On 21 April 2003, Moreno Ocampo was unanimously elected first prosecutor of a new International Criminal Court. On 16 June 2003, as the conflict with
Iraq began, he sworn in for a non-renewable nine-year term as Chief Prosecutor of the
International Criminal Court. There were fears that the ICC would be unable to function. In its first nine years, the Office of the Prosecutor opened investigations in four states: the
Democratic Republic of the Congo,
Uganda, the
Central African Republic and
Kenya – and in
Darfur and
Libya, at the request of the UN Security Council, and in
Côte d'Ivoire at the request of its national authorities. In his capacity as the prosecutor of the court, Moreno Campo initiated several ICC investigations. Altogether, the ICC has Moreno Ocampo led an investigation of leaders of the
Lord's Resistance Army, who in 2005 faced ICC arrest warrants for crimes against humanity. Moreno Ocampo directed an investigation against
Germain Katanga and
Matthieu Ngudjolo Chui, who received arrest warrants in 2007 and 2008 for
crimes against humanity in the Democratic Republic of Congo. In March 2008, according to an Argentine online news report, Moreno Ocampo claimed that
FARC, the largest guerrilla group in
Colombia, should face an investigation by the International Criminal Court. During his tenure at the ICC, the first trial ended with the conviction of
Thomas Lubanga.
Ben Ferencz, who at age 27 participated as prosecutor in the
Nuremberg trials, closed the ICC prosecution at the age of 93. On 10 July 2012, Trial Chamber 1 sentenced Lubanga to 14 years in prison, from which six remand years were deducted. , Luis Moreno-Ocampo,
Urmas Paet, and
Tiina Intelmann at the International Criminal Court (L–R), February 2012 In July 2008, Moreno Ocampo accused
Omar al-Bashir of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes in Darfur. That November, he called for arrest warrants against rebels accused of killing members of an international peacekeeping force in Darfur. The International Criminal Court sent in 2009 and 2010 two international arrest warrants against al-Bashir, who denied all charges. According to the United Nations, in 16 years of conflict from the 2003 uprising of two rebel groups in Darfur, he had caused 300,000 deaths and 2.5 million displacements. In 2019, Al-Bashir was also sentenced to imprisonment for embezzling up to $9 billion in oil revenues. In 2020, Sudan's ruling generals finally agreed to hand Al-Bashir over to the ICC to face charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity in courts in The Hague. Moreno Ocampo announced on 15 December 2010 six "prime suspects" – the
Ocampo Six – in the
Kenya post-election violence of 2007. Named as leading perpetrators where the suspended Minister of Higher Education
William Ruto, Minister for Industrialisation
Henry Kosgey, Deputy Prime Minister
Uhuru Kenyatta, former commissioner of the
Kenya Police Major General
Mohammed Hussein Ali, head of public services
Francis Muthaura, and journalist Joshua Arap Sang. On 3 March 2011, Moreno Ocampo declared "there will be no impunity in Libya" as he announced an investigation of crimes against humanity committed by either Libyan security forces loyal to leader
Muammar Gaddafi or the opposition to the
Gaddafi government during the
2011 Libyan civil war. On 16 May 2011, he filed a request to the ICC to issue arrest warrants against Gaddafi, his son
Saif al-Islam and Libyan intelligence chief
Abdullah Senussi, for crimes against humanity. The Court issued these on 27 June 2011. On 15 June 2012, Moreno Ocampo finished his term and was replaced by
Gambia lawyer
Fatou Bensouda. ==After the ICC==