African Union urges ICC to drop cases against leaders
The African Union has urged the International Criminal Court (ย ICC) to defer cases against sitting leaders until they leave office.
The current presidents ofย Kenyaย and Sudan both faceย ICCย trials, and African leaders have long complained that the court unfairly targets them.
The AU meeting in Ethiopia had discussed withdrawing from theย ICC, but the measure failed to gain support.
Senior figures including Kofi Annan have criticised plans to quit theย ICC.
“Sitting heads of state and government should not be prosecuted while in office,” said Ethiopian Foreign Minister Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
“We have resolved to speak with one voice to make sure that our concerns are heard loud and clear.”
The AU summit in Addis Ababa is expected to formally adopt the request later.
The Ethiopian foreign minister said the AU would ask for the trials ofย Kenyan President Uhuruย Kenyatta and Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir to be deferred.
He also said the AU would ask for a deferral of the trial of Mrย Kenyatta’s deputy, William Ruto.
Bothย Kenyan leaders deny charges of organising violence after the 2007 election.
Theย ICCย issued a warrant in 2009 for Mr Bashir over alleged war crimes in the Darfur region, but he has not yet been arrested.
Theย ICCย relies on the authorities of national governments to hand over suspects, but Mr Bashir has avoided arrest despite travelling to countries that have signed up to theย ICCย statute.
Mr Tedros, who is the current chairman of the AU’s Executive Council, said theย ICCย was “condescending” towards the continent.
“The court has transformed itself into a political instrument targeting Africa and Africans. This unfair and unjust treatment is totally unacceptable,” he said.
He said that theย ICCย had failed to respond to the African Union’s previous complaints and said the issue should be referred to the UN Security Council.
Thirty-four of the AU’s 54 members have signed up to theย ICC.
Kenya’s parliament has already passed a motion for the country to withdraw.
Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan has said that withdrawing from the court would be a “badge of shame”.
Nobel Peace laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu has also voiced his support for theย ICC.
“Those leaders seeking to skirt the court are effectively looking for a license to kill, maim and oppress their own people without consequence,” he wrote in an article carried by several newspapers.
“They simply vilify the institution as racist and unjust, as Hermann Goering and his fellow Nazi defendants vilified the Nuremberg tribunals following World War II.”
All eight of the cases currently open at theย ICCย are in Africa but it is also investigating possible cases elsewhere.-standardmedia.co.ke