The International Criminal Court’s relationship with Africa: An unfair bias?
Arlette Afagbegee
2014-06-04, 

All current cases before the ICC are from Africa and case referrals are
restricted by international politics. However, this should not be an excuse
for African leaders to circumvent justice. As no African Court with
efficient jurisdiction and capacity exists, the ICC remains vital to African
victims and ending impunity.
The International Criminal Court (ICC), which will soon be celebrating its
twelfth anniversary, has received extensive media coverage and attention of
late due to its interventions in Kenya and its prosecution of
recently-elected Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta and Deputy President
William Samoei Ruto in relation to the 2007-8 post-election violence. At a
time when the Court is facing unprecedented challenges and threats and
accusations of an unfair bias toward the African Continent by the African
Union (AU), Conectas Human Rights, who has followed the 2013 Assembly of the
State Parties (ASP) also known as ASP 12[1] and the other recent
developments with regard to the ICC, examines the context of these
challenges. 

BRIEF OVERVIEW OF ICC

The establishment of the ICC is the fruit of decades of efforts to establish
a permanent, independent, international institution vested with the mandate
to prosecute individuals accused of the gravest crimes of international
concern, namely war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. The Court
was founded in mid-1998 during the Rome Conference at which more than 160
world governments and over 200 NGOs were present. The majority of the
Conference’s attendees believed that the creation of a permanent,
international criminal justice mechanism to hold individuals accountable for
heinous human rights violations would be a great achievement in global
governance. The Court’s founding treaty, the Rome Statute, entered into
force on July 1, 2002 after being ratified by 60 countries. So far, 139
States have signed the treaty, while 122 of them have ratified it.

AFRICA’S RELATIONSHIP WITH THE ICC

To date, the ICC counts 34 (out of a total of 55) African nations among its
State Parties, and eleven[2] more African countries have signed but have yet
to ratify the Statute. The African Block, which represents the largest
regional grouping of countries within the ICC, actively participated in the
establishment of the Court and was instrumental in bringing it into being. 

During the first few years of its existence, the ICC enjoyed a friendly,
cooperative relationship with the AU, with several African governments
referring situations to the Court. But all that changed when Sudanese
President Omar al-Bashir was indicted in 2009 after the situation in Darfur
was referred to the ICC Prosecutor by the United Nations Security Council
(UNSC), prompting the AU to adopt a hostile attitude towards the ICC and
call on its member states to adopt a policy of non-cooperation under the
threat of sanctions.[3] 

The impending trial of President Uhuru Kenyatta and the trial of Deputy
President William Ruto, whose cases were initiated proprio motu by then-ICC
Chief Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo in 2010, have only served to further
sour relations between the two institutions. Some African leaders are now
claiming that the Rome Statute violates their sovereignty and have issued
accusations that rather than pursuing cases on the basis of universal
demands, the ICC and the UNSC are doing so on the basis of political
expediency. This begs the question: Is there any truth to the AU’s claims of
an unfair bias?

As is oft-asserted in response to the AU’s claims, most of the African cases
currently before the Court were referred to it by African governments
themselves, and to borrow Dr. Ademola Abass words, author of “The Proposed
International Criminal Jurisdiction for the African Court: Some Problematic
Aspects”[4] and the AU’s first expert on Regional Mechanisms, “The African
states’ claim that the Rome Statute undermines their sovereignty flies in
the face of their voluntary submission to that treaty.” It is also no secret
that violent conflicts that have visited truly heinous human rights abuses
on the African populace have long afflicted the Continent. As the Coalition
for the ICC’s Senior Adviser on AU, UN and Africa Situations, Stephen
Lamony, astutely points out in his article, “Is the International Criminal
Court really picking on Africa?”[5](voted African Arguments’ best article of
2013), “[t]hose who argue that the Court is targeting Africans should stop
and think for a moment: there are more than 5 million African victims
displaced, more than 40,000 African victims killed, hundreds of thousands of
African children transformed into killers and rapists, thousands of Africans
raped. Should the ICC ignore these victims?” 

The answer to this question should be a resounding and unequivocal “no!”
Those responsible for these crimes must be held accountable and their
victims, who have either lost their lives or been left physically and
psychologically maimed, deserve justice. At the time of writing, tragedies,
which have been characterized as war crimes and crimes against humanity, are
unfolding in the Central African Republic (warnings have been issued by the
international community that the situation has the potential to degenerate
even further into genocide) and in South Sudan. 

