Statement of ICC Prosecutor Karim A.A. Khan KC on the unsealing of six arrest warrants in the situation in Libya.
ICC Prosecutor Karim A. A. Khan K.C. visited mass
graves and locations of alleged crimes in Tarhunah, Libya in November 2022.
Today,
Pre-Trial Chamber I of the International Criminal Court has granted my Office’s
request to unseal warrants of arrest against the following six Libyan
nationals alleged to have committed Rome Statute crimes in Tarhunah:
- Abdurahem Khalefa Abdurahem
Elshgagi aka Abdurahem AL KANI
- Makhlouf
Makhlouf Arhoumah DOUMAH
- Abdelbari
Ayyad Ramadan AL SHAQAQI
- Fathi
Faraj Mohamed Salim AL ZINKAL
- Nasser
Muhammad Muftah DAOU
- Mohamed
Mohamed AL SALHEEN SALMI
Three of
the six suspects were leaders and/or prominent members of the Al Kaniyat
militia that controlled Tarhunah from at least 2015 to June 2020, when
government forces ousted them from the city. Three other suspects were in the
Libyan security sector and were associated with the Al Kaniyat militia at the
time of the alleged crimes. Since June 2020, hundreds of bodies have been
exhumed from mass graves in and around Tarhunah, allegedly victims of the Al
Kaniyat militia.
The
Chamber’s decision to issue and unseal these warrants is an important moment in
our collective work to deliver justice and accountability for crimes committed
in Libya pursuant to Security Council resolution 1970 (2011) and in line with
the renewed strategy I presented to the Council in relation to this situation
upon taking up my position as Prosecutor.
My Office
applied for these warrants of arrest in November 2022 and April 2023 and
the decisions to issue the arrest warrants were made in April and July 2023.
The applications were filed and the decisions were issued confidentially or
under seal in order to maximise arrest opportunities and to minimise risks to
an ongoing criminal investigation. For that reason, no details of these
warrants could be provided until this stage. It is now my view that arrest and
surrender can be achieved most effectively through the unsealing of these
warrants.
Through its
investigations to date, the Office has received a wide range of credible
information indicating that Tarhunah residents have been subjected to crimes
amounting to war crimes, including murder, outrages upon personal
dignity, cruel treatment, torture, sexual violence, and rape. In my visit to
Tarhunah in 2022, I
heard accounts of people kept in appalling and inhumane conditions, and saw
farms and landfill sites that were turned into mass graves. I saw the
courageous work of Libyan forensic experts seeking to excavate remains so that
we can collectively deliver justice for victims. I heard from mothers who no
longer wished to live in their homes due to the pain caused by the memories of
their sons being taken from them before their eyes.
ICC Prosecutor Karim A.A. Khan KC and the Office of
the Prosecutor’s Libya team visited Tarhunah, Libya in November 2022.
Pre-Trial Chamber
I examined the six arrest warrant applications and the evidence and, by
majority, was satisfied that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the
suspects have committed crimes within the jurisdiction of the Court and that
the arrest of the suspects is necessary. These warrants of arrest underscore my
commitment to significantly deepen the impact of our action in the Libya situation, and deliver on the mandate
provided to us by the Security Council.
My Office
is seeking to work closely with Libyan authorities so that these individuals
can face the charges against them in a court of law, pursuant to United Nations
Security Council (UNSC) Resolution 1970(2011). My Office will also work closely
with the Registrar to help secure the arrest of these individuals.
I would
like to thank all victims who approached my Office and provided information to
establish the truth. I applaud them for their courage and determination to seek
accountability for such crimes. I would wish to underline to them that our work
on Libya is continuing with considerable focus, in line with our renewed
strategy for this situation.
As I noted
in my recent
statement to the United Nations Security Council, the Libya situation is a priority for my
Office. Deepening our cooperation with national authorities in pursuit of
accountability is one of the core principles at the heart of both the renewed
strategy for the Libya investigation outlined in my UN Security
Council Report in April 2022, and in my Office’s Policy Paper on Complementarity
and Cooperation.
This
message of cooperation, dynamic complementarity and accountability is one I and
Deputy Prosecutor Nazhat Shameem Khan have emphasised during our visits to
Libya in 2022 and 2024, and during multiple bilateral meetings with Libyan
authorities since 2022.
As we move
towards the completion of the investigative phase of our activities at the end
of 2025, we will continue to accelerate our work across the priority lines of
inquiry outlined in my reports to the United Nations Security Council pursuant
to Resolution 1970(2011).
For more
on the situation in Libya, see here. For further details on
"preliminary examinations" and "situations and cases"
before the Court, click here, and here.
Source:
Office of the Prosecutor | OTPNewsDesk@icc-cpi.int