The states parties to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court are those sovereign states that have ratified, or have otherwise become party to, the Rome Statute. The Rome Statute is the treaty that established the International Criminal Court, an international court that has jurisdiction over certain international crimes, including genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes that are committed by nationals of states parties or within the territory of states parties. States parties are legally obligated to co-operate with the Court when it requires, such as in arresting and transferring indicted persons or providing access to evidence and witnesses. States parties are entitled to participate and vote in proceedings of the Assembly of States Parties, which is the Court's governing body. Such proceedings include the election of such officials as judges and the Prosecutor, the approval of the Court's budget, and the adoption of amendments to the Rome Statute.

States parties
As of October 2024, there are 125 states parties to the Rome Statute.
State party | Signed | Ratified or acceded | Entry into force | A1 | A2 | A3 | A4 | A5 | A6 | A7 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | — | 10 February 2003 | 1 May 2003 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 31 January 2003 | 1 May 2003 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 30 April 2001 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | — | — | — | In force |
![]() | 23 October 1998 | 18 June 2001 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 8 January 1999 | 8 February 2001 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 1 October 1999 | 14 November 2023 | 1 February 2024 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 9 December 1998 | 1 July 2002 | 1 September 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 28 December 2000 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 16 September 1999 | 23 March 2010 | 1 June 2010 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 8 September 2000 | 10 December 2002 | 1 March 2003 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 10 September 1998 | 28 June 2000 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified |
![]() | 5 April 2000 | 5 April 2000 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 24 September 1999 | 22 January 2002 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 17 July 1998 | 27 June 2002 | 1 September 2002 | — | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 17 July 1998 | 11 April 2002 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 8 September 2000 | 8 September 2000 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 February 2000 | 20 June 2002 | 1 September 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 11 February 1999 | 11 April 2002 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 30 November 1998 | 16 April 2004 | 1 July 2004 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 23 October 2000 | 11 April 2002 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 December 1998 | 7 July 2000 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 28 December 2000 | 10 October 2011 | 1 January 2012 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 12 December 1999 | 3 October 2001 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 20 October 1999 | 1 November 2006 | 1 January 2007 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 11 September 1998 | 29 June 2009 | 1 September 2009 | In force | In force | — | In force | In force | In force | — |
![]() | 10 December 1998 | 5 August 2002 | 1 November 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 22 September 2000 | 18 August 2006 | 1 November 2006 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 8 September 2000 | 11 April 2002 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 17 July 1998 | 3 May 2004 | 1 August 2004 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | — | 18 July 2008 | 1 October 2008 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 7 June 2001 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 30 November 1998 | 15 February 2013 | 1 May 2013 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 12 October 1998 | 21 May 2001 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | In force | In force | In force | In force |
![]() | 15 October 1998 | 7 March 2002 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified |
![]() | 13 April 1999 | 21 July 2009 | 1 October 2009 | In force | In force | — | In force | In force | In force | — |
![]() | 25 September 1998 | 21 June 2001 | 1 July 2002 | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 5 November 2002 | 1 February 2003 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | — | 12 February 2001 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 8 September 2000 | 12 May 2005 | 1 August 2005 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | — | 6 September 2002 | 1 December 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 5 February 2002 | 1 July 2002 | — | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | — | 3 March 2016 | 1 June 2016 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 27 December 1999 | 30 January 2002 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified |
![]() | 29 November 1999 | 29 November 1999 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 29 December 2000 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 9 June 2000 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | Ratified | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 22 December 1998 | 20 September 2000 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 4 December 1998 | 28 June 2002 | 1 September 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 5 September 2003 | 1 December 2003 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 10 December 1998 | 11 December 2000 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | In force | In force | In force | In force |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 20 December 1999 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 15 May 2002 | 1 August 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | — | 19 May 2011 | 1 August 2011 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | — | 2 April 2012 | 1 July 2012 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 September 2000 | 14 July 2003 | 1 October 2003 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 28 December 2000 | 24 September 2004 | 1 December 2004 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 1 July 2002 | 1 September 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 15 January 1999 | 30 November 2001 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 26 August 1998 | 25 May 2000 | 1 July 2002 | — | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 11 April 2002 | 1 July 2002 | — | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 26 July 1999 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | — | — | — | — |
![]() | — | 17 July 2007 | 1 October 2007 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 11 April 2002 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | — | 26 November 2019 | 1 February 2020 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 11 August 1999 | 15 March 2005 | 1 June 2005 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 8 March 2000 | 13 November 2002 | 1 February 2003 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 22 April 1999 | 28 June 2002 | 1 September 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | In force | In force | In force | — |
![]() | 30 November 1998 | 6 September 2000 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 17 July 1998 | 22 September 2004 | 1 December 2004 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 2 October 2001 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | In force | — | — | In force |
![]() | 10 December 1998 | 12 May 2003 | 1 August 2003 | In force | In force | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified |
![]() | 13 October 1998 | 8 September 2000 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | — | In force | In force | In force | In force |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 14 March 2008 | 1 June 2008 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 2 March 1999 | 19 September 2002 | 1 December 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | — | 21 September 2011 | 1 December 2011 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 17 July 1998 | 16 August 2000 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 17 July 1998 | 29 November 2002 | 1 February 2003 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 6 September 2000 | 7 December 2000 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 11 November 1998 | 5 March 2002 | 1 July 2002 | In force | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 September 2000 | 28 October 2005 | 1 January 2006 | In force | — | — | In force | In force | In force | — |
![]() | 8 September 2000 | 12 October 2010 | 1 January 2011 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 29 December 2000 | 11 April 2002 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | — | 23 October 2006 | 3 June 2006 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 27 October 1998 | 25 June 2002 | 1 September 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 13 December 2000 | 12 November 2001 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 17 July 2001 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | In force | In force | In force | In force |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 7 September 2000 | 1 July 2002 | In force | — | — | In force | In force | In force | In force |
![]() | 17 July 1998 | 11 April 2002 | 1 July 2002 | — | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 1 June 2000 | 27 September 2001 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 6 March 2002 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 28 August 1998 | 16 February 2000 | 1 July 2002 | In force | — | Ratified | In force | In force | In force | In force |
![]() | — | 2 January 2015 | 1 April 2015 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 21 March 2002 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 14 May 2001 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 December 2000 | 10 November 2001 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 9 April 1999 | 12 November 2001 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 5 February 2002 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | — | — | — | In force |
![]() | 7 July 1999 | 11 April 2002 | 1 July 2002 | In force | — | Ratified | In force | In force | In force | In force |
![]() | — | 22 August 2006 | 1 November 2006 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 27 August 1999 | 18 August 2010 | 1 November 2010 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | — | 3 December 2002 | 1 March 2003 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 17 July 1998 | 16 September 2002 | 1 December 2002 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 13 May 1999 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 2 February 1999 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 19 December 2000 | 6 September 2001 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 28 December 2000 | 10 August 2010 | 1 November 2010 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 17 October 1998 | 15 September 2000 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 23 December 1998 | 11 April 2002 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | In force | In force | In force | — |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 31 December 2001 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | In force | In force | In force | In force |
![]() | 17 July 1998 | 27 November 2000 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 24 October 2000 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | — | — | — | — |
![]() | — | 15 July 2008 | 1 October 2008 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 7 October 1998 | 28 June 2001 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | In force | — | — | — |
![]() | 18 July 1998 | 12 October 2001 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | In force | In force | In force | In force |
![]() | 29 December 2000 | 20 August 2002 | 1 November 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 30 November 1998 | 5 May 2000 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 23 March 1999 | 6 April 1999 | 1 July 2002 | In force | In force | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | — | 24 June 2011 | 1 September 2011 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 17 March 1999 | 14 June 2002 | 1 September 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 20 January 2000 | 25 October 2024 | 1 January 2025 | Ratified | Ratified | — | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified | Ratified |
![]() | 30 November 1998 | 4 October 2001 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 19 December 2000 | 28 June 2002 | 1 September 2002 | In force | In force | Ratified | In force | In force | In force | In force |
![]() | — | 2 December 2011 | 1 February 2012 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 14 October 1998 | 7 June 2000 | 1 July 2002 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
![]() | 17 July 1998 | 13 November 2002 | 1 February 2003 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
Implementing legislation
The Rome Statute obliges states parties to cooperate with the Court in the investigation and prosecution of crimes, including the arrest and surrender of suspects. Part 9 of the Statute requires all states parties to “ensure that there are procedures available under their national law for all of the forms of cooperation which are specified under this Part”.
Under the Rome Statute's complementarity principle, the Court only has jurisdiction over cases where the relevant state is unwilling or unable to investigate and, if appropriate, prosecute the case itself. Therefore, many states parties have implemented national legislation to provide for the investigation and prosecution of crimes that fall under the jurisdiction of the Court.
