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The ICC wants Putin arrested. What happens now?

The International Criminal Court has issued an arrest warrant for Russia's president over the invasion of Ukraine, but few in Moscow or beyond expect Vladimir Putin to be led away in handcuffs anytime soon. The court has no jurisdiction over key countries including the U.S., China and Russia.

3 sitting world leaders have faced warrants from the court. None have been jailed

Wearing a dark suit, Russian President Vladimir Putin sits looking up at a blue flag.
Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting of the Prosecutor General's Office Board in Moscow on Wednesday. Russian officials have denied allegations of war crimes in Ukraine and say an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court (ICC) for Putin is meaningless. (Pavel Bednyakov, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via The Associated Press)

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has issued an arrest warrant for Russia's president over the invasion of Ukraine, but few in Moscow or beyond expect Vladimir Putin to be led away in handcuffs anytime soon.

The warrant issued on Friday relates toPutin's alleged involvement in thedeportation of thousands of children from Ukraine toRussia. Another was issued for Maria Alekseyevna Lvova-Belova, Russia's commissioner for children's rights.

News of the warrants brought cheers from Ukraine and derision from Moscow. Russia is not among the 123 countries that have signed on to the ICC, making such warrants "null and void" within its borders, saidKremlin spokespersonDmitry Peskov.

But if Putin were to set foot in any of those other countries, they'd have to arrest him, saidPayam Akhavan, a senior fellow at the University of Toronto's Massey College and an adviser on genocide to the ICC prosecutor. He'd then be sent to The Hague for trial.

WATCH | Warrant 'only the beginning,' says Akhavan:

'Arrest warrant is only the beginning,' says ICC special adviser

2 years ago
Duration 6:54
Payam Akhavan is a professor of international law and a senior fellow at Massey College in Toronto and a special adviser to the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court. He says the arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin will take time, and that people should be prepared to 'dig in' and wait to see a resolution.

That might sound like a long shot, but stranger things have happened.The idea that formerYugoslav presidentSlobodan Milosevic would face international justice in front of a United Nations tribunal for war crimes once seemed unlikely, said Akhavan, but eventually "that came to pass."

"Those who are in power today may not be in power tomorrow,"Akhavantold CBC News.

So what does the warrant mean for the leader of the world's largest country?

Who is part of the ICC?

Canada is among the countries to have ratified the ICC's foundational Rome Statute. Many others have not, including keymembers of the UN Security Council the U.S., China and Russia and majorG20 nations such as India, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia and Turkey.

Most of the countries in Europe and South America have signed on, as have Australia, New Zealand, Japan and much of Africa.

What can the ICC do?

The ICC has jurisdiction over four types of crimes: genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and crimes of aggression.

However, with no armed body to enforce its warrants, the ICC has minimal power to arrest people and instead must rely onthe security forces ofmember states.

WATCH | 'Indiscriminate and disproportionate' attacks:

Russia violated 'international humanitarian law,' UN-backed inquiry finds

2 years ago
Duration 1:28
Russian forces carried out 'indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks' that impacted residential buildings, hospitals and 'places with large concentration of civilians,' says Erik Mse, chair of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine.

Since its launch in 2002, the court has issued arrest warrants for three sittingworld leaders:Sudan's Omar al-Bashir, Libya's Moammar Gadhafiand now Putin. None have stood trial. (Gadhafiwas killedandal-Bashir remains at large.)

Another Moscow resident, who gave his name only as Daniil, 20, scoffed at the warrant.

"Putin! Nobody will arrest him. Rather, he will arresteveryone," he told Reuters.

What is the court's prosecution record?

With more than 900 staff members and an annual budget of nearly $250 million, 31 cases have gone before the International Criminal Court.

Its judges haveissued 38 arrest warrants, according to the ICC's website. Twenty-one of thosehave led to a suspect being arrested by a member state and heldin the court's detention centre.

The court has issued 10 convictions and four acquittals.

Has it secured any big convictions?

Most of the people who have been tried, convicted and jailed by the court hail from Africa.

Dominic Ongwen, a formercommander in theLord's Resistance Army, an insurgency group in Uganda infamous for using child soldiers, is serving a 25-year sentence for war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The first person convicted by the ICC, Thomas Lubanga Dyilo, was sentenced to 14 years in prison over his role in commanding rebel forces in the Democratic Republic of Congo whichcommitted atrocities.

Ahmad al-Faqi al-Mahdi,a member of Ansar Dine, an Islamist militia in Mali, served seven years for the war crimeof attacking religious and historical buildings in thecity of Timbuktu.

In other cases, the suspects remain at large includingJoseph Kony, the leaderof the Lord's Resistance Army in Uganda andRussian government official Mikhail Mayramovich Mindzaev,who is wanted for war crimes against civilians in Georgia.

SaifGadhafi, the son of the former Libyan leader, is also wanted by the ICC and is considered a fugitive.

What happens next?

While an arrest might be unlikely, the warrant will make diplomatic and business endeavours more difficult for Putin and his allies, according to a former U.S. ambassador-at-large for war crimeissues.

"This makes Putin a pariah," said Stephen Rapp, who held the position during Barack Obama's presidency."If he travels he risks arrest.This never goes away."

Some hope that, by issuingthe warrant, the ICC and other international bodies are eyeing otherlarger, legal pursuits though they doubtanything will happen quickly.

"It is essential for the international community to dig in for the long term and to send a clear message that they will not sweep these crimes under the carpet and that the perpetrators will be pursued and will one day be brought to justice," Akhavan, the law professor, said.

"The important point to remember is that the arrest warrant is only the beginning."

With files from Reuters and The Associated Press