Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called on Thursday, July 14, for the establishment of a "special tribunal" to investigate the Russian invasion, addressing an international conference on war crimes in Ukraine organized in The Hague , in the Nederlands.

"Current judicial institutions cannot bring all the culprits to justice. Therefore, a special court is needed to try the crimes of Russian aggression against Ukraine," Volodymyr Zelensky said in a video shown at the conference.

“The question deserves to be studied”

Political, diplomatic and judicial leaders from around the world gathered in The Hague, seat of international justice, for a conference on accountability for crimes committed in Ukraine since February 24.

Organized by the International Criminal Court (ICC) the European Commission and the Netherlands, the event aimed to ensure that crimes committed since the Russian invasion "do not go unpunished".

ICC prosecutor Karim Khan opened an investigation into possible war crimes committed in Ukraine in early March, after receiving the green light from 43 states.

But this court, which has been prosecuting the perpetrators of the worst atrocities in the world for twenty years, cannot prosecute the crime of aggression if the country has not ratified the Rome Statute, which is the case of Russia and Ukraine.

The question of a special court is therefore "a very valid point", Wopke Hoekstra, Dutch Foreign Minister, told reporters after the conference.

"I think the issue is worth investigating," he added.

"So I can imagine that we are considering setting up such a tribunal. The Netherlands will look into this openly," he continued, conceding, however, that it "probably won't be easy."

Wopke Hoekstra, Karim Khan and Didier Reynders, European Commissioner for Justice, recalled the need to "work together" to achieve justice.

The conference led several countries to pay more money to the ICC for its investigation and to send experts to Ukraine, Wopke Hoekstra said.

"We must be coordinated, dialogue and communicate" to make international law triumph, "in order to avoid the scenes from hell that we have seen", declared Karim Khan in front of the journalists.

>> To read - Ukraine: how to judge war crimes 

Russia denies the abuses of which its troops are accused

Some 14 European states are investigating crimes in Ukraine and a European joint investigation team has been set up.

Russia systematically denies all the abuses of which its troops are accused: bombardments of civilians, summary executions, rapes.

And she in turn accuses Ukraine of war crimes.

Two Russian soldiers were sentenced in May to 11.5 years in prison by a Ukrainian court for bombing civilian areas, while another was jailed for life earlier this month for the murder of a civilian.

There is no overall assessment of the civilian victims of the conflict.

The UN has tallied nearly 5,000 confirmed dead, including more than 300 children, but acknowledges that the true number is likely much higher.

On Thursday, at least 20 people were killed by Russian strikes on a city in central Ukraine, bombings described as an “openly terrorist act” by the Ukrainian president.

These strikes took place at the end of the morning on a region of the country hitherto relatively spared from the war, several hundred kilometers from the front lines.

With AFP

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