As of April 2006, the following states had enacted or drafted implementing legislation:
States | Complementarity legislation | Co-operation legislation |
---|---|---|
Australia, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Canada, Croatia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Georgia, Germany, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Malta, Netherlands, New Zealand, Slovakia, South Africa, Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, United Kingdom | Enacted | Enacted |
Colombia, Congo, Serbia, Montenegro | Enacted | Draft |
Burundi, Costa Rica, Mali, Niger, Portugal | Enacted | None |
France, Norway, Peru, Poland, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland | Draft | Enacted |
Austria, Japan, Latvia, Romania | None | Enacted |
Argentina, Benin, Bolivia, Botswana, Brazil, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Dominica, Gabon, Ghana, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Kenya, Lesotho, Luxembourg, Nigeria, Samoa, Senegal, Uganda, Uruguay, Zambia | Draft | Draft |
Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Honduras, Hungary, Jordan, Panama, Venezuela | Draft | None |
Mexico | None | Draft |
Afghanistan, Albania, Andorra, Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Belize, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Cyprus, Djibouti, Fiji, the Gambia, Guinea, Guyana, Liberia, Malawi, Marshall Islands, Mauritius, Mongolia, Namibia, Nauru, North Macedonia, Paraguay, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, San Marino, Sierra Leone, Tajikistan, Tanzania, Timor-Leste | None | None |
Timeline of signatures and ratifications/accessions

Date | Signatures | ||
31 December 1998 | 71 | ||
31 December 1999 | 92 | ||
31 December 2000 | 139 | ||
Date | Ratifications/accessions | Remaining signatories | Denunciations |
31 December 1998 | 0 | 71 | 0 |
31 December 1999 | 6 | 86 | |
31 December 2000 | 27 | 112 | |
31 December 2001 | 48 | 92 | |
31 December 2002 | 87 | 55 | |
31 December 2003 | 92 | 51 | |
31 December 2004 | 97 | 46 | |
31 December 2005 | 100 | 43 | |
31 December 2006 | 104 | 41 | |
31 December 2007 | 105 | ||
31 December 2008 | 108 | 40 | |
31 December 2009 | 110 | 38 | |
31 December 2010 | 114 | 34 | |
31 December 2011 | 120 | 32 | |
31 December 2012 | 121 | ||
31 December 2013 | 122 | 31 | |
31 December 2014 | |||
31 December 2015 | 123 | ||
31 December 2016 | 124 | ||
31 December 2017 | 123 | 1 | |
31 December 2018 | |||
31 December 2019 | 2 | ||
31 December 2020 | |||
31 December 2021 | |||
31 December 2022 | |||
31 December 2023 | 124 | 30 | |
31 December 2024 | 125 | 29 |
States that have denounced the Rome Statute are no longer considered signatories.
Regional groups and minimum voting requirements
The number of states parties from the several United Nations regional groups has an influence on the regional minimum voting requirements during elections of judges. Paragraph 20(b) of the procedure for the nomination and election of judges of the Court states that each Party must vote for at least as many candidates from a regional group as would be required to bring the number of judges from that group to two. If, however, more than 16 states parties belong to the group, this target is increased to three.
The following table lists how many states parties there are from each regional group as of August 2024.[update] After the accession of the Maldives on 1 December 2011, the Asia–Pacific Group became the last regional group to reach the threshold size of 17 members, just in time to increase the minimum voting requirement for this group in the 2011 election. Since then, the target for the regional minimum voting requirement has remained at three for all regional groups. This has resulted in at least three judges from each regional group sitting on the bench except during the term from 2020 to 2023, when there were only two judges from the Asia–Pacific group. Because only a single candidate from that group was nominated in the 2020 election, no minimum voting requirement was applied for the group, and the one nominee was not elected.
Group | Number of states parties |
African Group | 33 |
Asia–Pacific Group | 19 |
Eastern European Group | 20 |
Latin American and Caribbean Group | 28 |
Western European and Others Group | 25 |
Withdrawal
Article 127 of the Rome Statute allows for states to withdraw from the ICC. Withdrawal takes effect one year after notification of the depositary, and has no effect on prosecution that has already started. As of April 2025 four states have given formal notice of their intention to withdraw from the statute, although two rescinded the notification before it came into effect.
State party | Signed | Ratified or acceded | Entry into force | Withdrawal notified | Withdrawal effective | Withdrawal rescinded |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 13 January 1999 | 21 September 2004 | 1 December 2004 | 27 October 2016 | 27 October 2017 | — |
![]() | 4 December 1998 | 28 June 2002 | 1 September 2002 | 10 November 2016 | — | 10 February 2017 |
![]() | 28 December 2000 | 30 August 2011 | 1 November 2011 | 17 March 2018 | 17 March 2019 | — |
![]() | 17 July 1998 | 27 November 2000 | 1 July 2002 | 19 October 2016 | — | 7 March 2017 |
Several states have argued that the ICC is a tool of Western imperialism, only punishing leaders from small, weak states while ignoring crimes committed by richer and more powerful states. This sentiment has been expressed particularly by African states, 34 of which are members of the ICC, due to a perceived disproportionate focus of the Court on Africa. Nine out of the ten situations which the ICC has investigated were in African countries.
In June 2009, several African states, including Comoros, Djibouti, and Senegal, called on African states parties to withdraw en masse from the statute in protest against the indictment of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir. In September 2013, Kenya's National Assembly passed a motion to withdraw from the ICC in protest against the ICC prosecution of Kenyan Deputy President William Ruto and President Uhuru Kenyatta (both charged before coming into office). A mass withdrawal from the ICC by African member states in response to the trial of Kenyan authorities was discussed at a special summit of the African Union in October. The summit concluded that serving heads of state should not be put on trial, and that the Kenyan cases should be deferred. However, the summit did not endorse the proposal for a mass withdrawal due to lack of support for the idea. In November the ICC's Assembly of State Parties responded by agreeing to consider proposed amendments to the Rome Statute to address the AU's concerns.
In October–November 2016, Burundi, South Africa, and The Gambia all notified the UNSG of their intention to withdraw from the ICC. Burundi was the subject of an ongoing preliminary investigation by the ICC at the time. South Africa's exit followed its refusal to execute an ICC warrant for Sudan's al-Bashir when he was in the country. Following The Gambia's presidential election later that year, which ended the long rule of Yahya Jammeh, The Gambia rescinded its withdrawal notification. The constitutionality of South Africa's notice was challenged by the Democratic Alliance opposition party, which argued that the approval of parliament was required and not sought. The High Court of South Africa ruled in February 2017 that the government's notification was not legal, and it was required to revoke the notice effective 7 March 2017. A parliamentary bill on ICC withdrawal was subsequently withdrawn by the government. The governing African National Congress party continued to support withdrawing, and in 2019 a new bill was put before Parliament to withdraw from the Statute, though this was also withdrawn in March 2023. Following the issuance of ICC arrest warrants for Vladimir Putin and Maria Lvova-Belova of Russia in March 2023, due to the deportation of children from Ukraine to Russia during the Russian invasion of Ukraine, South African president Cyril Ramaphosa declared that his country had decided to withdraw from the treaty to allow Putin to visit their country without risk of arrest for the upcoming 2023 BRICS summit hosted in South Africa. However, it was subsequently clarified that such a decision had not been made.
On March 14, 2018, Rodrigo Duterte, the Philippine President who was under preliminary examination by the ICC for his controversial war on drugs campaign, announced that the country would withdraw from the Rome Statute. He argued that while the Statute was ratified by the Senate of the Philippines in 2011, it was never published in the Official Gazette of the Philippines, a requirement for penal laws (of which the Rome Statute subscribes as such) to take effect. Hence, he claimed that the Philippines was never a State Party ab initio. Additionally, he stated that the ICC was being utilized as a political tool against weak targets such as the Philippines. The United Nations received the official notification of withdrawal on March 17, 2018; one year later (March 17, 2019), by rule, the Philippines' withdrawal became official. The legal validity of the withdrawal was challenged at the Supreme Court of the Philippines, which dismissed the case in 2021 in a unanimous decision for being "moot and academic". Nevertheless, the Supreme Court affirmed that the Philippines was obliged to cooperate with the ICC regarding acts committed while the Rome Statute was still in effect. While Bongbong Marcos, Duterte's successor as President, initially stated that the country "has no intention of rejoining the ICC", in 2023 he stated that he was studying the possibility of rejoining. The Philippine government also confirmed that it would extradite Duterte to the ICC if the matter were transferred to Interpol. When an arrest warrant was issued in March 2025, Duterte was arrested by Philippine police and surrendered to the custody of the ICC shortly thereafter. A spokesperson for president stated that the country had "not yet discussed any plan of rejoining the ICC".
In February 2025, following the ICC prosecutor's request for arrest warrants against Supreme Leader Hibatullah Akhundzada and Chief Justice Abdul Hakim Haqqani, the Taliban government, which is not recognized by the United Nations, issued a decree purporting to withdraw Afghanistan from the ICC effective immediately and retroactively nullify the accession in 2003.
On 3 April 2025, Hungary announced that they would begin the process of withdrawing from the ICC just hours after Benjamin Netanyahu, who was wanted by the court for his alleged war crimes in Gaza, arrived to the country for an official visit. Prime Minister Viktor Orban stated that the court's decision to prosecute Netanyahu showed it had become a "political court". The decision marked the first time a European Union member state decided to withdraw from the Rome Statute.
Acceptance of jurisdiction
Pursuant to article 12(3) of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, a state that is not a party to the Statute may, "by declaration lodged with the Registrar, accept the exercise of jurisdiction by the Court with respect to the crime in question." Even if the state that does so is not a State Party to the Statute, the relevant provisions of the statute would still be applicable on the accepting state, but only on an ad hoc basis.
To date, the Court has received six article 12(3) declarations. Additionally, a declaration was submitted in December 2013 by the Freedom and Justice Party of Egypt seeking to accept jurisdiction on behalf of Egypt. However, the Office of the Prosecutor found that as the party has lost power following the 2013 Egyptian coup d'état that July, it did not have the authority to make the declaration.
State | Date of acceptance | Start of jurisdiction | End of jurisdiction | Date of membership |
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 18 April 2003 | 19 September 2002 | Indefinite | 1 May 2013 |
![]() | 21 January 2009 | 1 July 2002 | Indefinite | 1 April 2015 |
![]() | 9 April 2014 | 21 November 2013 | 22 February 2014 | 1 January 2025 |
![]() | 31 December 2014 | 13 June 2014 | Indefinite | 1 April 2015 |
![]() | 8 September 2015 | 20 February 2014 | Indefinite | 1 January 2025 |
![]() | 15 November 2023 | 10 May 2021 | Indefinite | 1 February 2024 |
* | = Declaration was deemed invalid by the Office of the Prosecutor. |
Signatories which have not ratified
Of the 139 states that had signed the Rome Statute, 29 have not ratified. Of these, 4 have formally indicated that they no longer plan to ratify the treaty.
