The
International Criminal Court is uncertain on what action would be taken
to President Uhuru Kenyatta if he fails to attend his trial on November
12.
“I can’t speculate,” ICC Outreach Coordinator for Kenya and Uganda, Maria Mabinty Kamara said.
Speaking
at Panafric Hotel in Nairobi during the monthly Journalists for Justice
Forum, Ms Kamara said President Kenyatta is still required to attend
trial next month pending the petitions he has filed.
Ms
Kamara said President Kenyatta and his deputy William Ruto had
committed themselves that they will continue to cooperate with ICC.
There
has been speculation that a warrant of arrest would be issued if
President Kenyatta fails to attend the trial as demanded by some of his
supporters.
Ms Kamara said the President and his deputy
have been cooperating fully with ICC including when they were issued
with summons to appear before the court.
The duo, Ms Kamara added, had also complied with conditions not to interfere with witnesses or intimidate them.
She
said 30 witnesses are lined up to give evidence in the ongoing Ruto and
journalist Joshua Arap Sang case. The witnesses are crime based,
linkage and experts.
NO COMMUNICATION ON DEFERRAL
She said the ICC will abide by the United Nations Security Council decision on request for the deferral of cases facing President Kenyatta and Mr Ruto by the African Union.
She said the ICC will abide by the United Nations Security Council decision on request for the deferral of cases facing President Kenyatta and Mr Ruto by the African Union.
She however said there has been no communication from the court whether the request had been received.
Ms
Kamara said the ICC could leave Kenya to handle case facing journalists
Walter Barasa if the country establishes credible proceedings against
him and charges the former Eldoret based correspondent with the charges
the ICC has lined up for him.
“ICC
has principle of complementarity. It will only investigate if assembly
of state party is unable or unwilling to do so,” Ms Kamara said.
She
said Mr Barasa could challenge the admissibility of his case at the
Hague but the state has to establish to a process to investigate him on
same crime.
“The process has to be genuine,” Ms Kamara said.
“The process has to be genuine,” Ms Kamara said.
Mr
Barasa is seeking to stop legal proceedings in Kenya that could lead to
Kenya extraditing him to the ICC to face charges of interfering with
witnesses in the case facing Mr Ruto and Sang.
Human
rights lawyer Njonjo Mue took issue with the State’s description of
cases facing President Kenyatta and Mr Ruto as a national problem, yet
the Head of State had termed it personal before the March election.
Mr
Njue said the ICC cases facing the three Kenyans were not about them,
Kenya’s sovereignty or the African Union but for the 1,133 people who
died following the 2007 post-election violence, the 600,000 people who
were rooted from their homes, scores of women who were raped and
infected with HIV/Aids and men who were forcefully circumcised.
“The
cases are not for one or three people or those who have mobilised all
resources of state and the continent to put a spanner in the will of
justice,” Mr Njue said.
Mr Njue said Mr Ruto is on
record saying it would take ICC 90 years to initiate the Kenyan cases, a
“time when we shall all be dead,” and that it is Parliament and the
government that took Kenya to the Hague by refusing to establish a local
tribunal or act on Kenya’s worst violence since independence.
“As
a law abiding country, we should stick to the Hague process.
Sovereignty does not mean leave us alone, we shall call you when we have
a problem like Westgate attack. Sovereignty is about being responsible
to protect,” Mr Njue said.
Mr Njue said of the eight
cases being handled by ICC, five were referred by governments of those
countries including one by Uganda President Yoweri Museveni of Lord
Resistance Army leader Joseph Kony.
Two of the cases
were referred to ICC by the UNSC while the “Kenyan case was referred to
the ICC through a process started by the AU itself when it appointed
Kofi Annan.”
“Kenya called on ICC when it failed to
commit itself to do what it committed under the Rome Statute it signed
voluntarily in 1999 and ratified in 2005. ICC is about victims
regardless of how powerful politicians are,” Mr Njue said.
'POORLY ATTENDED' AU SUMMIT
Mr Stephen Lamony who is senior adviser, AU, UN and Africa Situation Coalition for ICC said no individual including the President enjoys immunity from prosecution under the Kenyan constitution and Rome statute for crimes against humanity, war crimes or genocide.
Mr Stephen Lamony who is senior adviser, AU, UN and Africa Situation Coalition for ICC said no individual including the President enjoys immunity from prosecution under the Kenyan constitution and Rome statute for crimes against humanity, war crimes or genocide.
He
said a decision adopted by a poorly attended “extraordinary summit” of
the AU calling upon the UNSC and ICC to postpone the trial of Mr
Kenyatta is a step backwards in the continent's fight against impunity.
Pre-summit
proposals for a “mass withdrawal” from the ICC treaty and for total
non-cooperation by African states were rejected at the AU meeting. Mr
Lamony said less than a third of the 54 AU heads of state or governments
attended or were represented by ministers at the summit last weekend.
Many
of the 130 African and international NGOs that wrote to African ICC
states parties calling on them to reaffirm their support for the court
believe that governments expressed their objections to the purpose of
the meeting by not attending.
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