Monday, November 25th 2013
REPORTER
Kenya has secured a compromise to ensure her leaders do not have to be present
during their trial at the International Criminal Court in The Hague. But the
proposal to ensure that a sitting president can only be tried after serving the
presidential term will be deferred to a special Assembly of State Parties in
February. Reports indicate that Guatemala and Greece yesterday made a formal
presentation asking for the amendment of Article 134 of the Rules of
Procedures, which touches on motions relating to the trial proceedings to waive
the requirement for accused to be present. Kenya has supported the wording of
the proposed amendment that is also backed by Japan and South Africa.
It
states: “The Trial Chamber shall rule that an accused, subject to a summons to
appear, who is mandated to fulfill important and extraordinary public duties,
shall be represented by counsel during the trial, provided that a notice in
writing has been filed with the Chamber explicitly waiving his or her right to
be present during the trial. The Trial Chamber shall satisfy itself that the
right of the accused will be fully ensured in his or her absence and the
absence of the accused shall not prejudice the efficient administration of
justice.” Kenyan officials welcomed Guatemala’s position, saying it would meet
the persistent position argued by Kenya that President Uhuru Kenyatta and
Deputy President William Ruto cannot spend months attending trial at the ICC
when they have an obligation to govern Kenya.
Guatemala and Japan reportedly
argued that their position did not give blanket coverage that would lead to
impunity. Kenya welcomed the proposal because its leaders, in the current
cases, would not be expected to follow proceedings via video-link throughout.
But the AU proposal to shield sitting presidents from prosecution is likely to
be dealt with at a special Assembly of State Parties in late February. Kenya is
pressing for the special summit to be convened by UN Secretary General Bank
Ki-Moon in the time stipulated.
During the next three days, Kenya will argue
that it is not running away from justice or trial, but is keen to see that
fairness is a guiding principle. Attorney General Githu Muigai, the leader of
Kenya’s delegation, said: “We are making headway on the key issues of interest
to Kenya at this meeting. There is a consensus that some of the rules of
procedure must change because they are not practical at the moment.
“The
formal meetings and negotiations have only just started and we envisage a
result in two or three days. All the talk about Kenya being on the back foot on
this or that is rubbish because you cannot attain a position such as that
before the meetings themselves even begin.”
No comments:
Post a Comment