State | Signature |
---|---|
![]() | 28 December 2000 |
![]() | 7 October 1998 |
![]() | 29 December 2000 |
![]() | 11 December 2000 |
![]() | 17 July 1998 |
![]() | 26 December 2000 |
![]() | 7 October 1998 |
![]() | 12 September 2000 |
![]() | 26 February 1999 |
![]() | 31 December 2000 |
![]() | 31 December 2000 |
![]() | 8 September 2000 |
![]() | 8 September 2000 |
![]() | 8 December 1998 |
![]() | 18 July 1998 |
![]() | 8 September 2000 |
![]() | 28 December 2000 |
![]() | 20 December 2000 |
![]() | 13 September 2000 |
![]() | 28 December 2000 |
![]() | 3 December 1998 |
![]() | 8 September 2000 |
![]() | 29 November 2000 |
![]() | 2 October 2000 |
![]() | 27 November 2000 |
![]() | 31 December 2000 |
![]() | 29 December 2000 |
![]() | 28 December 2000 |
![]() | 17 July 1998 |
* | = States which have declared that they no longer intend to ratify the treaty |
According to the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, a state that has signed but not ratified a treaty is obliged to refrain from "acts which would defeat the object and purpose" of the treaty. However, these obligations do not continue if the state has "made its intention clear not to become a party to the treaty". Four signatory states (Israel, Russia, Sudan, and the United States) have informed the UN Secretary General that they no longer intend to become parties to the Rome Statute, and as such have no legal obligations arising from their signature.
Bahrain
The government of Bahrain originally announced in May 2006 that it would ratify the Rome Statute in the session ending in July 2006. By December 2006, the ratification had not yet been completed, but the Coalition for the International Criminal Court said they expected ratification in 2007.
Israel
Israel voted against the adoption of the Rome Statute but later signed it for a short period. In 2002, Israel notified the UN Secretary General that it no longer intended to become a party to the Rome Statute, and as such, it has no legal obligations arising from their signature of the statute.
Israel states that it has "deep sympathy" with the goals of the Court. However, it has concerns that political pressure on the Court would lead it to reinterpret international law or to "invent new crimes". It cites the inclusion of "the transfer of parts of the civilian population of an occupying power into occupied territory" as a war crime as an example of this, whilst at the same time disagrees with the exclusion of terrorism and drug trafficking. Israel sees the powers given to the prosecutor as excessive and the geographical appointment of judges as disadvantaging Israel which was prevented from joining any of the UN Regional Groups.
Kuwait
At a conference in 2007, the Kuwaiti Bar Association and the Secretary of the National Assembly of Kuwait, Hussein Al-Hereti, called for Kuwait to join the Court.
Russia
Russia signed the Rome Statute in 2000. On 14 November 2016 the ICC published a report on its preliminary investigation of the Russo-Ukrainian War which found that "the situation within the territory of Crimea and Sevastopol factually amounts to an on-going state of occupation" and that "information, such as reported shelling by both States of military positions of the other, and the detention of Russian military personnel by Ukraine, and vice-versa, points to direct military engagement between Russian armed forces and Ukrainian government forces that would suggest the existence of an international armed conflict in the context of armed hostilities in eastern Ukraine". In response, a presidential decree by Russian President Vladimir Putin approved "sending the Secretary General of the United Nations notice of the intention of the Russian Federation to no longer be a party to the Rome Statute". Formal notice was given on 30 November 2016.
Sudan
Sudan signed the Rome Statute in 2000. In 2005 the ICC opened an investigation into the war in Darfur, a region of Sudan. Omar al-Bashir, the President of Sudan, was indicted in 2009. On 26 August 2008, Sudan notified the UN Secretary General that it no longer intended to ratify the treaty and therefore no longer bears any legal obligations arising from its signature. Following the 2019 Sudanese coup d'état, Sadiq al-Mahdi a former Prime Minister of Sudan who backs the opposition, called for Sudan to join the ICC.
On 4 August 2021, the Sudanese government approved unanimously a draft bill to join the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.
Thailand
Former Senator Kraisak Choonhavan called in November 2006 for Thailand to ratify the Rome Statute and to accept retrospective jurisdiction, so that former premier Thaksin Shinawatra could be investigated for crimes against humanity connected to 2,500 alleged extrajudicial killings carried out in 2003 against suspected drug dealers.
United States
The United States signed the Rome Statute in December 2000 (under President Bill Clinton), but Clinton decided not to submit the treaty to the United States Senate for ratification, stating: "I will not, and do not recommend that my successor [George W. Bush] submit the treaty to the Senate for advice and consent until our fundamental concerns are satisfied." Opponents of the ICC in the U.S. Senate are "skeptical of new international institutions and still jealously protective of American sovereignty"; before the Rome Statute, opposition to the ICC was largely headed by Republican Senator Jesse Helms. On May 6, 2002, the Bush administration stated that the U.S. did not intend to become a state party to the ICC; in a letter to Secretary-General of the United Nations Kofi Annan, Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security John Bolton stated that "the United States does not intend to become a party to the treaty," and that "the United States has no legal obligations arising from its signature on December 31, 2000." This letter is sometimes called the "unsigning" of the treaty, but legal opinions on its actual legal effects differ, with some scholars arguing that the president does not have the power to unilaterally "unsign" treaties.
The United States "adopted a hostile stance towards the Court throughout most of the Bush presidency." In 2002, Congress enacted the American Servicemembers' Protection Act (ASPA), which was signed into law on August 2, 2002; the "overriding purpose of the ASPA was to inhibit the U.S. government from supporting the ICC." Major provisions of the ASPA blocked U.S. funding of the ICC and required the U.S. "to enter into agreements with all ICC signatory states to shield American citizens abroad from ICC jurisdiction, under the auspices of Article 98 of the Rome Statute," which bars the ICC "from prosecuting individuals located on the territory of an ICC member state, where such action by the Court would cause the member state to violate the terms of any other bilateral or multilateral treaty to which it is a party." Traditionally, Article 98 was used in relation to traditional status of forces agreements (SOFAs) and status of mission agreements (SOMAs), in which nations hosting U.S. military personnel by invitation agreed to immunize them from prosecution in foreign courts. The Bush administration, supported by opponents of the ICC in Congress, adopted a new strategy of aggressively pursuing Bilateral Immunity Agreements (BIAs), "which guarantee immunity from ICC prosecution for all American citizens in the country with which the agreement is concluded" rather than just U.S. military forces. "Under the original ASPA, nations who refused to conclude BIAs with the United States were subject to sanctions, including the loss of military aid (though these provisions have since been repealed)." As of December 2006, the U.S. State Department reported that it had signed 102 BIAs. In 2002, the United States threatened to veto the renewal of all United Nations peacekeeping missions unless its troops were granted immunity from prosecution by the Court. In a compromise move, the Security Council passed Resolution 1422 on 12 July 2002, granting immunity to personnel from ICC non-states parties involved in United Nations established or authorized missions for a renewable twelve-month period. This was renewed for twelve months in 2003 but the Security Council refused to renew the exemption again in 2004, after pictures emerged of US troops abusing Iraqi prisoners in Abu Ghraib, and the US withdrew its demand.
Under the Obama administration, the U.S. did not take moves to ratify the Rome Statute, but did adopt a "cautious, case-by-case approach to supporting the ICC" by supporting cases before the ICC. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton stated that the U.S. encouraged "effective ICC action in ways that promote U.S. interests by bringing war criminals to justice." U.S. steps in support of the ICC undertaken under the Obama administration included participating in the annual Assembly of States Parties as an observer; using the U.S.'s permanent seat on the UN Security Council to support the referral of cases to the ICC (including Libya in 2011); "sharing intelligence on fugitives and providing other substantial in-kind support" to the ICC; and expanding the War Crimes Rewards Program."
The first Trump administration strained relations with the ICC, stating it would revoke visas for any ICC staff seeking to investigate Americans for war crimes. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo stated that such revocations could be applied to any staff involved with investigating war crimes committed by Israel or other allied nations as well.
Yemen
On 24 March 2007, the Yemeni parliament voted to ratify the Rome Statute. However, some MPs claim that this vote breached parliamentary rules, and demanded another vote. In that further vote, the ratification was retracted.
Non-party, non-signatory states
The deadline for signing the Rome Statute expired following 31 December 2000. States that did not sign before that date have to accede to the Statute in a single step.
Of all the states that are members of the United Nations, observers in the United Nations General Assembly, or otherwise recognized by the Secretary-General of the United Nations as states with full treaty-making capacities, there are 41 which have neither signed nor acceded to the Statute:
Azerbaijan
Belarus
Bhutan
Brunei
China
Cuba
Equatorial Guinea
Ethiopia
India
Indonesia
Iraq
Kazakhstan
Korea, North
Laos
Lebanon
Libya
Malaysia
Mauritania
Micronesia
Myanmar
Nepal
Nicaragua
Niue
Pakistan
Palau
Papua New Guinea
Qatar
Rwanda
Saudi Arabia
Singapore
Somalia
South Sudan
Sri Lanka
Swaziland
Togo
Tonga
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Tuvalu
Vatican City
Vietnam
Additionally, in accordance with practice and declarations filed with the Secretary-General, the Rome Statute is not in force in the following dependent territories:
Guernsey – a Crown dependency of the United Kingdom
Jersey – a Crown dependency of the United Kingdom
Tokelau – a territory of New Zealand
China
The People's Republic of China has opposed the Court, on the basis that it goes against the sovereignty of nation states, that the principle of complementarity gives the Court the ability to judge a nation's court system, that war crimes jurisdiction covers internal as well as international conflicts, that the Court's jurisdiction covers peacetime crimes against humanity, that the inclusion of the crime of aggression weakens the role of the UN Security Council, and that the Prosecutor's right to initiate prosecutions may open the Court to political influence.
