President
Uhuru Kenyatta on Saturday launched a scathing attack on the
International Criminal Court and Western powers saying they had teamed
up to humiliate African leaders, exactly one month before the start of
his trial.
While addressing the African Union
extraordinary summit in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, the President accused the
court of performing on the “cues of Europeans and American governments”
against the sovereignty of African states.
And in what
could be a major diplomatic victory by the Jubilee coalition, the
African Union resolved that President Kenyatta should not show up for
trial at the ICC on November 12 before the request to adjourn his case
is addressed.
“What the summit decided is that
President Kenyatta should not appear until the requests we have made is
actually answered,” said Ethiopian Foreign Minister Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus after a special AU meeting.
“This elected leader should lead his country,” he said.
The
President described the court as a “toy of declining imperial powers,”
which has subjected him and his deputy to humiliation and stigma.
TRIGGER ARREST WARRANTS
The
tone and strong language of the speech and attack of the court is
likely to trigger debate on whether the President will attend the
November 12 trials.
However, the AU resolution thrusts
Kenya’s two principals in a delicate situation because the Rome Statute
allows the court to trigger arrest warrants in case of non-cooperation,
with Kenya then running the risk of diplomatic isolation. (EDITORIAL: Siege mentality against the ICC unfortunate)
“The
ICC has been reduced into a painfully farcical pantomime, a travesty
that adds insult to the injury of victims. It stopped being the home of
justice the day it became the toy of declining imperial powers,”
President Kenyatta said, alluding to previous statements which have
termed the ICC process as “race-hunting”.
“It is the
fact that this court performs on the cue of European and American
governments against the sovereignty of African States and peoples that
should outrage us. People have termed this situation “race-hunting”. I
find great difficulty adjudging them wrong,” he said.
He charged that the court was biased towards Africans and violated its founding principles.
He charged that the court was biased towards Africans and violated its founding principles.
“We
would love nothing more than to have an international forum for justice
and accountability, but what choice do we have when we get only bias
and race-hunting at the ICC?...If so, what justice can be rendered by a
court which disregards our views?” said President Kenyatta.
The
Kenyan President added that African countries had made sacrifices for
their independence and asked foreign powers to respect their
sovereignty.
“Like other African countries, Kenya did not achieve its independence with ease. Blood was shed for it.”
President
Kenyatta accused world powers who sponsor the ICC of double standards
saying they were hesitant to take action against those responsible for
crimes committed in Iraq, Syria, Libya and Afghanistan.
The
President also accused the court of teaming up with western powers to
block him and his running mate Mr William Ruto from ascending to the
presidency before the March 4 elections and undermining them after
election.
This was in apparent reference to statement
by the prosecution that Kenya should appoint an interim deputy president
while Mr Ruto is attending trials.
“The Office of the
Prosecutor made certain categorical pronouncements regarding eligibility
for leadership of candidates in Kenya’s last general election. Only a
fortnight ago, the Prosecutor proposed undemocratic and unconstitutional
adjustments to the Kenyan Presidency,” he said.
The
President and his deputy appear before the court as free men under
conditions set by the judges, which compel them to among other things
refrain from interfering with witnesses or engaging in activities that
could injure the search for justice for the 2007/2008 violence victims.
(READ: President Kenyatta hits out at the West over ICC: Speech)
He
described western powers as the key drivers of the ICC process saying
that they had warned of consequences in case the Jubilee coalition
candidates won.
“These interventions go beyond
interference in the internal affairs of a sovereign State. They
constitute a fetid insult to Kenya and Africa,” he said.
The
chorus against his election, added President Kenyatta, was led by the
‘USA, Britain, EU, and certain eminent persons in global affairs. “It
was a threat made to Kenyans against electing my Government.”
The
president said despite the fact that he and his deputy, who are both
facing crimes against humanity charges at The Hague had fully cooperated
with the court, the prosecution was still subjecting them to
“humiliation and stigma”.
“I cannot narrate quite
accurately the calculated humiliation and stigma the prosecution has
inflicted on us at every turn, within and outside the proceedings. It is
all consistent with a political agenda, rather than a quest for
justice,” he said.
'FUGITIVE FROM JUSTICE'
He
said the prosecution has sought to present him as a “fugitive from
justice” who is already guilty of the crimes he has been accused of
committing.
“For five years I have strained to
cooperate fully, and have consistently beseeched the Court to expedite
the cases. Yet the gratuitous libel and prejudice I have encountered at
the instance of the Prosecution seeks to present me as a fugitive from
justice who is guilty as charged,” he said.
“All I have
requested as President is to be allowed to execute my constitutional
obligations as the forensic side of things is handled by my lawyers,” he
said. (READ: African leaders tell ICC not to try heads of state)
He
spoke as deputy President Ruto said the Jubilee government will not
condone interference with the country’s sovereignty by “foreigners” yet
it has been fully mandated by Kenyans to take charge.
Speaking
at Teldet IDP camp in Trans Nzoia, Mr Ruto said the country and her
African counterparts have the capability to solve their own problems
without foreign help.
“I and the president have a
responsibility to solve our country’s problems because we were mandated
by Kenyans through our election in to office,” he said.
Mr Ruto spoke when he issued Sh154.4 million to 383 families towards the closure of the camp.
The
deputy president said Africa has come of age to soldier on in its
socio-economic development agenda without necessarily requiring aid.
“You
are all aware that African heads are meeting in Ethiopia and we are
saying that we have the capability as a continent to solve our own
issues since we know our role,” said Mr Ruto.
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