U.K. Foreign Secretary William Hague welcomed news Monday that Moamer Gadhafi and two Libyan regime figures faced arrest for war crimes, saying crimes against civilians would not go unpunished.
U.K. Foreign Secretary William Hague welcomed news Monday that Moamer
Gadhafi and two Libyan regime figures faced arrest for war crimes, saying
crimes against civilians would not go unpunished.
He called on the international community to "fully support" the
United Nations war crimes court after its chief prosecutor requested warrants
against Gadhafi, his son Seif al-Islam and his intelligence head for crimes
against humanity.
"I welcome this announcement. The human rights situation in western
Libya
and
the behaviour of the Gadhafi regime remains of grave concern and the
U.K.
was
at the forefront of efforts in the U.N. to adopt resolution 1970 which referred
the situation in
Libya
to
the ICC," Hague said in a statement.
"The request for these warrants is a reminder to all in Gadhafi's regime
that crimes will not go unpunished and the reach of international justice will
be long. Those responsible for attacks on civilians must be held to account.
"The international community must fully support the ICC in thoroughly
investigating all allegations."
A panel of ICC judges will now have to decide whether to accept or reject the prosecutor's
application, based on his case file.
ICC chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo is also investigating four other senior
Libyan officials, including
Libya
's
former top diplomat Mussa Kussa, who arrived unexpectedly in the
U.K.
in
March and announced he was resigning.
The
U.K.
's
foreign ministry said it had not offered Mussa any immunity and he is free to
come and go.
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