India
The government of India has consistently opposed the Court. It abstained in the vote adopting the statute in 1998, saying it objected to the broad definition adopted of crimes against humanity; the rights given to the UN Security Council to refer and delay investigations and bind non-states parties; and the use of nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction not being explicitly criminalized. Other anxieties about the Court concern how the principle of complementarity would be applied to the Indian criminal justice system, the inclusion of war crimes for non-international conflicts, and the power of the Prosecutor to initiate prosecutions.
Indonesia
Indonesia has stated that it supports the adoption of the Rome Statute, and that “universal participation should be the cornerstone of the International Criminal Court”. In 2004, the President of Indonesia adopted a National Plan of Action on Human Rights, which states that Indonesia intends to ratify the Rome Statute in 2008. This was confirmed in 2007 by Foreign Minister Hassan Wirajuda and the head of the Indonesian People's Representative Council's Committee on Security and International Affairs, Theo L. Sambuaga. In May 2013, Defense Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro stated that the government needed "more time to carefully and thoroughly review the pros and cons of the ratification".
Iraq
In February 2005, the Iraqi Transitional Government decided to ratify the Rome Statute. However, two weeks later they reversed this decision, a move that the Coalition for the International Criminal Court claimed was due to pressure from the United States.
Lebanon
In March 2009, Lebanese Justice Minister said the government had decided not to join for now. The Coalition for the International Criminal Court claimed this was due in part to "intense pressure" from the United States, who feared it could result in the prosecution of Israelis in a future conflict. Following the outbreak of the Gaza war which triggered clashes between Israel and the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah, in April 2024 Lebanon's cabinet decided to submit a declaration to the ICC accepting the court's jurisdiction over crimes committed on Lebanese territory since 7 October 2023. However, the following month this decision was reversed, and the declaration was not submitted.
Malaysia
Malaysia submitted an instrument of accession to the Rome Statute on 4 March 2019, which was to enter into force on 1 June. However, on 29 April 2019, Malaysia submitted a notice withdrawing its instrument of accession effective immediately to the Secretary General of the United Nations, preventing it from acceding. Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad explained that the withdrawal was due to concerns over its constitutionality as well as possible infringement of the sovereignty of the Malay Rulers.
Nepal
On 25 July 2006, the Nepalese House of Representatives directed the government to ratify the Rome Statute. Under Nepalese law, this motion is compulsory for the Executive.
Following a resolution by Parliament requesting that the government ratify the Statute, Narahari Acharya, Ministry of Law, Justice, Constituent Assembly and Parliamentary Affairs of Nepal, said in March 2015 that it had "formed a taskforce to conduct a study about the process". However, he said that it was "possible only after promulgating the new constitution", which was being debated by the 2nd Nepalese Constituent Assembly.
Pakistan
Pakistan has supported the aims of the International Court and voted for the Rome Statute in 1998. However, Pakistan has not signed the agreement on the basis of several objections, including the fact that the Statute does not provide for reservations upon ratification or accession, the inclusion of provisional arrest, and the lack of immunity for heads of state. In addition, Pakistan (one of the largest suppliers of UN peacekeepers) has, like the United States, expressed reservations about the potential use of politically motivated charges against peacekeepers.
South Sudan
South Sudan's President Salva Kiir Mayardit said in 2013 that the country would not join the ICC.
Turkey
Turkey is currently a candidate country to join the European Union, which has required progress on human rights issues in order to continue with accession talks. Part of this has included pressure, but not a requirement, on Turkey to join the Court which is supported under the EU's Common Foreign and Security Policy. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan stated in October 2004 that Turkey would "soon" ratify the Rome Statute, and the Turkish constitution was amended in 2004 to explicitly allow nationals to be surrendered to the Court. However, in January 2008, the Erdoğan government reversed its position, deciding to shelve accession because of concerns it could undermine efforts against the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).
See also
- List of presidents and vice-presidents of the Assembly of States Parties of the International Criminal Court
- European Union and the International Criminal Court
- Armenia and the International Criminal Court
Notes
- On 15 November 2023 the Armenian government submitted a declaration, dated the same day, accepting the Court's jurisdiction for "genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes ... starting from 10 May 2021."
- Colombia made a declaration under article 124 of the Rome Statute to exempt war crimes committed by its nationals or on its territory from the jurisdiction of the Court for a period of seven years. This declaration came into force with the coming into force of the Rome Statute, for Colombia, on 1 November 2002 and expired on 31 October 2009.
- On 1 October 2003 the Ivorian government submitted a declaration, dated 18 April 2003, accepting the Court's jurisdiction for "acts committed on Ivorian territory since the events of 19 September 2002." Côte d'Ivoire subsequently acceded to the Rome Statute, on 15 February 2013, and therefore is now a state party.
- The Rome Statute entered into force for the Faroe Islands on 1 October 2006 and for Greenland on 1 October 2004.
- France made a declaration under article 124 of the Rome Statute to exempt war crimes committed by its nationals or on its territory from the jurisdiction of the Court for a period of seven years. This declaration came into force with the coming into force of the Rome Statute, for France, on 1 July 2002. France withdrew its declaration on 13 August 2008 with effect from 15 June 2008.
- The Gambia formally notified the depositary of its intentions to withdraw from the Statute, effective 10 November 2017. However, this notification was rescinded effective 10 February 2017.
- Montenegro succeeded to the Rome Statute on 3 June 2006, the date of its independence from Serbia and Montenegro, per a declaration it sent to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, which was received on 23 October 2006.
- The Rome Statute is not in force for Tokelau.
- The Palestinian National Authority submitted a declaration on 22 January 2009, dated the previous day, accepting the Court's jurisdiction for "acts committed on the territory of Palestine since 1 July 2002." However, on 3 April 2012 the Prosecutor of the ICC deemed the declaration invalid because the Rome Statute only permits sovereign states to make such a declaration and Palestine was designated an "observer entity" within the United Nations (the body that is the depositary for the Rome Statute) at the time. On 29 November 2012, the United Nations General Assembly voted in favour of recognising Palestine as a non-member observer state. However, in November 2013 the Office of the Prosecutor concluded that this decision did "not cure the legal invalidity of the 2009 declaration." A second declaration accepting the court's jurisdiction was reportedly submitted in July 2014 by Palestine's Justice Minister Saleem al-Saqqa and General Prosecutor Ismaeil Jabr, but the prosecutor responded that only the head of state, head of government or minister of foreign affairs had the authority to make such a declaration. After failing to receive confirmation from Minister of Foreign Affairs Riyad al-Maliki during an August meeting that the declaration had been made on behalf of the Palestinian government, the Prosecutor concluded that the declaration was invalid because it did not come from an authority with the power to make it. On 2 September 2014, the Prosecutor clarified that if Palestine filed a new declaration, or acceded to the Rome Statute, it would be deemed valid. In December 2014, the assembly of state parties of the ICC recognized Palestine as a "state" without prejudice to any legal or other decisions taken by the court or any other organization. A new declaration was submitted on 1 January 2015 by Palestine, dated 31 December 2014, accepting the court's jurisdiction effective 13 June 2014. Palestine acceded to the Rome Statute on 2 January 2015, becoming state party to the ICC. The prosecutor launched a preliminary examination of the situation in Palestine on 16 January 2015, and on 22 January 2020 requested a ruling by the court on the territorial jurisdiction of the Rome Statute in Palestine. The ICC Pre-Trial Chamber ruled on 5 February 2021 that due to Palestine's accession to the Rome Statute, the ICC had jurisdiction over "territories occupied by Israel since 1967, namely Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem."
- Canada filed a declaration stating that it does not recognize Palestine as a state and as such it does not consider the Rome Statute to be in force between it and Palestine.
- South Africa formally notified the depositary of its intentions to withdraw from the Statute, effective 19 October 2017. However, this notification was rescinded effective 7 March 2017.
- Ukraine submitted a declaration accepting the jurisdiction of the Court for a limited time period on 17 April 2014. Another declaration accepting jurisdiction indefinitely was submitted on 8 September 2015. Ukraine subsequently acceded to the Rome Statute, on 1 January 2025, and therefore is now a state party. Upon ratification, Ukraine made a declaration under article 124 of the Rome Statute to exempt war crimes committed by its nationals from the jurisdiction of the Court for a period of seven years. This declaration came into force with the coming into force of the Rome Statute, for Ukraine, on 1 January 2025 and will expire on 1 January 2032.
- The Rome Statute entered into force for Akrotiri and Dhekelia; Anguilla; Bermuda; the British Virgin Islands; the Cayman Islands; the Falkland Islands; Montserrat; the Pitcairn Islands; Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha; and the Turks and Caicos Islands on 11 March 2010. The Statute entered into force for the Isle of Man on 1 February 2013. The Statute entered into force for Gibraltar on 20 April 2015.
- The legal validity of the Philippines' withdrawal was challenged at the Supreme Court of the Philippines, but was dismissed in a unanimous decision for being "moot and academic" two years after the country's official withdrawal from the tribunal.
- Signature withdrawn on 28 August 2002.
- Signature withdrawn on 30 November 2016.
- Signature withdrawn on 26 August 2008.
- Signature withdrawn on 6 May 2002.
- Malaysia submitted an instrument of accession to the Rome Statute on 4 March 2019, which was to enter into force on 1 June. However, on 29 April 2019 Malaysia submitted a notice withdrawing its instrument of accession effective immediately, preventing it from acceding. For more details see § Malaysia.
