By MACHARIA KAMAU, May 20 2013
In Summary
- Can the ICC still be said to be safeguarding the political rights of Kenyans, their freedom and democracy, when the cases threaten to consume the time and effort that Kenyans have tasked the principals with to improve the lives of Kenyans?
My
recent communication to the UN Security Council requesting the
cessation of weak cases against Kenyan officials by the International
Criminal Court has caused considerable public commentary.
What
has been missing in the commentary is an understanding of the issue
from the perspective of the Kenyan State. I was not making a defence of
the ICC indictees, but instead was representing the interests of the
State I serve.
In the free and fair democratic
elections of March of this year, the President and the Deputy President –
were entrusted with executing the will of 40 million Kenyans.
In
pursuit of the Kenyan people’s domestic and international interests,
State officials under the direction of the principals deal with multiple
institutions whose work affects the ICC, and in which the Kenyan state
is an active member.
When matters of the ICC arise, are
those officials to pull back from vigorously pursuing their
responsibilities because there is a perception that they represent only
the principals’ personal interest?
Certainly not. The
State is not on trial at the ICC despite the Prosecutor’s continuous use
of a media bullhorn to try and erase the important distinction between
the indictees and State institutions.
The state has an
obligation to ensure that it operates from the strongest possible
position, defending itself from foreign intimidation and manipulation,
from attacks on its credibility and prestige, as well as any attempts to
curtail its full participation in the community of nations.
If,
as is the case this month, the UN Security Council has a debate on the
functioning of international tribunals and courts, Kenya must
participate on the same footing as others and advance the nation’s
interest without self-censure.
My critique of the ICC
prosecution is legitimate, And the fact is that my observations of the
prosecutions are not frivolous. There is overwhelming evidence that the
cases are frail.
The prosecution has suffered repeated censure from the ICC judges. It has even, by its own admission, used witnesses who are on record as confirming they were coached to lie.
The prosecution has suffered repeated censure from the ICC judges. It has even, by its own admission, used witnesses who are on record as confirming they were coached to lie.
With
increasing frequency, witnesses are dropping out and the prosecution’s
only response is to make unsubstantiated public attacks on the integrity
of the accused. These irregularities should give pause to anyone
concerned with due process.
That the prosecution has
continued to pursue the cases despite their evident weakness only gives
credence to suspicions, both in Kenya and abroad, that the prosecution
is using the cases in questionable faith to sustain the relevance of a
failing institution.
It is a matter of dismal record
that the prosecution has only managed one conviction in a decade, at a
cost of hundreds of millions of dollars.
That all its
indictees have been Africans, at a time when there have been multiple
conflicts outside Africa leading to hundreds of thousands of civilian
deaths at the hands of repressive and oppressive state actors, indicates
strongly that the prosecution lacks true legitimacy in the
international community.
The gap between its duty and
its performance widens when we note that Kenyans made a sovereign
electoral choice incompatible with the continuation of prosecutions that
are purported to benefit them.
Can the ICC still be
said to be safeguarding the political rights of Kenyans, their freedom
and democracy, when the cases threaten to consume the time and effort
that Kenyans have tasked the principals with to improve the lives of
Kenyans?
This is not to attack the ideals and the
aspirations of the ICC, but certainly the project as currently
undertaken is not working and will not work without a concerted effort
by the international community to revisit its fundamentals.
In
the meantime, the main purposes of the ICC seem to be to advance the
career interests of a handful of jurists and academics, and to enrich
international law jurisprudence. I can see no reason to sacrifice the
interests of Kenyans to such vain ends.
Finally, it
should never be forgotten that the death of 1133 Kenyan and displacement
of 650,000 others remains a deep wound on the Kenyan psyche. Kenyans
fear nothing more than a repeat of the 2008 events, and the 2013
elections, peaceful, restrained, free, fair and universally acclaimed
bear testament to that fact.
Mr Kamau is Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Kenya’s Mission to the United Nations, New York.
Mr Kamau is Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Kenya’s Mission to the United Nations, New York.
No comments:
Post a Comment