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Hungary Parliament approves law to maintain membership in International Criminal Court

By Thomson Reuters May 27, 2026 | 4:01 AM

BUDAPEST, May 27 (Reuters) – Hungary’s parliament on Wednesday approved legislation to maintain the country’s membership in the International ​Criminal Court, reversing a 2025 ‌decision made by the government of Viktor Orban.

Orban’s government decided to withdraw from the ICC, saying the court had become “political.” Current Prime Minister ‌Peter ​Magyar, who ousted Orban ⁠in parliamentary elections ⁠last month, pledged to halt the withdrawal process and keep Hungary in the ICC.

The International Criminal Court was set ​up more than two decades ago to prosecute those accused of war ⁠crimes, crimes against humanity ⁠and genocide.

Orban’s government announced the ​withdrawal in April 2025, shortly after Israeli ​Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrived in Hungary ‌for a state visit in a rare trip abroad in defiance of an ICC arrest warrant. Hungary rejected the ⁠idea of arresting Netanyahu and called the warrant “brazen.”

The legislation passed on Wednesday said: “in the interest of ⁠international ‌peace and security, and for ⁠the protection of human rights ​it ‌is … necessary to hold those ​who committed ⁠the worst of international crimes, accountable in an international court.”

The law said it is necessary to maintain Hungary’s participation in the ICC.

(Reporting by Krisztina Than; Editing by ​Thomas Derpinghaus)