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The states parties to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court are those sovereign states that have ratified or have otherwise become party to the Rome Statute The Rome Statute is the treaty that established the International Criminal Court an international court that has jurisdiction over certain international crimes including genocide crimes against humanity and war crimes that are committed by nationals of states parties or within the territory of states parties States parties are legally obligated to co operate with the Court when it requires such as in arresting and transferring indicted persons or providing access to evidence and witnesses States parties are entitled to participate and vote in proceedings of the Assembly of States Parties which is the Court s governing body Such proceedings include the election of such officials as judges and the Prosecutor the approval of the Court s budget and the adoption of amendments to the Rome Statute State party Signatory that has not ratified State party that subsequently withdrew its membership Signatory that subsequently withdrew its signature Non state party non signatoryStates partiesAs of October 2024 there are 125 states parties to the Rome Statute State party Signed Ratified or acceded Entry into force A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 A7 Afghanistan 10 February 2003 1 May 2003 Albania 18 July 1998 31 January 2003 1 May 2003 Andorra 18 July 1998 30 April 2001 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified In force Antigua and Barbuda 23 October 1998 18 June 2001 1 July 2002 Argentina 8 January 1999 8 February 2001 1 July 2002 In force In force Armenia 1 October 1999 14 November 2023 1 February 2024 Australia 9 December 1998 1 July 2002 1 September 2002 Austria 7 October 1998 28 December 2000 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified Bangladesh 16 September 1999 23 March 2010 1 June 2010 Barbados 8 September 2000 10 December 2002 1 March 2003 Belgium 10 September 1998 28 June 2000 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Belize 5 April 2000 5 April 2000 1 July 2002 Benin 24 September 1999 22 January 2002 1 July 2002 Bolivia 17 July 1998 27 June 2002 1 September 2002 In force Bosnia and Herzegovina 17 July 1998 11 April 2002 1 July 2002 Botswana 8 September 2000 8 September 2000 1 July 2002 In force In force Brazil 7 February 2000 20 June 2002 1 September 2002 Bulgaria 11 February 1999 11 April 2002 1 July 2002 Burkina Faso 30 November 1998 16 April 2004 1 July 2004 Cambodia 23 October 2000 11 April 2002 1 July 2002 Canada 18 December 1998 7 July 2000 1 July 2002 Cape Verde 28 December 2000 10 October 2011 1 January 2012 Central African Republic 12 December 1999 3 October 2001 1 July 2002 Chad 20 October 1999 1 November 2006 1 January 2007 Chile 11 September 1998 29 June 2009 1 September 2009 In force In force In force In force In force Colombia 10 December 1998 5 August 2002 1 November 2002 Comoros 22 September 2000 18 August 2006 1 November 2006 Congo Democratic Republic of the 8 September 2000 11 April 2002 1 July 2002 Congo Republic of the 17 July 1998 3 May 2004 1 August 2004 Cook Islands 18 July 2008 1 October 2008 Costa Rica 7 October 1998 7 June 2001 1 July 2002 In force In force Cote d Ivoire 30 November 1998 15 February 2013 1 May 2013 Croatia 12 October 1998 21 May 2001 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified In force In force In force In force Cyprus 15 October 1998 7 March 2002 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Czech Republic 13 April 1999 21 July 2009 1 October 2009 In force In force In force In force In force Denmark 25 September 1998 21 June 2001 1 July 2002 Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Djibouti 7 October 1998 5 November 2002 1 February 2003 Dominica 12 February 2001 1 July 2002 Dominican Republic 8 September 2000 12 May 2005 1 August 2005 East Timor 6 September 2002 1 December 2002 Ecuador 7 October 1998 5 February 2002 1 July 2002 In force El Salvador 3 March 2016 1 June 2016 In force In force Estonia 27 December 1999 30 January 2002 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Fiji 29 November 1999 29 November 1999 1 July 2002 Finland 7 October 1998 29 December 2000 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified France 18 July 1998 9 June 2000 1 July 2002 Ratified Gabon 22 December 1998 20 September 2000 1 July 2002 Gambia The 4 December 1998 28 June 2002 1 September 2002 Georgia 18 July 1998 5 September 2003 1 December 2003 In force In force Germany 10 December 1998 11 December 2000 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified In force In force In force In force Ghana 18 July 1998 20 December 1999 1 July 2002 Greece 18 July 1998 15 May 2002 1 August 2002 Grenada 19 May 2011 1 August 2011 Guatemala 2 April 2012 1 July 2012 Guinea 7 September 2000 14 July 2003 1 October 2003 Guyana 28 December 2000 24 September 2004 1 December 2004 In force In force Honduras 7 October 1998 1 July 2002 1 September 2002 Hungary 15 January 1999 30 November 2001 1 July 2002 Iceland 26 August 1998 25 May 2000 1 July 2002 In force Ireland 7 October 1998 11 April 2002 1 July 2002 In force Italy 18 July 1998 26 July 1999 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified Japan 17 July 2007 1 October 2007 Jordan 7 October 1998 11 April 2002 1 July 2002 Kiribati 26 November 2019 1 February 2020 Kenya 11 August 1999 15 March 2005 1 June 2005 Korea South 8 March 2000 13 November 2002 1 February 2003 Latvia 22 April 1999 28 June 2002 1 September 2002 In force In force Ratified In force In force In force Lesotho 30 November 1998 6 September 2000 1 July 2002 Liberia 17 July 1998 22 September 2004 1 December 2004 Liechtenstein 18 July 1998 2 October 2001 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified In force In force Lithuania 10 December 1998 12 May 2003 1 August 2003 In force In force Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Luxembourg 13 October 1998 8 September 2000 1 July 2002 In force In force In force In force In force In force Madagascar 18 July 1998 14 March 2008 1 June 2008 Malawi 2 March 1999 19 September 2002 1 December 2002 Maldives 21 September 2011 1 December 2011 Mali 17 July 1998 16 August 2000 1 July 2002 Malta 17 July 1998 29 November 2002 1 February 2003 In force In force Marshall Islands 6 September 2000 7 December 2000 1 July 2002 Mauritius 11 November 1998 5 March 2002 1 July 2002 In force Mexico 7 September 2000 28 October 2005 1 January 2006 In force In force In force In force Moldova 8 September 2000 12 October 2010 1 January 2011 Mongolia 29 December 2000 11 April 2002 1 July 2002 In force In force Montenegro 23 October 2006 3 June 2006 Namibia 27 October 1998 25 June 2002 1 September 2002 Nauru 13 December 2000 12 November 2001 1 July 2002 Netherlands 18 July 1998 17 July 2001 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified In force In force In force In force New Zealand 7 October 1998 7 September 2000 1 July 2002 In force In force In force In force In force Niger 17 July 1998 11 April 2002 1 July 2002 In force Nigeria 1 June 2000 27 September 2001 1 July 2002 North Macedonia 7 October 1998 6 March 2002 1 July 2002 In force In force Norway 28 August 1998 16 February 2000 1 July 2002 In force Ratified In force In force In force In force Palestine 2 January 2015 1 April 2015 In force In force Panama 18 July 1998 21 March 2002 1 July 2002 In force In force Paraguay 7 October 1998 14 May 2001 1 July 2002 In force In force Peru 7 December 2000 10 November 2001 1 July 2002 In force In force Poland 9 April 1999 12 November 2001 1 July 2002 In force In force Portugal 7 October 1998 5 February 2002 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified In force Romania 7 July 1999 11 April 2002 1 July 2002 In force Ratified In force In force In force In force Saint Kitts and Nevis 22 August 2006 1 November 2006 Saint Lucia 27 August 1999 18 August 2010 1 November 2010 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 3 December 2002 1 March 2003 Samoa 17 July 1998 16 September 2002 1 December 2002 In force In force San Marino 18 July 1998 13 May 1999 1 July 2002 In force In force Senegal 18 July 1998 2 February 1999 1 July 2002 Serbia 19 December 2000 6 September 2001 1 July 2002 Seychelles 28 December 2000 10 August 2010 1 November 2010 Sierra Leone 17 October 1998 15 September 2000 1 July 2002 Slovakia 23 December 1998 11 April 2002 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified In force In force In force Slovenia 7 October 1998 31 December 2001 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified In force In force In force In force South Africa 17 July 1998 27 November 2000 1 July 2002 Spain 18 July 1998 24 October 2000 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified Suriname 15 July 2008 1 October 2008 Sweden 7 October 1998 28 June 2001 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified In force Switzerland 18 July 1998 12 October 2001 1 July 2002 In force In force Ratified In force In force In force In force Tanzania 29 December 2000 20 August 2002 1 November 2002 Tajikistan 30 November 1998 5 May 2000 1 July 2002 Trinidad and Tobago 23 March 1999 6 April 1999 1 July 2002 In force In force Tunisia 24 June 2011 1 September 2011 Uganda 17 March 1999 14 June 2002 1 September 2002 Ukraine 20 January 2000 25 October 2024 1 January 2025 Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified Ratified United Kingdom 30 November 1998 4 October 2001 1 July 2002 Uruguay 19 December 2000 28 June 2002 1 September 2002 In force In force Ratified In force In force In force In force Vanuatu 2 December 2011 1 February 2012 Venezuela 14 October 1998 7 June 2000 1 July 2002 Zambia 17 July 1998 13 November 2002 1 February 2003 Implementing legislation The Rome Statute obliges states parties to cooperate with the Court in the investigation and prosecution of crimes including the arrest and surrender of suspects Part 9 of the Statute requires all states parties to ensure that there are procedures available under their national law for all of the forms of cooperation which are specified under this Part Under the Rome Statute s complementarity principle the Court only has jurisdiction over cases where the relevant state is unwilling or unable to investigate and if appropriate prosecute the case itself Therefore many states parties have implemented national legislation to provide for the investigation and prosecution of crimes that fall under the jurisdiction of the Court As of April 2006 the following states had enacted or drafted implementing legislation States Complementarity legislation Co operation legislation Australia Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria Canada Croatia Denmark Estonia Finland Georgia Germany Iceland Liechtenstein Lithuania Malta Netherlands New Zealand Slovakia South Africa Spain Trinidad and Tobago United Kingdom Enacted Enacted Colombia Congo Serbia Montenegro Enacted Draft Burundi Costa Rica Mali Niger Portugal Enacted None France Norway Peru Poland Slovenia Sweden Switzerland Draft Enacted Austria Japan Latvia Romania None Enacted Argentina Benin Bolivia Botswana Brazil Central African Republic Democratic Republic of Congo Dominica Gabon Ghana Greece Ireland Italy Kenya Lesotho Luxembourg Nigeria Samoa Senegal Uganda Uruguay Zambia Draft Draft Dominican Republic Ecuador Honduras Hungary Jordan Panama Venezuela Draft None Mexico None Draft Afghanistan Albania Andorra Antigua and Barbuda Barbados Belize Burkina Faso Cambodia Cyprus Djibouti Fiji the Gambia Guinea Guyana Liberia Malawi Marshall Islands Mauritius Mongolia Namibia Nauru North Macedonia Paraguay Saint Vincent and the Grenadines San Marino Sierra Leone Tajikistan Tanzania Timor Leste