SP
BravenNow
EU optimistic about joining Special Tribunal to prosecute Russian aggression against Ukraine
| Ukraine | general | βœ“ Verified - kyivindependent.com

EU optimistic about joining Special Tribunal to prosecute Russian aggression against Ukraine

πŸ“– Full Retelling

It is increasingly likely that the European Union will formally back a new court with a mandate to prosecute Russia's leadership for the crime of aggression, a senior official in the EU's diplomatic arm told the Kyiv Independent.

Entity Intersection Graph

No entity connections available yet for this article.

}
Original Source
Europe EU optimistic about joining Special Tribunal to prosecute Russian aggression against Ukraine April 22, 2026 3:12 pm β€’ 2 min read Prefer on Google by Chris Powers It is increasingly likely that the European Union will formally back a new court with a mandate to prosecute Russia's leadership for the crime of aggression, according to a senior official in the EU's diplomatic arm. "I am pretty optimistic that a positive decision will come" from the negotiations to have the EU sign up, said Frank Hoffmeister, director of the legal department in the European External Action Service. Hoffmeister spoke at an event organized by the European Policy Center think tank in Brussels, where he told the Kyiv Independent "I want to send a positive signal." The special tribunal for prosecuting the crime of aggression against Ukraine was signed off by the Council of Europe in May 2025. The idea comes from legal scholar Philippe Sands, who identified the need for a special court to directly prosecute this breach of international law, for which the International Criminal Court lacks jurisdiction. Since then, the Netherlands has come forward as the country willing to host the tribunal, preparatory work has been underway to collect evidence, and countries have begun signing on as supporters. The Kyiv Independent confirmed that enough countries were ready to do so, ahead of the formal announcement that the critical threshold of 16 signatory countries was reached. Being a signatory comes with obligations to provide funding and legal expertise to the tribunal, but it also comes with a say over when and how it will work. The European Commission declared at the end of March that it is interested in having the EU be a signatory in its own right. Hoffmeister's comments at the event confirmed the legal process: that only a qualified majority β€” 55% of EU countries representing 65% of the population β€” is required to endorse the proposal, rather than a majority. The proposal is currently being ...
Read full article at source

Source

kyivindependent.com

More from Ukraine

News from Other Countries

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ USA

πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ United Kingdom