New Zealand has long been a member of the International Criminal Court, which impartially prosecutes serious war criminals for atrocities.
โThe United States of America is attacking the ICC with sanctions and undermining its important and respected role as a prosecutor of war criminals,โ Labour foreign affairs spokesperson David Parker said.
โIt is one thing for the USA not to participate in the ICC. To go further and introduce sanctions to hinder the ability of the ICC doing its work for other countries is plainly wrong.
โIn recent days, 79 countries have signed a statement condemning this. Those countries include Switzerland, Canada, France and Germany – countries we normally work closely with. New Zealand was notably absent.
โIt is understandable that New Zealand does not want to criticise every decision made by President Trump.
โBut our government wonโt even speak up in the company of 79 others when an institution we are part of is threatened and undermined.
โSilence conveys consent.
โNew Zealandโs reputation for being fair and principled is built on decades of important decisions like these – across successive governments.
โIn its efforts to appease the new USA administration, New Zealand should not cravenly abandon its principles,โ David Parker said.


