"The United Nations and its "International Criminal Court" (ICC) just suffered another massive blow - possibly a fatal one - to whatever credibility they may have had left. In explosive leaked documents making headlines around the world, former ICC 'chief prosecutor' Luis Moreno Ocampo (shown) was exposed using dubious offshore accounts to engage in what have been widely described as shady dealings. Among his big-spending "clients," meanwhile, are extremely shady characters that, experts say, could someday be hauled before the very UN "court" that Ocampo used to work for...
Ocampo's shady schemes, being exposed in leading media outlets around the world, may accelerate the ICC's ongoing implosion. And many of the former ICC chief prosecutor's most controversial acts - ordering the arrest of a duly elected Christian president, for example, as UN-backed jihadists slaughtered Christians with machetes to install a totalitarian-minded Muslim central banker as leader - have not even been brought up amid the latest brouhaha...
Among the recent scandals that have received the most attention thus far, Ocampo reportedly received huge sums of money from a mega-wealthy Libyan oil and media baron, Hassan Tatanaki, known for his close ties to a particular armed faction in that nation's brutal ongoing civil war. The militia he supports, led by former Gadhafi General Khalifa Haftar (sometimes written Hifter) has reportedly perpetrated ghastly war crimes and atrocities in its bid to seize control over Libya and its wealth. Among the crimes the military leader has been accused of: ordering extrajudicial killings, including murdering prisoners. Speaking on Tatanaki's own TV stations, some of Haftar's top officers have called for 'slaughtering' everyone who opposed them. Multiple allegations of war crimes have been made against the Tatanaki-backed militia leader in media outlets all over the world. Human rights groups have also documented some of the crimes.
All of that had many calling for Haftar and his associates to be arrested and prosecuted. Ocampo, though, offered costly advice on how to protect his client - who agreed to pay $1 million per year in addition to $5,000 per day for Ocampo's 'services' - from potential prosecution. As a result, Ocampo is being labeled a mercenary, a hypocrite, and worse by critics. 'He told me he was trying to fix Libya,' Ocampo claimed in trying to justify his lucrative deal with Tatanaki. 'What he was proposing to me was absolutely not just legal, it was positive." Ocampo said it was 'obvious' that Hafter and his men, as well as 'every side,' were committing crimes. So for a million dollars a year plus $5,000 daily, Ocampo claims he told Tatanaki 'be careful not to be involved in financing any crimes.'..."