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The ICC at a Crossroads:

Potential Conflicts of Interest and Credibility Risks

By ACD

The International Criminal Court (ICC), established to bring justice to the world’s most grievous crimes, now finds itself under intense scrutiny. Concerns have emerged regarding potential conflicts of interest and misconduct that may have compromised the integrity of key cases over the past two decades.


Central to these concerns is the relationship between ICC prosecutor Karim Khan (highlights of his profile below), his wife, Dato Shyamala Alagendra, and Andrew Caylay, a fellow colleague at the Temple Garden Chambers (TGC) legal set that they all belong to, and the significant roles they have all played in some of the ICC’s most high-profile cases over the past 20 years.


The ICC’s mandate is to ensure impartiality and justice, but the overlap in the professional and personal lives of Khan and Alagendra raises troubling questions. They met while on opposing sides of major international cases—she as a prosecutor and he as a defense attorney. This overlap is not merely incidental; it spans six international cases involving some of the most notorious figures in recent history, including former Military Generals of Kosovo, Liberian President Charles Taylor, Sudanese officials of Darfur, and members of the Gaddafi family.


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