
War crimes court rebuffed and threatened by Trump administration
These are turbulent times for the International Criminal Court, created 17 years ago as a court of 'last resort.'
Already have an account? Log in
These are turbulent times for the International Criminal Court, created 17 years ago as a court of 'last resort.'
The Trump administration's broadsides embolden nations with poor rights records and encourage attacks on journalists.
The non-binding deal tries to solve some of the polarizing but age-old issues surrounding people crossing borders.
The effort accompanied a similar pact for migration that the U.N. General Assembly also approved this month.
Qatar joined OPEC in 1961 and has been its 11th biggest producer, putting out 600,000 barrels of crude oil a day.
As demands grow for a U.N. probe of Khashoggi's murder, an Arete News review finds just eight previous such orders.
Protesters urged more attention to global weapons sales in the wake of a journalist's murder in a Saudi consulate at Istanbul.
At the U.N. General Assembly, the U.S. president attacked the world body as a largely useless "global bureaucracy."
The picture is complicated by safety and environmental concerns and IAEA's dual roles as watchdog and promoter.
Trump's national security adviser harshly condemned the International Criminal Court, which is hated by conservatives.
With the U.S. reversal, Iran's planned economic opening to the West depends on its European, Russian and Chinese partners.
Three times a year an obscure panel of human rights experts meets in Geneva and New York with a monumental task.