In Summary
- "The International Criminal Court will not be reacting to African Union resolutions," ICC spokesman Fadi El Abdallah told AFP after the pan-continental bloc urged the Kenyans' trials be taken out of the ICC's hands.
The
International Criminal Court (ICC) has said it will ignore African
Union (AU) resolutions on President Uhuru Kenyatta and deputy William
Ruto cases, emphasising the court is not bound by political decisions.
The
AU said ICC is targeting Africans on a racial basis on Monday, as the
continental bloc urged crimes against humanity trials for Kenya's
leaders be moved to their home country.
The Hague based
court on Monday denied an African Union charge that it was racist and
said it would not respond to an AU call for Kenyan leaders' crimes
against humanity trials to be moved to their home country.
"The
International Criminal Court will not be reacting to African Union
resolutions," ICC spokesman Fadi El Abdallah told AFP after the
pan-continental bloc urged the Kenyans' trials be taken out of the ICC's
hands.
AU chair and Ethiopian Prime Minister
Hailemariam Desalegn had earlier Monday accused the ICC at an AU summit
in Addis Ababa of being involved in "race hunting".
"African
leaders have come to a consensus that the (ICC) process that has been
conducted in Africa has a flaw," Desalegn told reporters. "The intention
was to avoid any kind of impunity... but now the process has
degenerated to some kind of race hunting."
The
Hague-based ICC, set up in 2002 to try the world's worst crimes, is
frequently accused of bias because all of its cases involve Africans.
Spokesman
Abdallah referred to the standard denial response to such accusations,
which notes that four out of eight situations under investigation in
Africa were referred to the court by the countries themselves.
Also,
43 African countries have signed the ICC's founding Rome Statute, which
34 have ratified, "making Africa the most heavily represented region in
the court's membership," the ICC statement said.
African
leaders in Ethiopia were on Monday expected to pass the resolution
calling for the ICC trials of Kenyan leaders, including President Uhuru
Kenyatta and his vice president, to be referred back to Kenya.
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