''Title IV, The accused, the defence, and jointly liable persons § 23a'' 
1) An accused who is unable to sufficiently communicate in the 
language of the proceedings shall be entitled to translation assistance. 
This shall be provided by providing an interpreter as far as this is 
necessary in the interests of the administration of justice, in particular to 
preserve the rights of defence of the accused. This shall apply in 
particular to the instruction on rights (§ 23(4)), to acts of taking evidence 
in which the accused takes part, and to hearings. At the accused's 
request, he shall be provided with translation assistance also for his 
contact with a defence counsel provided to him or during the 
announcement of an application, an order, or a judicial ruling. The 
accused shall be given translation assistance for the inspection of the files 
only if he has no defence counsel and if it is unacceptable for the accused 
for special reasons to ensure himself the translation of the relevant parts 
of the files of which he has received copies. 
2) If the accused is deaf or mute, an interpreter for sign language shall 
be brought in if the accused is able to communicate in this language. 
Otherwise, it shall be attempted to communicate with the accused in 
writing or in any other suitable manner in which the accused is able to 
make himself understood. 
§ 23b2 
1) The accused shall have the right to make suggestions to the 
Prosecution Service for the judicial taking of evidence even during the 
provisional inquiry. Such suggestions shall contain the facts in issue, the 
evidence, and the information required for the taking of evidence. Unless 
this is obvious, reasons shall be given why the evidence might be useful for 
clarifying the facts in issue. 
2) Evidence which is inadmissible, impossible, or which cannot be 
used shall not be taken. Otherwise, any taking of evidence suggested by 
the accused may only be refrained from if 
1. the facts in issue are obvious or irrelevant for assessing the suspicion, 
2. the evidence is not suitable for proving a material fact, or 
3. the facts in issue can be considered proven. 
1 § 23a inserted by LGBl. 2012 No. 26. 
2 § 23b inserted by LGBl. 2012 No. 26. 
Code of Criminal Procedure (StPO) 312.0 
35 
3) The submitting of applications in the investment proceedings shall 
be subject to § 43; the investigating judge may reserve the taking of 
evidence for the trial. This shall be inadmissible where the result of the 
taking of evidence may be suitable to directly remove the suspicion or 
where there is the danger that evidence for a material fact might be lost. 
If the evidence is not taken, the court shall inform the accused of the 
reasons for this.
  ''Title IV, § 264''
3. if the accused (defendant) is blind, deaf, mute, disabled in any other 
way, or not sufficiently able to speak the court language, and 
therefore unable to defend himself,
  ''Title X, § 116'' 
If a witness does not speak German, an interpreter shall be brought in 
unless both the investigating judge and the keeper of the minutes speak 
the foreign language. The witness's testimony shall only be recorded in 
that language in the record or in exhibits if it is necessary to have a 
verbatim record of the own expressions of the person examined (§ 48 
(3)). 
§ 117 
If a witness is deaf, he shall be asked the questions in writing, and if 
he is mute, he shall be asked to answer in writing. If one or the other 
way of examination is impossible, the witness must be examined in the 
presence of one or several persons who are in command of the witness's 
sign language or who are otherwise able to communicate with deaf-mute 
persons, and who shall be sworn as interpreters before.
1. The official languages of the Court shall be Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish. The judgements of the Court, as well as other decisions resolving fundamental issues before the Court, shall be published in the official languages. The Presidency shall, in accordance with the criteria established by the Rules of Procedure and Evidence, determine which decisions may be considered as resolving fundamental issues for the purposes of this paragraph.
2. The working languages of the Court shall be English and French. The Rules of Procedure and Evidence shall determine the cases in which other official languages may be used as working languages.
3. At the request of any party to a proceeding or a State allowed to intervene in a proceeding, the Court shall authorize a language other than English or French to be used by such a party or State, provided that the Court considers such authorization to be adequately justified.
2. Where there are grounds to believe that a person has committed a crime within the jurisdiction of the Court and that person is about to be questioned either by the Prosecutor, or by national authorities pursuant to a request made under Part 9, that person shall also have the following rights of which he or she shall be informed prior to being questioned:
(c) To have legal assistance of the person's choosing, or, if the person does not have legal assistance, to have legal assistance assigned to him or her, in any case where the interests of justice so require, and without payment by the person in any such case if the person does not have sufficient means to pay for it; and
2. Requests for cooperation and any documents supporting the request shall either be in or be accompanied by a translation into an official language of the requested State or one of the working languages of the Court, in accordance with the choice made by that State upon ratification, acceptance, approval or accession. Subsequent changes to this choice shall be made in accordance with the Rules of Procedure and Evidence.