06/10/2026
Khan Is Not the Scandal’s End, but the Institution’s Alibi
The Bureau’s decision to remove Karim A. A. Khan from his functions risks turning a structural crisis at the International Criminal Court into the personal file of one Prosecutor, while leaving untouched the deeper architecture of concealment: the conflict of interest tolerated in Venezuela I, the judicial and Registry failures that allowed it to survive, the internal mechanisms that looked too late or too softly, and the unresolved presence of counsel linked to the Venezuelan regime and tied by family to the Prosecutor himself. Even Silence Has a Witness — When Silence Becomes Evidence: The Cover-Up of Ethical Corruption at the International Criminal Court — documents why Khan’s removal is not a cleansing of the Court, but evidence that the Court is now trying to sacrifice a name without confronting the system that protected the silence. Available on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Even-Silence-Has-Witness-International/dp/B0H2Q8W2B2/
Robert Carmona-Borjas
is the true account of how Robert Carmona-Borjas, a recognised victim in the International Criminal Court’s , forced one of the world’s most solemn judicial institutions to confront an ethical wound it had long been positioned to see. At the centre of the book lies a question the Court cou...