
The International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague prosecutes individuals for the most serious crimes under international law, as defined in the Rome Statute. These are not ordinary crimes — they are large-scale, organized violations of humanitarian law that often involve mass atrocities during armed conflict or peacetime
The Four Main Crimes the ICC Prosecutes
- Genocide
Acts committed with the specific intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group. This includes killing group members, causing serious harm, imposing measures to prevent births, or forcibly transferring children to another group l - Crimes Against Humanity
Serious violations committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack against any civilian population, regardless of whether an armed conflict exists. Examples include murder, enslavement, torture, rape, apartheid, and enforced disappearances - War Crimes
Grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions and other rules of armed conflict. These include:- Deliberately targeting civilians or protected persons
- Using prohibited weapons
- Killing or torturing prisoners of war
- Forcing children under 15 into the armed forces
- Destroying property without military justification
- Taking hostages or unlawful detention of protected persons
- Crime of Aggression
The use of armed force by a state leader against another sovereign state in violation of the UN Charter. Only those in a position to control a state’s political or military decisions can be charged
When the ICC Gets Involved
The ICC can act when:
- The accused is a national of a state party to the Rome Statute.
- The crime occurred on the territory of a state party.
- The UN Security Council refers a situation to the Court
It complements, not replaces, national courts — it only steps in when national systems are unwilling or unable to prosecute
In short: The Hague’s ICC handles the gravest crimes — genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and the crime of aggression — when they meet the legal thresholds and jurisdictional requirements under the Rome Statute
Sources: wiki, legalclarity.org
