The International Criminal Court, that grand edifice of globalist legalism, has suspended its chief prosecutor amid a misconduct probe. Britain, ever the moralising scold, seizes the moment to call for ‘reform.’ One might laugh if the implications were not so grave. This is not a blip; it is a symptom of a rot that infests our institutions, a decadence reminiscent of the late Roman Empire when the law became a tool of politics rather than justice.
The ICC was conceived as a beacon of impartiality, a tribunal to hold tyrants accountable. Instead, it has become a stage for show trials and geopolitical manoeuvring. The suspension of its chief prosecutor over allegations of misconduct is a farce. One wonders: misconduct by whose standards? The court has been accused of bias against Western allies and soft-pedalling on African strongmen. Now, when its own house is in disarray, Britain tut-tuts and demands reform. How predictable.
Britain, a nation that once understood the dignity of law, now plays the part of the schoolmarm, wagging a finger at others while its own legal system groans under the weight of political correctness. The call for ‘reform’ is code for neutering the ICC further, making it safe for the interests of the powerful. The Victorians would have been appalled. They built an empire on the idea of law and order, however imperfect. Today, we have a court that cannot even police itself.
The suspension itself is a masterstroke of bureaucratic cowardice. Investigate the chief prosecutor, sure, but do it quietly. Instead, we get a public spectacle, a feeding frenzy for the media. The court’s credibility, already tattered, is now in tatters. This is the inevitable result of an institution built on abstractions rather than rooted in a shared culture of justice. The ICC tries to impose universal norms without the consent of the people it judges. It is no wonder it collapses under its own contradictions.
What should be done? Abolish it. Scrap the whole pretentious machinery and start again, but this time with humility. Justice cannot be imposed from on high; it must grow organically from within nations. Britain should lead by example, not by calling for reforms that will only plaster over the cracks. But of course, our leaders lack the courage for such radicalism. They prefer tinkering, managing decline.
The fall of Rome took centuries. Our fall may be swifter. If the ICC is any bellwether, we are already in the terminal phase. The suspension of its chief prosecutor is a sign of institutional decay, a reminder that when ideals become idols, they crumble. The only question is whether we have the wit to learn from history before it repeats itself as tragedy. I suspect we will not.








