Site icon Africa Global Village

AU summit opens with a Scathing attack on ICC policies Targeting African leaders

 

Several nations in the 54-member AU, whose rotating presidency is currently held by Ethiopia, have accused the ICC of singling out Africans for prosecution, and have specifically demanded that the court drop the proceedings against Kenya’s leadership.

“The manner in which the Court has been operating, particularly its unfair treatment of Africa and Africans, leaves much to be desired,” Ethiopian Foreign Minister Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told ministers and delegates at the opening of the two-day meeting.

“Far from promoting justice and reconciliation… the court has transformed itself into a political instrument. This unfair and unjust treatment is totally unacceptable,” he said of the ICC, the world’s first permanent court to try genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.

African countries account for 34 of the 122 parties to have ratified the Rome Statute, the ICC’s founding treaty, which took effect on July 1, 2002, and a mass pull-out from the court – as some countries have demanded – could seriously damage the institution.

The bloc, however, appears divided on the issue – with countries like Kenya, Sudan, Ethiopia and Rwanda taking a tough line, other nations seemingly more reluctant and some prominent African figures lobbying hard against a pull-out.

South African anti-apartheid icon and Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu on Friday fired off a sharply-worded attack that compared ICC opponents to Nazis seeking to evade justice, and argued the number of African cases was merely a reflection of the human rights situation on the continent.

“Those leaders seeking to skirt the court are effectively looking for a license to kill, maim and oppress their own people without consequence. They believe the interests of the people should not stand in the way of their ambitions of wealth and power,” he wrote in an op-ed carried by several newspapers.

“They simply vilify the institution as racist and unjust, as Hermann Goering and his fellow Nazi defendants vilified the Nuremberg tribunals following World War II,” he wrote.

Former UN secretary general Kofi Annan has also said a pull-out would leave Africa wearing a “badge of shame”, while a group of 130 African civil society and human rights organisations have also issued a public letter expressing their steadfast support for the tribunal.

The special summit started with an agenda-setting, ministerial-level meeting on Friday. Heads of state are due to join the debate at the AU’s Addis Ababa headquarters on Saturday.

All of the court’s current eight cases are against Africans, prompting the AU to accuse the ICC of “hunting” Africans, even though four of those cases were referred to the court by the countries themselves.

Last month, Kenyan lawmakers backed a motion to withdraw from the ICC. If successful, Kenya would be the first country to pull out of the court.

The ICC has charged Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta and Vice-President William Ruto, as well as former radio boss Joshua Arap Sang, with crimes against humanity linked to post-election violence in 2007-2008 that left at least 1100 dead and more than 600,000 homeless.

The trial of Ruto and Sang has already begun, and proceedings against Kenyatta are due to start on November 12. The accused are all co-operating with the court, but tensions have been mounting amid accusations of witness intimidation by the accused and counter-complaints against the ICC that it is inflexible.

The government has also demanded that Kenyatta be allowed to appear by video-link, and on Thursday his lawyers filed a request to the ICC for a halt in proceedings, alleging abuse of process by the court.

Should the accused be convicted or fail to turn up and trigger arrest warrants, Kenya would face diplomatic isolation.

FacebookTwitterEmailWhatsAppBloggerShare
Exit mobile version