Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, 17 July 1998
State Signatories SignatureRatification / Accession 1)Reservation / Declaration 2)
Algeria28.12.2000   
Angola07.10.1998   
Armenia02.10.1999   
Bahamas29.12.2000   
Bahrain11.12.2000   
Bangladesh16.09.1999   
Cameroon17.07.1998   
Cape Verde28.12.2000   
Côte d'Ivoire30.11.1998   
Egypt26.12.2000  26.12.2000 (text)
Eritrea07.10.1998   
Guinea-Bissau12.09.2000   
Haiti26.02.1999   
Iran (Islamic Rep.of)31.12.2000   
Israel31.12.2000  31.12.2000 (text)
Jamaica08.09.2000   
Kuwait08.09.2000   
Kyrgyzstan08.12.1998   
Moldova (Republic of)08.09.2000   
Monaco18.07.1998   
Morocco08.09.2000   
Mozambique28.12.2000   
Oman20.12.2000   
Philippines28.12.2000   
Russian Federation13.09.2000   
Saint Lucia27.08.1999   
Sao Tome and Principe28.12.2000   
Seychelles28.12.2000   
Solomon Islands03.12.1998   
Sudan08.09.2000   
Syrian Arab Republic29.11.2000   
Thailand02.10.2000   
Ukraine20.01.2000   
United Arab Emirates27.11.2000   
United States of America31.12.2000   
Uzbekistan29.12.2000   
Yemen28.12.2000   
Zimbabwe17.07.1998   

1) Ratification : a treaty is generally open for signature for a certain time following the conference which has adopted it. However, a signature is not binding on a State unless it has been endorsed by ratification. The time limits having elapsed, the Conventions and the Protocols are no longer open for signature. The States which have not signed them may at any time accede or, in the appropriate circumstances, succeed to them.
Accession : instead of signing and then ratifying a treaty, a State may become party to it by the single act called accession.
2) Reservation / Declaration : unilateral statement, however phrased or named, made by a State when ratifying, acceding or succeeding to a treaty, whereby it purports to exclude or to modify the legal effect of certain provisions of the treaty in their application to that State (provided that such reservations are not incompatible with the object and purpose of the treaty).