Steve Lamony recalls how in his first speech at a Summit of the Organization
of African Unity (OAU) held in 1986, then just-elected Ugandan President
Yoweri Museveni issued criticism of the body’s members for standing idly by
while an estimated 750,000 Ugandans were killed either directly or
indirectly by a succession of brutal regimes that had ruled the country
since independence in 1962 (including those of the notorious Idi Amin and
Milton Obote). “Tyranny”, Museveni said, “is color-blind is no less
reprehensible when it is committed by one of our own kind.” He rejected the
principle of non-interference in internal affairs and argued that Article
III of the OAU’s Charter “should not be used as a cloak to shield genocide
from just censure”, further warning that “African silence in the face of
gross abuses undermines Africa's moral authority to condemn the excesses of
others, like the Pretoria regime.” It is ironic and quite sad that today,
President Museveni is one of the Court’s fiercest critics, and yet, as
Lamony asserts, impunity in Africa is just as big a problem today as it was
two decades ago.

Therefore, the International Criminal Court is as relevant as ever. This is
not being called into question. However, atrocities have unfolded and
continue to unfold in other parts of the world, such as Syria, and the
victims of those crimes equally deserve justice. 

The Security Council has been vested with the power to refer cases to the
Court over which the Court would not otherwise have jurisdiction, but while
there have been loud calls for the Security Council to refer Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad to the ICC, certain permanent members have
threatened to use their veto power to ensure that the situation remains
beyond the Court’s reach. In the words of Max du Plessis, senior research
associate at the International Crime in Africa Programme (ICAP) at the
Institute for Security Studies (ISS) and author of the paper “Universalising
International Criminal Law: The ICC, Africa, and the Problem of Political
Perceptions”[6], 

“One cannot merely claim that the African cases before the Court are there
because they deserve the Court’s attention. They do. But while crimes in
Syria, or Palestine, remain beyond the ICC's reach, it is impossible to
claim that the international criminal justice project is truly universal in
its aspirations, or free from the vicissitudes of international politics.
Ultimately, it is a question of fairness and equality. […]It is thus in the
interests of justice and credibility of the ICC that the Court stretch its
work beyond Africa. By doing so, the Court will deny the powerful African
elites the diversion that they use to cover up their crimes.” 

Perhaps it is time a more public debate was held among civil society on the
role of the Security Council in referring and deferring cases to the ICC,
especially in light of the fact that 1) rather than necessarily facilitating
the Court’s access to universal jurisdiction, some of its most powerful
members are keeping certain cases beyond the reach of the Court and 2)
three[7] of the five permanent members are neither States Parties to nor
signatories of the Rome Statute. Or, perhaps in addition to the Security
Council, the Human Rights Council should also be vested with the mandate to
directly refer situations of international concern to the Court. At the very
least, there should be a more spirited discussion about whether the
permanent members should be allowed to use their veto power to circumvent
the ICC’s ability to take on certain cases. 

AU 2013 EXTRAORDINARY SUMMIT ON THE ICC 

On October 11 and 12, 2013, the African Union convened the Extraordinary
Summit on ICC to discuss its relations with the ICC and the possibility of
withdrawing from the Institution en masse. Though the immediate threat to
pull out has been averted (at least for now), some African leaders and
officials in attendance expressed their view that Africa was been unfairly
targeted by the ICC (currently, all the 8[8] situations before the Court are
from the Continent) and their disappointment with the Court and the UNSC for
not taking their requests for deferrals seriously; the AU had sought
deferrals in the situations of Darfur, Sudan and Kenya in the past, but the
bid to postpone the Kenya trials has failed on two occasions (in 2011 and
2013) at the Security Council. 

