Allegations of sexual misconduct against the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court are still under review by the court's executive branch, an internal memo shared with staff on Sunday said, after a media report that he had been exonerated.

ICC Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan, who investigates war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide, has stepped aside temporarily pending an investigation into accusations of a non-consensual sexual relationship with a lawyer in his office. He rejects allegations of wrongdoing.

After a year-long investigation, the UN Office of Internal Oversight Services submitted its confidential fact-finding report in December to the ICC's executive branch, known as the Bureau of the Assembly of States Parties.

A news report in the Middle East Eye on Saturday said Khan had been cleared of the allegations.

But in a memo to court staff, which Reuters reviewed, the Assembly's President Paivi Kaukoranta said: "The disciplinary process before the Bureau is ongoing and remains confidential. No decisions have been taken, and no weight should be given to recent media speculation."

Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan talks while waiting for former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte to appear via video link before the International Criminal Court (ICC), in The Hague, Netherlands, Friday, March 14, 2025.
Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan talks while waiting for former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte to appear via video link before the International Criminal Court (ICC), in The Hague, Netherlands, Friday, March 14, 2025. (credit: Peter Dejong/Pool via REUTERS)

The court, the office of the prosecutor, the Assembly, and external lawyers representing Khan did not respond to emails seeking comment, which were sent on Sunday outside of normal working hours.

No decision taken

The sexual misconduct investigation into Khan coincided with U.S. sanctions against him and other court prosecutors and judges for their role in investigating allegations of Israeli war crimes in Gaza, which led to the indictment of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The ICC is the world's court of last resort for international crimes, and has 125 member countries. It has been thrust into an existential crisis by the sanctions and the loss of its most prominent official, the prosecutor.

Its membership does not include China, Russia, or the United States, which have opposed Khan's issuing of arrest warrants for sitting leaders, including Russian President Vladimir Putin and Netanyahu.