West Africa’s Military-Led Alliance Breaks with ICC, Calls for Indigenous Justice
Written by Keith A. Newsome on October 4, 2025
In a bold move signaling deepening divisions with international institutions, the West African military-led bloc known as the Alliance of Sahel States (AES) has officially rejected the authority of the International Criminal Court (ICC). In a joint declaration, the member states—Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger—announced that they no longer recognize the ICC’s jurisdiction, denouncing the court as a tool of neocolonial repression.
According to the statement, the ICC has become “an instrument of imperialism” that enforces a form of selective justice, particularly targeting leaders and nations in the Global South. The AES bloc criticized the court’s failure to effectively prosecute serious international crimes, including war crimes, genocide, and crimes against humanity. For them, this lack of action demonstrates a fundamental bias in how international justice is applied.
This isn’t the first time the military juntas of Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger have distanced themselves from international and regional institutions. Earlier this year, they withdrew from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), using similar rhetoric about sovereignty, justice, and foreign interference.
As part of their wider strategy, the AES nations say they plan to establish “indigenous mechanisms” for justice and conflict resolution—frameworks that reflect local realities rather than foreign-imposed legal systems. These mechanisms, they argue, will better serve efforts to restore peace and stability across the Sahel region, which continues to face armed insurgencies and political instability.
The formation of the AES itself followed a series of military coups between 2020 and 2023 in Bamako (Mali), Ouagadougou (Burkina Faso), and Niamey (Niger). Since then, the alliance has increasingly turned away from Western partnerships—particularly with former colonial power France—and toward new allies such as Russia for military support.
This latest rebuke of the ICC is part of a broader geopolitical realignment in West Africa. By rejecting Western legal and diplomatic frameworks, the AES states are attempting to reassert sovereignty, redefine justice on their own terms, and challenge what they see as lingering colonial influence.
Whether these “indigenous mechanisms” will deliver effective and impartial justice remains to be seen—but one thing is clear: the Alliance of Sahel States is determined to chart its own path, regardless of international approval.