ICC prosecutor who sought arrest warrant for Netanyahu accused of trying to suppress sexual misconduct probe against himself

By New York Post (World News) | Created at 2024-11-21 22:10:05 | Updated at 2024-11-22 03:18:58 5 hours ago
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The International Criminal Court’s top prosecutor who issued an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over “war crimes” in Gaza was accused of trying to suppress a sexual misconduct investigation against himself.

Karim Khan, 54, faced accusations that he tried for more than a year to push a female aide into a sexual relationship and then groped her against her will.

During the investigation, which was launched amid the probe against Israeli and Hamas officials, multiple ICC staff claimed Khan and an ally at the court repeatedly pushed the woman to recant her statements to protect his reputation, the Guardian reported.

International Criminal Court Prosecutor Karim Khan was investigated for alleged sexual misconduct against a female aid. REUTERS

The British-appointed prosecutor and another ICC official, who was not named, allegedly spoke to the woman in person and over the phone about the case after Khan learned of the internal probe against him, four sources with knowledge of the investigation told the UK outlet.

The conversations were held despite the court advising Khan to avoid one-on-one contact with the alleged victim.

Khan has maintained that he never coerced the woman or groped her, with the court’s anonymous briefings suggesting that the prosecutor was the target of a smear campaign over his decision to go after Netanyahu.

“There is no truth to suggestions of such misconduct,” Khan’s statement said. “I have worked in diverse contexts for 30 years, and there has never been such a complaint lodged against me by anyone.”

The investigation into Khan took place amid his case against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant. REUTERS

Two of the victims’ co-workers said The Hague reported the alleged misconduct in May, which ended only after five days when the woman chose not to file a formal complaint.

While the woman has declined to discuss the case with reporters, people close to her say her decision to drop the case was driven by a distrust of the ICC and its internal watchdog group.

A compilation of whistleblower documents and interviews acquired by the Associated Press alleged that Khan worked together with the woman after he noticed her in the ICC and had her transferred to his office with a pay bump.

The sources said the two had a private dinner in London, where Khan allegedly took the woman’s hand and complained about his marriage.

Staffers at the ICC backed up the woman’s claims after she opted to drop the case, with many accusing Khan of pressuring her to do so. ANP/AFP via Getty Images

She then began joining him on official trips, with one resulting in Khan allegedly asking her to go with him to a hotel bed where he “sexually touched her.”

Other sexual misconduct incidents with Khan, including one where he allegedly pressed his tongue on her ear, ultimately left the woman traumatized and “experiencing severe emotional distress,” current and former ICC staffers told the Guardian.

Despite the woman dropping the case and the ICC concluding its investigation, the details became public when an anonymous account on X called @ICC_Leaks published some of the allegations against Khan online.

The leak shocked the globe given Khan’s status in the world of international justice and decades of commitment to the law.

Appointed as the ICC’s top prosecutor in 2021, Khan previously served as the assistant secretary-general of the United Nations and was the first special adviser and head of the UN Investigative Team.

His team sought to hold the Islamic State accountable for its war crimes and crimes against humanity in Iraq between 2018 and 2021.

With Post wires

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