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PGA’s vision is to contribute to the creation of a Rules-Based International Order for a more equitable, safe, sustainable and democratic world.

Armenia and the Rome Statute

Armenia’s Instrument of Ratification of the ICC Rome Statute Deposited at the UN. Photo: Permanent Mission of Armenia to the United Nations
Armenia’s Instrument of Ratification of the ICC Rome Statute Deposited at the UN. Photo: Permanent Mission of Armenia to the United Nations

Rome Statute

Armenia signed the Rome Statute on 1 October 1999. On 14 November, 2023, Ambassador Mher Margaryan deposited Armenia’s instrument of ratification to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, with Armenia becoming the 124th State Party to the ICC.

Kampala Amendments

Armenia has not ratified the Kampala Amendments of 2010.

Implementing legislation

In 2003, Armenia enacted partial implementing legislation, which incorporates some of the ICC crimes, which include genocide, serious breaches of international humanitarian law during armed conflicts (war crimes), and ‘crimes against human security’.

Agreement on Privileges and Immunities (APIC)

Armenia has yet to acceded to the APIC.

Additional Agreements

Armenia signed a Bilateral Non Surrender Agreement with the USA on 16 October 2004.

Progress towards Ratification

In 2004, the Armenian Constitutional Court ruled that the Statute was partially incompatible with the Armenian constitution and could not be ratified. The ruling affirmed that the ICC would supplement the Armenian national judicial system, hence requiring an amendment to the Constitution that would address the matter of judicial sovereignty (Articles 91, 92) and the rather hypothetical matter of the discretional authority provided to the President to pardon convicted persons.

In the 2006, within the framework of the Action Plan within the EU European Neighbourhood Policy, the Government of Armenia committed to initiate the process of ratifying the Rome Statute and to make the necessary legislative and constitutional amendments. 

A constitutional review, which begun in 2013, could have paved the way for necessary amendments to allow for ratification. In March 2015, the president approved a reform strategy that could have provided for such amendments. Regretfully, as recently as in November 2015, the President decided not to include in his proposal to reform the Constitution an "ICC-clause", which had been drafted by the Constitutional Reform Commission that was tasked with the mandate of preparing constitutional amendments in the year marking the 100 Anniversary of the genocide.  As of early 2016, the Armenian ratification process of the Rome Statute appears blocked.

As reported by an NGO representative who addressed the EU-CICC side-event during the November 2015 session of the Assembly of States Parties to the Rome Statute of the ICC, the President of Armenia decided not to send to Parliament the constitutional amendment on the ICC that the Executive had requested a Special Commission to draft in 2014. Information available to PGA shows that the President may have mistakenly calculated that Armenia's ratification of the Rome Statute would give a 'tactical' advantage to neighboring States not entertaining friendly relations with Armenia. This assertion seems misguided, due to the fact that the Rome Statute's ratification is aimed at reinforcing the protection for the civilian populations against the perpetration of the most serious crimes of international concern regardless of the nationality of the perpetrators. 

PGA Action

In May 2015, PGA Member Mr. Harry von Bommel, MP, of the Netherlands, conducted an official visit of the Standing Committee for Foreign Affairs of The Netherlands to Yerevan in order to pursue the topic of EU-Armenian friendly relations. While in Armenia, MP van Bommel was able to discuss the country’s ongoing process towards ratification of the Rome Statute with high-ranking officials including the Speaker of the Armenian Parliament, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, and other parliamentarians. In an interview with the PGA Secretariat, Mr. van Bommel underscored PGA’s deeply important role in equipping its members to engage and inform MPs about this topic, which would allow Armenia to give concrete meaning to its commitment to the 'never again'.

On 4 December 2015, PGA's Secretary-General addressed the conference on the 100 years of the Armenian genocide organized by the University of Teramo, Italy, under the direction of Prof. Emanuela Pistoia. In her key-note address, ICTY Judge Flavia Lattanzi stated that in 1915 genocide may not be qualified under the strict terms of the 1948 Convention, which may not be applied retrospectively to pre-World War II situations before relevant jurisdictions. Norms of customary international law concerning "crimes under International Law" crystallized themselves universally, in a very short time-frame, only after the end of World War II. The Judge however found that the facts of 1915 on the Ottoman Empire could have been easily fallen under the definition of genocide, should this type of crime have existed under international law at the time. Therefore, she found it more than appropriate for political bodies like Parliaments and Executives to recognize politically that genocide had occurred in Armenia during the year 1915.

As genocide and crimes against humanity were not prosecutable offenses in 1915, the PGA Secretary-General used the 1907 Hague Convention on the law and customs of war and the (never applied) 1919 Peace Treaty of Sevres to argue that the legal basis for reparations to victims’ descendants was provided by the law on "war crimes": In fact, the Ottoman Empire was a belligerent and the Armenians were seen also as an 'enemy-national-group', nationality being one the grounds for genocide under the 1948 Genocide Convention.

These legal interpretations were welcomed by all participants in the Conference, which provided an opportunity for PGA to level criticism on the regrettable decision of the President of Armenia not to transmit to Parliament the constitutional amendment on the ICC on the occasion of the 100 Years of the "Meds Yeghern" of the Armenians.

Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review

Armenia was reviewed during the 21st session of the UPR in 201, where it received 20 recommendations to expedite its ratification of the Rome Statute and implement it into its domestic legislation. It took note of 13 recommendations, and accepted 7 of them, but Armenia has yet to take action in this regard.

In 2003 and 2004, Armenian MPs participated in the II and III session of PGA's Consultative Assembly of Parliamentarians for the ICC and the Rule of Law respectively held in New York and Wellington. In 2006, upon indication of PGA, the Chair of the Parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee participated in a seminar on universality of the Rome Statute organized by the Austrian rotating Presidency of the EU at Salzburg University.


Status of the Rome Statute System as of February 2024:

 
States that have ratified the Rome Statute [124]
 
States that have signed the Rome Statute but have not ratified it yet [30]
 
States that have withdrawn from the Rome Statute [2]
 
States that have neither signed nor ratified the Rome Statute
 

124 countries are States Parties to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. Of these, 33 are African States, 19 are Asia-Pacific States, 19 are from Eastern Europe, 28 are from Latin American and Caribbean States, and 25 are from Western European and other States.

Work of PGA in this Country:

"Flag of Armenia." by young shanahan is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

This new chapter in Armenia’s history reinforces the system of the Rome Statute and safeguards accountability at the global level.

Armenia’s Instrument of Ratification of the ICC Rome Statute Deposited at the UN. Photo: Permanent Mission of Armenia to the United Nations

Parliamentarians for Global Action congratulates the Armenian Government on the deposit of instrument of ratification of the Rome Statute to the United Nations on 14 November 2023.

Mr. Harry van Bommel, MP, The Netherlands, “PGA Member of the month May 2015”

The PGA Secretariat has the pleasure of highlighting this month’s work on the ratification of the Rome Statute by Armenia, with 10 questions to Mr. Harry van Bommel, MP, The Netherlands.

With the ratification of the Rome Statute by the Czech Republic in July 2009, every Member State of the EU is now a State Party to the ICC.

With the ratification of the Rome Statute by the Czech Republic in July 2009, every Member State of the EU is now a State Party to the ICC.

Publication

Parliamentary Kit on the International Criminal Court
Parliamentary Kit on the International Criminal Court

Parliamentary Kit on the International Criminal Court

It is imperative that the Rome Statute be ratified universally for the successful functioning of the Court. Parliamentarians should ensure that the ICC is truly universal.

Description

Created by the Rome Statute, the International Criminal Court (ICC) is the first permanent and independent international court capable of investigating and bringing to justice individuals who commit the most serious violations of international criminal law, international humanitarian law, and human rights.

The Rome Statute defines the crimes under the Court’s jurisdiction and provides the general principles and procedures for the operation of the Court. It also outlines the cooperation obligations of its State Parties. It is imperative that the Rome Statute be ratified universally for the successful functioning of the Court. Parliamentarians should ensure that the ICC is truly universal.

PDF(s)

Additional Details

  • Publication Type: Toolkit
  • Author(s): Parliamentarians for Global Action

Publication

Handbook for Parliamentarians: National Nomination of Judicial Candidates for the International Criminal Court (ICC)
Handbook for Parliamentarians: National Nomination of Judicial Candidates for the International Criminal Court (ICC)

Handbook for Parliamentarians: National Nomination of Judicial Candidates for the International Criminal Court (ICC)

Description

The ICC is the first and only permanent independent court with the mandate to investigate and prosecute individuals responsible for committing international crimes, namely genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and the crime of aggression. Its 18 judges from around the world, elected for a nine-year term, play a key role in ensuring this expectation is lived up to through their primary mandate to render authoritative and high-quality jurisprudence and guarantee fair trials.

Therefore, the quality of the judges has fundamental importance to the performance, efficiency, and effectiveness of the ICC, which is at the heart of the long-term success of the ICC and the Rome Statute system as a whole. In this handbook, PGA sets forth specific criteria and recommendations for Parliamentarians to encourage their governments to improve national nomination procedures for ICC judicial candidates and adopt good practices and requirements to ensure these processes are fair, transparent, and merit-based. The goal of robust nomination procedures is to ensure that only candidate judges or jurists of the highest caliber make it on the ballot.

PDF(s)

Additional Details

  • Publication Type: Handbook
  • Author(s): Parliamentarians for Global Action

Publication

Handbook: Ratification and Implementation of the Kampala Amendments on the Crime of Aggression to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court
Handbook: Ratification and Implementation of the Kampala Amendments on the Crime of Aggression to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court

Handbook: Ratification and Implementation of the Kampala Amendments on the Crime of Aggression to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court

Description

It is our honor and privilege to present to you the Third Edition of the Handbook on the Ratification and Implementation of the Kampala Amendments on the Crime of Aggression to the Rome Statute of the ICC.

It is the product of our collaborative effort aimed at assisting States in ratifying the amendments adopted by consensus in Kampala and helping criminalize the most serious forms of the illegal use of force.

PDF(s)

Additional Details

  • Publication Type: Handbook
  • Author(s): Permanent Mission of the Principality of Liechtenstein to the United Nations; Global Institute for the Prevention of Aggression; Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination at Princeton University (LISD); (Drafting Assistance by PGA)