None None Timeline of signatures and ratifications accessions Total number of states parties from 1999 to 2006 Date Signatures 31 December 1998 71 31 December 1999 92 31 December 2000 139 Date Ratifications accessions Remaining signatories Denunciations 31 December 1998 0 71 0 31 December 1999 6 86 31 December 2000 27 112 31 December 2001 48 92 31 December 2002 87 55 31 December 2003 92 51 31 December 2004 97 46 31 December 2005 100 43 31 December 2006 104 41 31 December 2007 105 31 December 2008 108 40 31 December 2009 110 38 31 December 2010 114 34 31 December 2011 120 32 31 December 2012 121 31 December 2013 122 31 31 December 2014 31 December 2015 123 31 December 2016 124 31 December 2017 123 1 31 December 2018 31 December 2019 2 31 December 2020 31 December 2021 31 December 2022 31 December 2023 124 30 31 December 2024 125 29 States that have denounced the Rome Statute are no longer considered signatories Regional groups and minimum voting requirements The number of states parties from the several United Nations regional groups has an influence on the regional minimum voting requirements during elections of judges Paragraph 20 b of the procedure for the nomination and election of judges of the Court states that each Party must vote for at least as many candidates from a regional group as would be required to bring the number of judges from that group to two If however more than 16 states parties belong to the group this target is increased to three The following table lists how many states parties there are from each regional group as of August 2024 update After the accession of the Maldives on 1 December 2011 the Asia Pacific Group became the last regional group to reach the threshold size of 17 members just in time to increase the minimum voting requirement for this group in the 2011 election Since then the target for the regional minimum voting requirement has remained at three for all regional groups This has resulted in at least three judges from each regional group sitting on the bench except during the term from 2020 to 2023 when there were only two judges from the Asia Pacific group Because only a single candidate from that group was nominated in the 2020 election no minimum voting requirement was applied for the group and the one nominee was not elected Group Number of states parties African Group 33 Asia Pacific Group 19 Eastern European Group 20 Latin American and Caribbean Group 28 Western European and Others Group 25WithdrawalArticle 127 of the Rome Statute allows for states to withdraw from the ICC Withdrawal takes effect one year after notification of the depositary and has no effect on prosecution that has already started As of April 2025 four states have given formal notice of their intention to withdraw from the statute although two rescinded the notification before it came into effect State party Signed Ratified or acceded Entry into force Withdrawal notified Withdrawal effective Withdrawal rescinded Burundi 13 January 1999 21 September 2004 1 December 2004 27 October 2016 27 October 2017 Gambia The 4 December 1998 28 June 2002 1 September 2002 10 November 2016 10 February 2017 Philippines 28 December 2000 30 August 2011 1 November 2011 17 March 2018 17 March 2019 South Africa 17 July 1998 27 November 2000 1 July 2002 19 October 2016 7 March 2017 Several states have argued that the ICC is a tool of Western imperialism only punishing leaders from small weak states while ignoring crimes committed by richer and more powerful states This sentiment has been expressed particularly by African states 34 of which are members of the ICC due to a perceived disproportionate focus of the Court on Africa Nine out of the ten situations which the ICC has investigated were in African countries In June 2009 several African states including Comoros Djibouti and Senegal called on African states parties to withdraw en masse from the statute in protest against the indictment of Sudanese President Omar al Bashir In September 2013 Kenya s National Assembly passed a motion to withdraw from the ICC in protest against the ICC prosecution of Kenyan Deputy President William Ruto and President Uhuru Kenyatta both charged before coming into office A mass withdrawal from the ICC by African member states in response to the trial of Kenyan authorities was discussed at a special summit of the African Union in October The summit concluded that serving heads of state should not be put on trial and that the Kenyan cases should be deferred However the summit did not endorse the proposal for a mass withdrawal due to lack of support for the idea In November the ICC s Assembly of State Parties responded by agreeing to consider proposed amendments to the Rome Statute to address the AU s concerns In October November 2016 Burundi South Africa and The Gambia all notified the UNSG of their intention to withdraw from the ICC Burundi was the subject of an ongoing preliminary investigation by the ICC at the time South Africa s exit followed its refusal to execute an ICC warrant for Sudan s al Bashir when he was in the country Following The Gambia s presidential election later that year which ended the long rule of Yahya Jammeh The Gambia rescinded its withdrawal notification The constitutionality of South Africa s notice was challenged by the Democratic Alliance opposition party which argued that the approval of parliament was required and not sought The High Court of South Africa ruled in February 2017 that the government s notification was not legal and it was required to revoke the notice effective 7 March 2017 A parliamentary bill on ICC withdrawal was subsequently withdrawn by the government The governing African National Congress party continued to support withdrawing and in 2019 a new bill was put before Parliament to withdraw from the Statute though this was also withdrawn in March 2023 Following the issuance of ICC arrest warrants for Vladimir Putin and Maria Lvova Belova of Russia in March 2023 due to the deportation of children from Ukraine to Russia during the Russian invasion of Ukraine South African president Cyril Ramaphosa declared that his country had decided to withdraw from the treaty to allow Putin to visit their country without risk of arrest for the upcoming 2023 BRICS summit hosted in South Africa However it was subsequently clarified that such a decision had not been made On March 14 2018 Rodrigo Duterte the Philippine President who was under preliminary examination by the ICC for his controversial war on drugs campaign announced that the country would withdraw from the Rome Statute He argued that while the Statute was ratified by the Senate of the Philippines in 2011 it was never published in the Official Gazette of the Philippines a requirement for penal laws of which the Rome Statute subscribes as such to take effect Hence he claimed that the Philippines was never a State Party ab initio Additionally he stated that the ICC was being utilized as a political tool against weak targets such as the Philippines The United Nations received the official notification of withdrawal on March 17 2018 one year later March 17 2019 by rule the Philippines withdrawal became official The legal validity of the withdrawal was challenged at the Supreme Court of the Philippines which dismissed the case in 2021 in a unanimous decision for being moot and academic Nevertheless the Supreme Court affirmed that the Philippines was obliged to cooperate with the ICC regarding acts committed while the Rome Statute was still in effect While Bongbong Marcos Duterte s successor as President initially stated that the country has no intention of rejoining the ICC in 2023 he stated that he was studying the possibility of rejoining The Philippine government also confirmed that it would extradite Duterte to the ICC if the matter were transferred to Interpol When an arrest warrant was issued in March 2025 Duterte was arrested by Philippine police and surrendered to the custody of the ICC shortly thereafter A spokesperson for president stated that the country had not yet discussed any plan of rejoining the ICC In February 2025 following the ICC prosecutor s request for arrest warrants against Supreme Leader Hibatullah Akhundzada and Chief Justice Abdul Hakim Haqqani the Taliban government which is not recognized by the United Nations issued a decree purporting to withdraw Afghanistan from the ICC effective immediately and retroactively nullify the accession in 2003 On 3 April 2025 Hungary announced that they would begin the process of withdrawing from the ICC just hours after Benjamin Netanyahu who was wanted by the court for his alleged war crimes in Gaza arrived to the country for an official visit Prime Minister Viktor Orban stated that the court s decision to prosecute Netanyahu showed it had become a political court The decision marked the first time a European Union member state decided to withdraw from the Rome Statute Acceptance of jurisdictionPursuant to article 12 3 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court a state that is not a party to the Statute may by declaration lodged with the Registrar accept the exercise of jurisdiction by the Court with respect to the crime in question Even if the state that does so is not a State Party to the Statute the relevant provisions of the statute would still be applicable on the accepting state but only on an ad hoc basis To date the Court has received six article 12 3 declarations Additionally a declaration was submitted in December 2013 by the Freedom and Justice Party of Egypt seeking to accept jurisdiction on behalf of Egypt However the Office of the Prosecutor found that as the party has lost power following the 2013 Egyptian coup d etat that July it did not have the authority to make the declaration State Date of acceptance Start of jurisdiction End of jurisdiction Date of membership Cote d Ivoire 18 April 2003 19 September 2002 Indefinite 1 May 2013 Palestine 21 January 2009 1 July 2002 Indefinite 1 April 2015 Ukraine 9 April 2014 21 November 2013 22 February 2014 1 January 2025 Palestine 31 December 2014 13 June 2014 Indefinite 1 April 2015 Ukraine 8 September 2015 20 February 2014 Indefinite 1 January 2025 Armenia 15 November 2023 10 May 2021 Indefinite 1 February 2024 Declaration was deemed invalid by the Office of the Prosecutor Signatories which have not ratifiedOf the 139 states that had signed the Rome Statute 29 have not ratified Of these 4 have formally indicated that they no longer plan to ratify the treaty State Signature Algeria 28 December 2000 Angola 7 October 1998 Bahamas The 29 December 2000 Bahrain 11 December 2000 Cameroon 17 July 1998 Egypt 26 December 2000 Eritrea 7 October 1998 Guinea Bissau 12 September 2000 Haiti 26 February 1999 Iran 31 December 2000 Israel 31 December 2000 Jamaica 8 September 2000 Kuwait 8 September 2000 Kyrgyzstan 8 December 1998 Monaco 18 July 1998 Morocco 8 September 2000 Mozambique 28 December 2000 Oman 20 December 2000 Russia 13 September 2000 Sao Tome and Principe 28 December 2000 Solomon Islands 3 December 1998 Sudan 8 September 2000 Syria 29 November 2000 Thailand 2 October 2000 United Arab Emirates 27 November 2000 United States 31 December 2000 Uzbekistan 29 December 2000 Yemen 28 December 2000 Zimbabwe 17 July 1998 States which have declared that they no longer intend to ratify the treaty According to the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties a state that has signed but not ratified a treaty is obliged to refrain from acts which would defeat the object and purpose of the treaty However these obligations do not continue if the state has made its intention clear not to become a party to the treaty Four signatory states Israel Russia Sudan and the United States have informed the UN Secretary General that they no longer intend to become parties to