Liechtenstein has become the 25th country to officially join the Special Tribunal that will investigate the crime of Russian aggression against Ukraine.
This was reported by Minister of Foreign Affairs Andriy Sybiha.
At a meeting of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe in Moldova on May 14-15, an agreement on the legal formalization of the tribunal will be put to a vote.
Special Tribunal for the Crime of Aggression of the Russian Federation
Ukraine insists on the creation of a Special Tribunal, since the International Criminal Court and other similar institutions cannot, at this stage, consider cases concerning the crime of aggression.
The heads of foreign ministries of European countries and the EU leadership expressed political support for the launch of the Special Tribunal on May 9, 2025. On June 25, President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky and Secretary General of the Council of Europe Alain Berset signed an agreement on its establishment in Strasbourg. The Statute of the Special Tribunal is also ready.
In January 2026, the European Union transferred the first €10 million to establish the tribunal, and in March it began the process to become one of its founders.
Austria, Portugal, Iceland, Poland, France, Costa Rica, Croatia, Estonia, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Moldova, the Netherlands, Norway, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Ukraine, the United Kingdom, Finland, Greece, the Czech Republic, Belgium, and Liechtenstein have already joined the Special Tribunal.
For more news and in-depth stories from Ukraine, please follow us on X.