Kenyan Chief Attorney Locks Horns With ICC

Public debate elicits strong views on Hague cases and wider issues of
accountability.

By Robert Wanjala - International Justice - ICC



ACR Issue 349,

29 May 13





As Kenya’s president and two other suspects prepare to face trial at
the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Attorney General Githu
Muigai has disputed claims by prosecutors that his country is not
cooperating as much as it should.

The heated exchange took place during a public debate held in Nairobi
on May 24. Entitled The ICC in Kenya: a blessing or a curse?, the
event was the third in a series of live debates hosted by IWPR, Wayamo
and Strathmore University on the ICC cases and broader questions of
justice and accountability.

Muigai accused prosecutors of being “outright unprofessional” and
dismissed allegations made by ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda that the
Kenyan government had not sufficiently cooperated with her office’s
investigations.

“Everything that the prosecutor is entitled to under the law, we have
given,” Muigai said. “Everything she has requested which our reading
of the law tells us she is not entitled to without a court order, we
have asked [for] that to go to court.”

According to Muigai, his office has complied with 35 of the 37
requests lodged by the prosecution since 2010, when it started
investigating the violence that engulfed Kenya in 2007-08.

“I do not know of any other country in the world that has assisted
this court in the manner that we have assisted it,” he said.

Chaired by Wayamo Foundation director Bettina Ambach, the panel
discussion at Strathmore University was attended by Attorney General
Muigai; the executive director of the Kenya Human Rights Commission,
Atsango Chesoni; the head of Change Associates Trust, Ngunjiri
Wambugu; Human Rights Watch’s senior international justice counsel,
Elizabeth Evenson; Njonjo Mue of the International Centre for
Transitional Justice in Kenya; and Wilfred Nderitu, who is legal
representative of the victims of the post-election violence at the
ICC.

The ICC’s Office of the Prosecutor was represented by Phakiso
Mochochoko, head of its jurisdiction, complementarity and cooperation
division, and by its adviser on international cooperation, Shamiso
Mbizvo. Both participated via a video link from The Hague.

The prosecutor’s office has repeatedly accused the Kenyan government
of failing to cooperate fully with its investigations. This prompted
Muigai to write to ICC judges on April 8 insisting that this was not
the case and that the Kenyan state should given a chance for its views
to be heard.

Kenya’s new president, Uhuru Kenyatta, and his deputy, William Ruto,
are charged with crimes against humanity for orchestrating the
violence that erupted after a disputed presidential election in
December 2007. The bloodshed claimed more than 1,100 lives and forced
an estimated 650,000 others to flee their homes.

Kenyatta and Ruto are charged in two separate cases, reflecting the
fact that they were part of opposing political groupings at the time
of the conflict. Radio journalist Joshua Arap Sang is charged
alongside Ruto.

In a response to Muigai’s submission on May 10, prosecutors outlined
to judges how they had encountered “serious difficulties” in getting
the cooperation they sought from the Kenyan authorities. Bensouda
stated that her office had yet to get its hands on “the most critical
documents” for its case.

Among their outstanding requests, prosecutors are want to secure the
defendants’ financial records and interview ten police officers about
the force’s role in the violence.

“When talking of cooperation, it must not be about the public
pronouncements,” Mochochoko told the panel discussion, after Muigai
said the Kenyan authorities had welcomed prosecutors into the country
and facilitated their work.

“It must be tangible, it must be concrete and must be timely. The
prosecution will continue pushing the government for assistance on the
outstanding issues,” Mochochoko said.

The legal representative of victims in the Kenyan case, Wilfred
Nderitu, called for the stand-off between ICC prosecutors and the
Kenyan government to be resolved so that the trials could get under
way quickly.

The debate took place less than three months after the March 4
presidential election in which Kenyatta allied himself with his former
enemy Ruto to form a winning team. During campaigning, they succeeded
in depicting the vote as a referendum on the ICC in Kenya, and the
cases against them as an indictment of whole communities rather than
of individuals.

Since the election, President Kenyatta and his deputy Ruto have
pledged to continue cooperating with the court. Ruto attended a
hearing in The Hague on May 14.

Despite this, questions remain about whether they and the Kenyan
government will be as cooperative as before.

On May 2, Kenya’s ambassador to the United Nations, Macharia Kamau,
wrote to the Security Council asking it to terminate both cases. The
UN Security Council has powers to trigger or temporarily suspend an
investigation, but not to close a case. Both the attorney general and
Ruto have distanced themselves from the request.

Meanwhile, foreign ministers gathered for an African Union summit in
the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa on May 24 tabled a proposal that the
ICC should refer the two cases back to Kenya’s domestic judiciary. On
May 27, the proposal was endorsed by African Union heads of state.

During the panel discussion, Elizabeth Evenson of Human Rights Watch
said it was important that all the states that had signed up to the
ICC demonstrated a commitment to support it.

“It is very important that states parties are out there, quite
publicly affirming the importance of the mission of the court and its
independence,” she said. “The public needs to see the government not
only committed on the letter but also the spirit of [the ICC’s
founding treaty] the Rome Statute.”

Other panelists also urged the Kenyan authorities to comply with their
obligations under national and international legislation. Kenya is a
member of the ICC and has introduced its own International Crimes Act,
a domestic version of the Rome Statute.

“There is no way out of this issue of ICC because it has become part
of Kenya’s legal system,” Chesoni of the Kenya Human Rights Commission
told the seminar.

The debate moved onto the recent election and its potential impact on
ICC proceedings. Panelists and members of the audience discussed
whether the election victory of Kenyatta and Ruto – both ICC suspects,
and both representing previously opposed ethnic communities – was a
sign that the country had moved on from the bloodshed of 2007-08.

The election outcome has led some to argue that since reconciliation
is obviously happening on the ground, the ICC process is no longer
needed. Panelists discussed this erosion of support for the ICC as an
institution in Kenya.

“One of the negative effects of this election is that we have a
situation where justice was sacrificed on the altar of democracy,”
Wambugu said. “I think we just have to figure out how to move on from
there.”

He went on to question whether Kenyans still saw the court as a credible force.

“If someone can use a case against him at the international court to
build enough profile to win an election, then we must accept that
there is a credibility issue,” Wambugi said. “You could have
indictments over your head at the international court, the
international community talking about it, you can have political
satirists – and still run and win an election. There is a problem.”

Other members of the panel warned against taking it on trust that the
reconciliation process was over and everyone had put the past behind
them.

“The country is still witnessing politically-inclined killings in
various parts of the country,” said Mue of the International Centre
for Transitional Justice. “Kenyans have not moved on.”

Chesoni said it would be “a very dangerous narrative” to assert that
all those who suffered in 2007-08 had voted for Kenyatta or Ruto this
March, and that they were therefore against the ICC trials.

Chesoni questioned whether Kenya could move forward peacefully without
a thorough justice process taking place, irrespective of political
developments.

“Any society in the world that shirks its responsibility to follow the
judicial system in pursuing criminal matters endangers the entire
society,” she said.

“We do need to ask ourselves as a society: when we say we believe in
the rule of law, do we mean we only believe in it as long as it is not
[directed against] our tribes-people?”

She concluded, “The ICC is just one plank. There are so many other
things that we need to do. It is an inadequate measure, but it is the
measure that we have.”

Robert Wanjala is a freelance reporter in Eldoret in the Rift Valley
region of Kenya.


This article was produced as part of a media development programme
implemented by IWPR and Wayamo Communication Foundation.

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