UN Council rejects Africa challenge to Kenya ICC trial

President Kenyatta
President Kenyatta

UNITED NATIONS/ADDIS ABABA – The UN Security Council yesterday failed to adopt a draft resolution co-sponsored by African countries on deferring the International Criminal Court (ICC) proceedings against Kenyan leaders. In a vote at the 15-member Council, seven members, including Russia and China, supported the draft resolution, while eight others, including Britain, France and the United States, abstained to ensure the failure of the bid.

To be adopted, a Security Council resolution needs nine votes in favour, with no veto from any of the five permanent members — Britain, Russia, China, France and the United States.

The African states’ call for the deferral was the biggest challenge yet to the trials of President Uhuru Kenyatta and Vice President William Ruto who are accused of fomenting deadly political unrest in the aftermath of the 2007 elections.

It was the first time in decades that a Security Council resolution has failed in such a way without a veto by one of the permanent members.

The African nations had wanted the Council to use its power under the ICC’s founding statute to suspend the case for a year when it could be a threat to peace.

Meanwhile, the African Union said yesterday it was “disappointed” at the UNSC’s rejection of its demand.

“Well of course we are disappointed,” Erastus Mwencha, deputy head of the AU Commission, said in Addis Ababa.

“I think at this stage we will have to reflect on it and then find a way forward,” he added.

Kenya’s leaders secured support from the AU at a special summit last month, which called for a deferral but stopped short of calling for an Africa-wide withdrawal from The Hague-based ICC.

The AU argued that Kenya’s leaders, who are facing crimes against humanity charges, should be allowed to fulfil their duties of running

Mr Ruto
Mr Ruto

the country.

The draft resolution presented to the UNSC said the court case is “distracting and preventing” Kenyatta and Ruto from carrying out their duties.

It took up African Union complaints that the two should be left to handle Kenya’s role in battling Islamist militants in Somalia and the aftermath of September’s mall attack in Nairobi, which left 67 dead.

Russia’s UN ambassador Vitaly Churkin, who backed the resolution, said African countries had presented “most compelling arguments” for a suspension.

ICC member states acknowledge that Kenya is a special case. But western diplomats and activists see the campaign to halt the proceedings as largely political and, more generally by countries opposed to the ICC, to discredit the court.

The African nations, led by Rwanda, who proposed the resolution faced strong criticism for the challenge and the way it was forced upon the Council.

Guatemala’s UN ambassador Gert Rosenthal called the vote an act of “contempt” against UN Security Council countries that had sought to help Africa with peacekeeping troops and efforts to boost justice in the continent.

“We are disappointed that this draft resolution was unnecessarily put to a vote,” commented Britain’s UN envoy Mark Lyall Grant.

France’s UN ambassador Gerard Araud said the draft resolution had created an “artificial confrontation” between the African Union and the Security Council. Australia’s ambassador Gary Quinlan called the vote “unnecessary.”

US ambassador Samantha Power joined Britain and France in saying that Africa’s complaints should be put to a meeting of the ICC member countries due to start in The Hague next Wednesday. The meeting is to consider changes in procedure, which could ease the conditions for the trials of the Kenyan leaders.

The United States is not an ICC member but strongly supports its work.

“We believe that justice for the victims of that violence is critical to the country’s long term peace and security,” Power said.

Ruto’s trial has started, while that of Kenyatta is scheduled to get underway February 5 after being delayed three times.

African leaders frequently complain that the ICC discriminates against their continent.

All eight cases being investigated by the ICC concern Africa. But nearly all were called for by the countries involved and Africa’s 34 members make up a key chunk of the court’s 122 signatories.

Rwanda’s UN ambassador Eugene Richard Gasana said that the Security Council had “failed” Kenya by rejecting the vote and it was a “shame” for the body.

He said African countries behind the move had not sought “confrontation” and that the Kenyan leaders had to be backed in their “fight against terrorism.”

“Kenya’s leadership wants theses cases squashed, but that would rob the victims of horrific crimes of any hope of redress,” said Richard Dicker, international justice specialist for Human Rights Watch.

“One wonders whether the governments, which pushed the resolution did so in a bid to ward off the possibility of their own officials being prosecuted for crimes in the future,” he added. – Xinhua-AFP.

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