the Rome Statute and as such have no legal obligations arising from their signature Bahrain The government of Bahrain originally announced in May 2006 that it would ratify the Rome Statute in the session ending in July 2006 By December 2006 the ratification had not yet been completed but the Coalition for the International Criminal Court said they expected ratification in 2007 Israel Israel voted against the adoption of the Rome Statute but later signed it for a short period In 2002 Israel notified the UN Secretary General that it no longer intended to become a party to the Rome Statute and as such it has no legal obligations arising from their signature of the statute Israel states that it has deep sympathy with the goals of the Court However it has concerns that political pressure on the Court would lead it to reinterpret international law or to invent new crimes It cites the inclusion of the transfer of parts of the civilian population of an occupying power into occupied territory as a war crime as an example of this whilst at the same time disagrees with the exclusion of terrorism and drug trafficking Israel sees the powers given to the prosecutor as excessive and the geographical appointment of judges as disadvantaging Israel which was prevented from joining any of the UN Regional Groups Kuwait At a conference in 2007 the Kuwaiti Bar Association and the Secretary of the National Assembly of Kuwait Hussein Al Hereti called for Kuwait to join the Court Russia Russia signed the Rome Statute in 2000 On 14 November 2016 the ICC published a report on its preliminary investigation of the Russo Ukrainian War which found that the situation within the territory of Crimea and Sevastopol factually amounts to an on going state of occupation and that information such as reported shelling by both States of military positions of the other and the detention of Russian military personnel by Ukraine and vice versa points to direct military engagement between Russian armed forces and Ukrainian government forces that would suggest the existence of an international armed conflict in the context of armed hostilities in eastern Ukraine In response a presidential decree by Russian President Vladimir Putin approved sending the Secretary General of the United Nations notice of the intention of the Russian Federation to no longer be a party to the Rome Statute Formal notice was given on 30 November 2016 Sudan Sudan signed the Rome Statute in 2000 In 2005 the ICC opened an investigation into the war in Darfur a region of Sudan Omar al Bashir the President of Sudan was indicted in 2009 On 26 August 2008 Sudan notified the UN Secretary General that it no longer intended to ratify the treaty and therefore no longer bears any legal obligations arising from its signature Following the 2019 Sudanese coup d etat Sadiq al Mahdi a former Prime Minister of Sudan who backs the opposition called for Sudan to join the ICC On 4 August 2021 the Sudanese government approved unanimously a draft bill to join the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court Thailand Former Senator Kraisak Choonhavan called in November 2006 for Thailand to ratify the Rome Statute and to accept retrospective jurisdiction so that former premier Thaksin Shinawatra could be investigated for crimes against humanity connected to 2 500 alleged extrajudicial killings carried out in 2003 against suspected drug dealers United States The United States signed the Rome Statute in December 2000 under President Bill Clinton but Clinton decided not to submit the treaty to the United States Senate for ratification stating I will not and do not recommend that my successor George W Bush submit the treaty to the Senate for advice and consent until our fundamental concerns are satisfied Opponents of the ICC in the U S Senate are skeptical of new international institutions and still jealously protective of American sovereignty before the Rome Statute opposition to the ICC was largely headed by Republican Senator Jesse Helms On May 6 2002 the Bush administration stated that the U S did not intend to become a state party to the ICC in a letter to Secretary General of the United Nations Kofi Annan Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security John Bolton stated that the United States does not intend to become a party to the treaty and that the United States has no legal obligations arising from its signature on December 31 2000 This letter is sometimes called the unsigning of the treaty but legal opinions on its actual legal effects differ with some scholars arguing that the president does not have the power to unilaterally unsign treaties The United States adopted a hostile stance towards the Court throughout most of the Bush presidency In 2002 Congress enacted the American Servicemembers Protection Act ASPA which was signed into law on August 2 2002 the overriding purpose of the ASPA was to inhibit the U S government from supporting the ICC Major provisions of the ASPA blocked U S funding of the ICC and required the U S to enter into agreements with all ICC signatory states to shield American citizens abroad from ICC jurisdiction under the auspices of Article 98 of the Rome Statute which bars the ICC from prosecuting individuals located on the territory of an ICC member state where such action by the Court would cause the member state to violate the terms of any other bilateral or multilateral treaty to which it is a party Traditionally Article 98 was used in relation to traditional status of forces agreements SOFAs and status of mission agreements SOMAs in which nations hosting U S military personnel by invitation agreed to immunize them from prosecution in foreign courts The Bush administration supported by opponents of the ICC in Congress adopted a new strategy of aggressively pursuing Bilateral Immunity Agreements BIAs which guarantee immunity from ICC prosecution for all American citizens in the country with which the agreement is concluded rather than just U S military forces Under the original ASPA nations who refused to conclude BIAs with the United States were subject to sanctions including the loss of military aid though these provisions have since been repealed As of December 2006 the U S State Department reported that it had signed 102 BIAs In 2002 the United States threatened to veto the renewal of all United Nations peacekeeping missions unless its troops were granted immunity from prosecution by the Court In a compromise move the Security Council passed Resolution 1422 on 12 July 2002 granting immunity to personnel from ICC non states parties involved in United Nations established or authorized missions for a renewable twelve month period This was renewed for twelve months in 2003 but the Security Council refused to renew the exemption again in 2004 after pictures emerged of US troops abusing Iraqi prisoners in Abu Ghraib and the US withdrew its demand Under the Obama administration the U S did not take moves to ratify the Rome Statute but did adopt a cautious case by case approach to supporting the ICC by supporting cases before the ICC Secretary of State Hillary Clinton stated that the U S encouraged effective ICC action in ways that promote U S interests by bringing war criminals to justice U S steps in support of the ICC undertaken under the Obama administration included participating in the annual Assembly of States Parties as an observer using the U S s permanent seat on the UN Security Council to support the referral of cases to the ICC including Libya in 2011 sharing intelligence on fugitives and providing other substantial in kind support to the ICC and expanding the War Crimes Rewards Program The first Trump administration strained relations with the ICC stating it would revoke visas for any ICC staff seeking to investigate Americans for war crimes Secretary of State Mike Pompeo stated that such revocations could be applied to any staff involved with investigating war crimes committed by Israel or other allied nations as well Yemen On 24 March 2007 the Yemeni parliament voted to ratify the Rome Statute However some MPs claim that this vote breached parliamentary rules and demanded another vote In that further vote the ratification was retracted Non party non signatory statesThe deadline for signing the Rome Statute expired following 31 December 2000 States that did not sign before that date have to accede to the Statute in a single step Of all the states that are members of the United Nations observers in the United Nations General Assembly or otherwise recognized by the Secretary General of the United Nations as states with full treaty making capacities there are 41 which have neither signed nor acceded to the Statute Azerbaijan Belarus Bhutan Brunei China Cuba Equatorial Guinea Ethiopia India Indonesia Iraq Kazakhstan Korea North Laos Lebanon Libya Malaysia Mauritania Micronesia Myanmar Nepal Nicaragua Niue Pakistan Palau Papua New Guinea Qatar Rwanda Saudi Arabia Singapore Somalia South Sudan Sri Lanka Swaziland Togo Tonga Turkey Turkmenistan Tuvalu Vatican City Vietnam Additionally in accordance with practice and declarations filed with the Secretary General the Rome Statute is not in force in the following dependent territories Guernsey a Crown dependency of the United Kingdom Jersey a Crown dependency of the United Kingdom Tokelau a territory of New Zealand China The People s Republic of China has opposed the Court on the basis that it goes against the sovereignty of nation states that the principle of complementarity gives the Court the ability to judge a nation s court system that war crimes jurisdiction covers internal as well as international conflicts that the Court s jurisdiction covers peacetime crimes against humanity that the inclusion of the crime of aggression weakens the role of the UN Security Council and that the Prosecutor s right to initiate prosecutions may open the Court to political influence India The government of India has consistently opposed the Court It abstained in the vote adopting the statute in 1998 saying it objected to the broad definition adopted of crimes against humanity the rights given to the UN Security Council to refer and delay investigations and bind non states parties and the use of nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction not being explicitly criminalized Other anxieties about the Court concern how the principle of complementarity would be applied to the Indian criminal justice system the inclusion of war crimes for non international conflicts and the power of the Prosecutor to initiate prosecutions Indonesia Indonesia has stated that it supports the adoption of the Rome Statute and that universal participation should be the cornerstone of the International Criminal Court In 2004 the President of Indonesia adopted a National Plan of Action on Human Rights which states that Indonesia intends to ratify the Rome Statute in 2008 This was confirmed in 2007 by Foreign Minister Hassan Wirajuda and the head of the Indonesian People s Representative Council s Committee on Security and International Affairs Theo L Sambuaga In May 2013 Defense Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro stated that the government needed more time to carefully and thoroughly review the pros and cons of the ratification Iraq In February 2005 the Iraqi Transitional Government decided to ratify the Rome Statute However two weeks later they reversed this decision a move that the Coalition for the International Criminal Court claimed was due to pressure from the United States Lebanon In March 2009 Lebanese Justice Minister said the government had decided not to join for now The Coalition for the International Criminal Court claimed this was due in part to intense pressure from the United States who feared it could result in the