
ICC Unsettled by Fresh Departures As Three More Nations Prepare To Quit
As some African states prepare to exit, the Hague court appears to be losing the trust of its member nations.

As some African states prepare to exit, the Hague court appears to be losing the trust of its member nations.

What began as questions over a ruling party doctor’s €370,000 salary has exploded into a sprawling investigation involving alleged medical malpractice, political favouritism, and multiple state agencies.

The Irish teacher criticized the judge for accepting a “biased” process and contrasted his treatment with last week’s Dublin Pride parade.

Nearly 70 leftist NGOs lobby EP President Roberta Metsola for “measures” against right-wing MEPs over “racist hate speech” after a landmark migrant deportation vote.

Briefings suggest that a Swedish supplier of airborne radar (and more) will be announced at next week’s defence meeting in Ankara.

A leaked police assessment says radical activists are expected to hide among thousands of demonstrators as authorities prepare one of the biggest security operations in Thuringia’s history.

The Venice Commission indicated that it was ready to urgently discuss the Hungarian President’s submission regarding the constitutional crisis in Hungary.

Kyiv wants trust, sanctions, and funding; Berlin responds with an indictment that could break years of diplomatic silence.

It didn’t take much, just one question.

Beijing’s “ethnic unity law” appears to have unsettled EU apparatchiks—who just started fretting in public about “extraterritorial application of third-country legislation.”
As some African states prepare to exit, the Hague court appears to be losing the trust of its member nations.
What began as questions over a ruling party doctor’s €370,000 salary has exploded into a sprawling investigation involving alleged medical malpractice, political favouritism, and multiple state agencies.
The Irish teacher criticized the judge for accepting a “biased” process and contrasted his treatment with last week’s Dublin Pride parade.
Nearly 70 leftist NGOs lobby EP President Roberta Metsola for “measures” against right-wing MEPs over “racist hate speech” after a landmark migrant deportation vote.
Briefings suggest that a Swedish supplier of airborne radar (and more) will be announced at next week’s defence meeting in Ankara.
A leaked police assessment says radical activists are expected to hide among thousands of demonstrators as authorities prepare one of the biggest security operations in Thuringia’s history.
The Venice Commission indicated that it was ready to urgently discuss the Hungarian President’s submission regarding the constitutional crisis in Hungary.
Kyiv wants trust, sanctions, and funding; Berlin responds with an indictment that could break years of diplomatic silence.
It didn’t take much, just one question.
Beijing’s “ethnic unity law” appears to have unsettled EU apparatchiks—who just started fretting in public about “extraterritorial application of third-country legislation.”
The lyrics of the song by the Wrexham Unite music project clearly resonate with the public mood after the brutal attack on Stephen Ogilvie.
“Another horrific night for the residents of the city, who were forced to spend it in shelters,” reported Ukraine’s ambassador to the U.S. Olha Stefanishyna on X.