The ICC-African Relationship: More Complex Than a Simplistic Dichotomy

Emily Rowe
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Abstract

The International Criminal Court’s (ICC) legitimacy, as an independent and unbiased international criminal court, has been brought into question, for all 30 official cases opened to this date are against African nationals. The ICC-African relationship is often framed in this excessively simplistic dichotomy: either the ICC is regarded as a Western neo-imperial colonial tool, or as a legal institutional champion of global human rights, rid of the political. Nevertheless, each obfuscates the complexity of this relationship by purporting either extreme.  Rather, it is the legal framework of the ICC that necessitates selectivity bias against nationals from developing countries, in particular, African states. The principle of complementarity and the United Nations Security Council’s (UNSC) referral power embedded in the ICC’s legal framework, allows for African nations to be disproportionately preliminarily examined, investigated, and then tried, while enabling warranted cases against nationals from developed states to circumvent such targeting. Therefore, the primary issue lies not in cases the ICC has opened, but in the cases it has not. 
国际刑事法院与非洲的关系:比简单的二分法更复杂
国际刑事法院作为一个独立和公正的国际刑事法院的合法性已受到质疑,因为迄今为止已审理的所有30起正式案件都是针对非洲国民的。国际刑事法院与非洲的关系常常被框制在这种过于简单化的二分法中:国际刑事法院要么被视为西方新帝国主义的殖民工具,要么被视为摆脱政治影响的全球人权的法律机构捍卫者。然而,每个人都声称自己是极端的,从而混淆了这种关系的复杂性。相反,是国际刑事法院的法律框架使得对发展中国家,特别是非洲国家国民的选择性偏见成为必要。互补性原则和联合国安理会移交权力嵌入国际刑事法院的法律框架,允许非洲国家受到不成比例的初步审查、调查和审判,同时允许针对发达国家国民的正当案件绕过这种针对目标。因此,主要问题不在于国际刑事法院已审理的案件,而在于它尚未审理的案件。
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