The International Criminal Court has suspended its chief prosecutor Karim Khan. A misconduct probe is underway. Britain, a key state party, demands “full transparency” from The Hague.
This is a seismic event for international justice. Khan, in post since 2021, has been a divisive figure. His office pursued cases against US and Israeli officials. Washington was furious. Tel Aviv was apoplectic. Now, internal allegations of misconduct have brought him down. For now.
The ICC’s oversight body confirmed the suspension late yesterday. No details on the allegations. Only that a “preliminary investigation” found them serious enough to warrant his removal from duties. Khan denies wrongdoing. His allies cry foul. A smear campaign, they insist.
But the damage is done. The court’s credibility is on the line. Britain’s statement was carefully calibrated. Foreign Office sources say London wants to avoid the appearance of meddling. Yet the message is clear: sort this out, or lose our confidence.
Whitehall insiders note the timing is awkward. The government has been pushing for greater accountability in Gaza. Khan’s office was investigating Israeli actions. That investigation is now in limbo. Critics will say Britain’s call for transparency is convenient. Defenders counter that the rules must apply to everyone, even the top prosecutor.
Backbench MPs are already mobilising. A cross-party letter is circulating, demanding a full independent inquiry. Labour’s shadow attorney general is leading the charge. The government is treading carefully. They don’t want to be seen as undermining the ICC. But they can’t ignore the crisis.
The real game is in the lobbying. The US is watching closely. European allies are divided. France is quiet. Germany is cautious. The UK is playing the honest broker. For now.
What happens next? The ICC’s assembly of states parties will meet. An interim prosecutor will be appointed. The investigation into Khan will take months. The court’s future hangs in the balance.
Westminster’s verdict? This is a mess of the ICC’s own making. But it’s also an opportunity. A chance to clean house and restore trust. Whether they take it remains to be seen.
Stay tuned. This story has legs.









