Niesamowita historia, jak możemy zostać “wyłączeni” z systemu. Amerykańskie sankcje blokują życie sieciowe i finansowe sędziego Międzynarodowego Trybunału Karnego, który wydał nakaz aresztowania Netanyahu.

https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2025/11/19/nicolas-guillou-juge-francais-de-la-cpi-sanctionne-par-les-etats-unis-face-aux-attaques-les-magistrats-de-la-cour-tiendront_6654016_3210.html

La vie de Nicolas Guillou, juge français de la CPI sous sanctions des Etats-Unis : « Vous êtes interdit bancaire sur une bonne partie de la planète »

Six juges et trois procureurs de la Cour pénale internationale ont été placés sous sanctions par l’administration Trump. Dans un entretien au « Monde », le magistrat raconte le poids de ces mesures sur son travail et son quotidien.

Le Monde
@zaufanatrzeciastrona jakieś ministreszczenie zza francuskiego paywalla?

@kalisz79

https://x.com/RnaudBertrand/status/1991352574390227129

"In a normal world, this should be an immense scandal in Europe.

Le Monde has a long article (https://lemonde.fr/international/article/2025/11/19/nicolas-guillou-juge-francais-de-la-cpi-sanctionne-par-les-etats-unis-face-aux-attaques-les-magistrats-de-la-cour-tiendront_6654016_3210.html) describing the hellish life of Nicolas Guillou, a French judge at the ICC in The Hague, due to U.S. sanctions punishing him for authorizing arrest warrants against Netanyahu and Gallant for war crimes in Gaza.

Guillou's daily existence has been transformed into a Kafkaesque nightmare. He cannot: open or maintain accounts with Google, Amazon, Apple, or any US company; make hotel reservations (Expedia canceled his booking in France hours after he made it); conduct online commerce, since he can't know if the packaging is American; use any major credit card (Visa, Mastercard, Amex are all American); access normal banking services, even with non-American banks, as banks worldwide close sanctioned accounts; conduct virtually any financial transaction.

He describes it as being "economically banned across most of the planet," including in his own country, France, and where he works, the Netherlands.

That's the real shocking aspect of this: the Americans are:
- punishing a European citizen
- for doing his job in Europe
- applying laws Europe officially supports
- at an institution based in Europe
- that Europe helped create and fund

and Europe is not only doing essentially nothing to protect him, they're actively enforcing America's sanctions against their own citizen - European banks closing his accounts, European companies refusing him service, European institutions standing by while Washington destroys a European judge's life on European soil.

Again, in a normal world, European leaders and citizens should be absolutely outraged about this. But we've so normalized the hollowing out of European sovereignty that the sight of a European citizen being economically executed on European soil for upholding European law is treated, at best, as an unfortunate technical complication in transatlantic relations."

@zaufanatrzeciastrona @kalisz79 Likely the exact reason why the EU is so soft on the tech-firms from the US. They are certainly breaching data-protection laws and commit more than enough tax fraud as well. But cracking down on them would certainly bring sanctions against all of Europe... Which would be... bad.

Imagine the damage when this were to be happen for all of Europe.

But all of this strengthens the sentiment we need European alternatives for stuff like credit cards and payment providers for example and get away from their software.

Yet some idiots think digital sovereignety could be achieved with using MS hosted in the EU.

I am really feeling for that poor judge having his life grind to a halt because of his job. uff So much to having independant judiciary at this point...
@stefan @zaufanatrzeciastrona @kalisz79 sanctions against Europe would indeed be bad, but the current situation, in which the rule of law and democracy itself are steamrollered at the whims of #billionaire #kleptocrats is by far worse.
@simon_brooke It will highly dependant on the viewpoint. I am totally with you this is a disgrace for any democracy. The problem is the alternatives may end up worse.

It is really choose the least worst thing right now. We have a total tyrant to the east just waiting for the crumble of the EU. Pretty much the only thing stopping him is that Ukraine did prove more feisty than thought and maybe NATO which the US is part of.

To the west we have an absolute maniac deciding huge things on a whim making him very unpredictable. But still is a vital alley in keeping us somewhat safe. Of course you would want to keep him somewhat happy and not do anything unwise and thought through so you might suffer more consequences.

Then you have the inner-european problems with a recession going on atm (in some EU countries not all?) people being more and more displeased with you and turning to the "easy answer" from the far-right idiots and conservatives doing their best to speedrun facism before the far-right was a chance to power.

Oh and the world is becoming on-fire everyday. Because who would have seen climate change becoming a problem?!

I guess its pick-your-poison time. I am so done with geo-politics atm. It kinda seems the EU missed the point in time to stand up for itself and there is nothing we can do to fix this that will not cost a fortune...

@stefan Europe's defence against tyrants in the east cannot depend on tyrants in the west. Europe's defence against anything cannot depend on US-made weapons systems with US-made kill switches. They are literally of no value whatever, because whenever Europe needs to use them *except* in pursuance of US imperial interests, it will be denied.

Tyrants will side with tyrants. #Trump isn't a 'vital ally' of `anyone at all except #Putin and #Netanyahu. Have you read his proposed 'Peace Plans'?