By AFP
Posted Monday, May 27 2013 at 12:45
African leaders will pass a resolution Monday urging the International Criminal Court to refer back to Kenya the crimes against humanity cases against the country's top leaders, a senior African Union official said. Read (African leaders put ICC to task over Uhuru trial)
Posted Monday, May 27 2013 at 12:45
African leaders will pass a resolution Monday urging the International Criminal Court to refer back to Kenya the crimes against humanity cases against the country's top leaders, a senior African Union official said. Read (African leaders put ICC to task over Uhuru trial)
"We will be approving this morning what the
ministers have proposed, definitely," AU security commissioner Ramtane
Lamamra told AFP, referring to a draft agreed Friday by foreign
ministers.
The resolution calls for the ICC to refer back to
Kenya the cases against recently-elected President Uhuru Kenyatta and
Vice President William Ruto.
Leaders will call for the "termination of the ICC
process... jurisdictions in Kenya will have to take care of the
situation," Lamamra said.
"Heads of state will support what the ministers
have proposed," Lamamra added, speaking on the sidelines of the AU
summit in the Ethiopian capital, where leaders are expected to endorse
the proposal before they close their meeting later Monday.
Kenyatta and Ruto, elected in March, both face
trial in The Hague for their alleged roles in orchestrating deadly
violence after previous elections in 2007 that left 1,100 people dead.
The proposal would have no legal impact on ICC
proceedings if passed, but would significantly boost Kenyatta's standing
on the continent.
It would be the first time the pan-African body
has moved formally against the ICC, even though Kenyatta is the second
African leader to face trial, after genocide charges were brought
against Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir.
Amnesty International has criticised the move saying it is a "worrying attempt by the Kenyan authorities to avoid justice".
The rights group called on the 34 AU members who
have signed the ICC's founding Rome Statute -- including Kenya -- to
"protect the international justice mechanism they have committed to".
Both Kenyatta and Ruto deny the charges and have agreed to cooperate fully with the ICC.
Kenyatta's trial is due to open on July 9, while a date for Ruto's trial is expected to be set later this month.
However, Lamamra said Africa remains committed to justice on the continent.
"Africa is committed to fighting impunity, but fighting impunity is not exclusive through the ICC," he said.
Many African leaders, as well as the AU as a body,
have claimed the ICC unfairly targets Africans, while ignoring war
crimes suspects in other parts of the world.
Violence erupted following the disputed 2007
election in Kenya, shattering the country's image as a beacon of
regional stability.
What began as political riots quickly turned into
ethnic killings and reprisal attacks, plunging Kenya into its worst wave
of violence since independence in 1963.
No comments:
Post a Comment