prosecution of Israelis in a future conflict Following the outbreak of the Gaza war which triggered clashes between Israel and the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah in April 2024 Lebanon s cabinet decided to submit a declaration to the ICC accepting the court s jurisdiction over crimes committed on Lebanese territory since 7 October 2023 However the following month this decision was reversed and the declaration was not submitted Malaysia Malaysia submitted an instrument of accession to the Rome Statute on 4 March 2019 which was to enter into force on 1 June However on 29 April 2019 Malaysia submitted a notice withdrawing its instrument of accession effective immediately to the Secretary General of the United Nations preventing it from acceding Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad explained that the withdrawal was due to concerns over its constitutionality as well as possible infringement of the sovereignty of the Malay Rulers Nepal On 25 July 2006 the Nepalese House of Representatives directed the government to ratify the Rome Statute Under Nepalese law this motion is compulsory for the Executive Following a resolution by Parliament requesting that the government ratify the Statute Narahari Acharya Ministry of Law Justice Constituent Assembly and Parliamentary Affairs of Nepal said in March 2015 that it had formed a taskforce to conduct a study about the process However he said that it was possible only after promulgating the new constitution which was being debated by the 2nd Nepalese Constituent Assembly Pakistan Pakistan has supported the aims of the International Court and voted for the Rome Statute in 1998 However Pakistan has not signed the agreement on the basis of several objections including the fact that the Statute does not provide for reservations upon ratification or accession the inclusion of provisional arrest and the lack of immunity for heads of state In addition Pakistan one of the largest suppliers of UN peacekeepers has like the United States expressed reservations about the potential use of politically motivated charges against peacekeepers South Sudan South Sudan s President Salva Kiir Mayardit said in 2013 that the country would not join the ICC Turkey Turkey is currently a candidate country to join the European Union which has required progress on human rights issues in order to continue with accession talks Part of this has included pressure but not a requirement on Turkey to join the Court which is supported under the EU s Common Foreign and Security Policy Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan stated in October 2004 that Turkey would soon ratify the Rome Statute and the Turkish constitution was amended in 2004 to explicitly allow nationals to be surrendered to the Court However in January 2008 the Erdogan government reversed its position deciding to shelve accession because of concerns it could undermine efforts against the Kurdistan Workers Party PKK See alsoList of presidents and vice presidents of the Assembly of States Parties of the International Criminal Court European Union and the International Criminal Court Armenia and the International Criminal CourtNotesOn 15 November 2023 the Armenian government submitted a declaration dated the same day accepting the Court s jurisdiction for genocide crimes against humanity and war crimes starting from 10 May 2021 Colombia made a declaration under article 124 of the Rome Statute to exempt war crimes committed by its nationals or on its territory from the jurisdiction of the Court for a period of seven years This declaration came into force with the coming into force of the Rome Statute for Colombia on 1 November 2002 and expired on 31 October 2009 On 1 October 2003 the Ivorian government submitted a declaration dated 18 April 2003 accepting the Court s jurisdiction for acts committed on Ivorian territory since the events of 19 September 2002 Cote d Ivoire subsequently acceded to the Rome Statute on 15 February 2013 and therefore is now a state party The Rome Statute entered into force for the Faroe Islands on 1 October 2006 and for Greenland on 1 October 2004 France made a declaration under article 124 of the Rome Statute to exempt war crimes committed by its nationals or on its territory from the jurisdiction of the Court for a period of seven years This declaration came into force with the coming into force of the Rome Statute for France on 1 July 2002 France withdrew its declaration on 13 August 2008 with effect from 15 June 2008 The Gambia formally notified the depositary of its intentions to withdraw from the Statute effective 10 November 2017 However this notification was rescinded effective 10 February 2017 Montenegro succeeded to the Rome Statute on 3 June 2006 the date of its independence from Serbia and Montenegro per a declaration it sent to the Secretary General of the United Nations which was received on 23 October 2006 The Rome Statute is not in force for Tokelau The Palestinian National Authority submitted a declaration on 22 January 2009 dated the previous day accepting the Court s jurisdiction for acts committed on the territory of Palestine since 1 July 2002 However on 3 April 2012 the Prosecutor of the ICC deemed the declaration invalid because the Rome Statute only permits sovereign states to make such a declaration and Palestine was designated an observer entity within the United Nations the body that is the depositary for the Rome Statute at the time On 29 November 2012 the United Nations General Assembly voted in favour of recognising Palestine as a non member observer state However in November 2013 the Office of the Prosecutor concluded that this decision did not cure the legal invalidity of the 2009 declaration A second declaration accepting the court s jurisdiction was reportedly submitted in July 2014 by Palestine s Justice Minister Saleem al Saqqa and General Prosecutor Ismaeil Jabr but the prosecutor responded that only the head of state head of government or minister of foreign affairs had the authority to make such a declaration After failing to receive confirmation from Minister of Foreign Affairs Riyad al Maliki during an August meeting that the declaration had been made on behalf of the Palestinian government the Prosecutor concluded that the declaration was invalid because it did not come from an authority with the power to make it On 2 September 2014 the Prosecutor clarified that if Palestine filed a new declaration or acceded to the Rome Statute it would be deemed valid In December 2014 the assembly of state parties of the ICC recognized Palestine as a state without prejudice to any legal or other decisions taken by the court or any other organization A new declaration was submitted on 1 January 2015 by Palestine dated 31 December 2014 accepting the court s jurisdiction effective 13 June 2014 Palestine acceded to the Rome Statute on 2 January 2015 becoming state party to the ICC The prosecutor launched a preliminary examination of the situation in Palestine on 16 January 2015 and on 22 January 2020 requested a ruling by the court on the territorial jurisdiction of the Rome Statute in Palestine The ICC Pre Trial Chamber ruled on 5 February 2021 that due to Palestine s accession to the Rome Statute the ICC had jurisdiction over territories occupied by Israel since 1967 namely Gaza and the West Bank including East Jerusalem Canada filed a declaration stating that it does not recognize Palestine as a state and as such it does not consider the Rome Statute to be in force between it and Palestine South Africa formally notified the depositary of its intentions to withdraw from the Statute effective 19 October 2017 However this notification was rescinded effective 7 March 2017 Ukraine submitted a declaration accepting the jurisdiction of the Court for a limited time period on 17 April 2014 Another declaration accepting jurisdiction indefinitely was submitted on 8 September 2015 Ukraine subsequently acceded to the Rome Statute on 1 January 2025 and therefore is now a state party Upon ratification Ukraine made a declaration under article 124 of the Rome Statute to exempt war crimes committed by its nationals from the jurisdiction of the Court for a period of seven years This declaration came into force with the coming into force of the Rome Statute for Ukraine on 1 January 2025 and will expire on 1 January 2032 The Rome Statute entered into force for Akrotiri and Dhekelia Anguilla Bermuda the British Virgin Islands the Cayman Islands the Falkland Islands Montserrat the Pitcairn Islands Saint Helena Ascension and Tristan da Cunha and the Turks and Caicos Islands on 11 March 2010 The Statute entered into force for the Isle of Man on 1 February 2013 The Statute entered into force for Gibraltar on 20 April 2015 The legal validity of the Philippines withdrawal was challenged at the Supreme Court of the Philippines but was dismissed in a unanimous decision for being moot and academic two years after the country s official withdrawal from the tribunal Signature withdrawn on 28 August 2002 Signature withdrawn on 30 November 2016 Signature withdrawn on 26 August 2008 Signature withdrawn on 6 May 2002 Malaysia submitted an instrument of accession to the Rome Statute on 4 March 2019 which was to enter into force on 1 June However on 29 April 2019 Malaysia submitted a notice withdrawing its instrument of accession effective immediately preventing it from acceding For more details see Malaysia References Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court United Nations Treaty Collection 2024 10 26 Retrieved 2024 10 26 Amendment to article 8 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court United Nations Treaty Collection 2018 09 29 Retrieved 2018 09 29 Amendments on the crime of aggression to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court United Nations Treaty Collection 2019 09 26 Retrieved 2019 09 26 Chapter XVIII Penal Matters 10 c Amendment to article 124 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court United Nations Treaty Collection 2019 05 17 Retrieved 2019 05 17 CHAPTER XVIII PENAL MATTERS 10 d Amendment to article 8 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court Weapons which use microbial or other biological agents or toxins United Nations Treaty Collection 2020 07 15 Retrieved 2020 07 16 CHAPTER XVIII PENAL MATTERS 10 e Amendment to article 8 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court Weapons the primary effect of which is to injure by fragments undetectable by x rays in the human body United Nations Treaty Collection 2020 07 15 Retrieved 2020 07 16 CHAPTER XVIII PENAL MATTERS 10 f Amendment to article 8 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court Blinding laser weapons United Nations Treaty Collection 2020 07 15 Retrieved 2020 07 16 CHAPTER XVIII PENAL MATTERS 10 g Amendment to article 8 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court Intentionally using starvation of civilians United Nations Treaty Collection 2024 08 25 Retrieved 2024 08 25 Declaration by the Republic of Cote d Ivoire Accepting the Jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court PDF International Criminal Court 2003 04 18 Retrieved 2011 04 06 Depository Notification C N 57 2015 TREATIES XVIII 10 PDF United Nations 2015 01 23 Retrieved 2015 01 31 Ukraine accepts ICC jurisdiction over alleged crimes committed between 21 November 2013 and 22 February 2014 ICC 2014 04 17 Archived from the original on May 17 2014 Retrieved 2014 09 05 Ukraine accepts ICC jurisdiction over alleged crimes committed since 20 February 2014 ICC 2015 09 08 Archived from the original on Sep 17 2015 Retrieved 2015 09 08 Amnesty International Implementation Archived 2006 12 14 at the Wayback Machine 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