The two main issues that were discussed at the Summit were that of immunity
for sitting Heads of State and complementarity. AU members unanimously
decided that sitting Heads of State and other high-ranking officials should
be granted immunity from ICC prosecution during their tenures, and they went
a step further by officially declaring “[t]hat to safeguard the
constitutional order, stability, and integrity of Member States, no charges
shall be commenced or continued before any International Court or Tribunal
against any serving AU Head of State or Government or anybody acting or
entitled to act in such capacity during their term in office.”[9] Moreover,
the decisions to request the inclusion of a special segment at the 2013 ASP
entitled “Indictment of Sitting Heads of State and Government and its
consequences to peace, stability, and reconciliation”, as well as to pursue
a UNSC deferral in the Kenyan cases, were taken. While acknowledging that
Africa is one of the most unstable regions in the world, the AU insisted
that its leaders needed to devote their undivided attention to governing and
could not afford to be distracted by trials. Additionally, leaders affirmed
that the ICC is a court of last resort and highlighted the importance of
complementarity and homegrown solutions. To this end, one of the most
critical decisions adopted during the Summit was the fast-tracking of the
African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (AfCHPR)’s expansion process- and
more specifically the merging of the existing AfCHPR and the African Court
of Justice into the African Court of Justice and Human Rights- to try
international crimes such as genocide, crimes against humanity, and war
crimes. This decision was preceded by one taken during the XXI AU Summit to
“seek ways of strengthening African mechanisms to deal with African
challenges and problems.”[10] 

Apart from the reasons publicly proffered at the Extraordinary Summit, what
might be some of the other reasons for African leaders, including
aforementioned Ugandan President Museveni’s sometimes vituperative criticism
of the Court? In the words of Steve Lamony, “Leaders and senior government
officials in Africa fear the extension of the arms of law. The reasons for
this are centuries of colonialism and absence of accountability for crimes
committed and hypocrisy and double standards of justice-supporting States.”

Lamony also makes a very interesting point regarding the AU’s criticism of
the Court. While it can undermine the Court and be counterproductive, a
silver lining that Lamony identifies is that in addition to spurring the
international community to ensure that cases outside of Africa that deserve
scrutiny are being pursued, it also pushes the continent to re-examine the
strengths and weaknesses of its own mechanisms and to ensure “that justice
and accountability are effectively sought within Africa, thus allowing the
Court to operate as it was truly intended, as a court of last resort.”[11]

It is important to note that following the AU Extraordinary Summit, the
Kenya Human Rights Commission and the Kenya Section of the International
Commission of Jurists addressed a letter to the chairperson of the African
Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR) in which they affirmed “that
recent developments at the just concluded Extraordinary Summit of the
African Union calling for the United Nations Security Council to defer the
Kenyan cases will have a devastating effect on victims’ quest for justice
and is inconsistent with the Rome Statute of which African States form the
majority of state parties.”[12] In the same letter, the signatories warned
that the decision to grant sitting Heads of State immunity from prosecution
was setting a dangerous precedent that could potentially erode the entire
African human rights system, and they called upon the ACHPR to “consistently
and proactively call upon African states to embrace criminal accountability
as an integral component in the fight against impunity.” In fact, not only
does this set a dangerous precedent for the African system, but for the
global quest to end impunity. 

Though the AU as a block has been calling for non-cooperation, many African
States continue to cooperate with the Court in its investigations. At least
one State - Botswana - has broken ranks with the AU and publicly voiced that
it does not stand with the AU in its decision that sitting Heads of State
should be beyond prosecution during their tenures. Moreover, many prominent
African figures, among them Kofi Annan and Bishop Desmond Tutu, and African
CSOs have rejected the view that Africa is being unfairly targeted by the
Court. In the run-up to the Extraordinary Summit, over 130 civil society
organizations addressed a letter[13] to African leaders calling on them to
support the ICC. The letter’s signatories urged leaders to affirm the
continent’s commitment to the protection and promotion of human rights and
to the rejection of impunity, as reflected in Article 4 of the AU’s
Constitutive Act. 

Hearteningly, the final draft of the future African Court of Justice and
Human Rights protocol doesn’t, at least for now in any case, include
immunity for sitting Heads of State or senior government officials. However,
certain African governments and the AU Commission are pushing for an
amendment to the draft protocol[14] to include immunities for Heads of State
during their term in office (article 46B in the former draft). This
amendment will be presented for adoption to the Conference of African
Ministers of Justice and Attorneys General scheduled to take place in late
May or early June, before the next AU Summit, which is slated to take place
in Malabo, Equatorial Guinea, in June/July of this year.

OUTCOMES OF UN SECURITY COUNCIL RESOLUTION AND 2013 ASSEMBLY OF STATE
PARTIES (ASP)

On November 15, the UNSC voted on a Security Council resolution pushed by
Council member Rwanda, with the backing of Togo and Morocco, to defer the
cases of Kenyatta and Ruto under article 16 of the Rome Statute. The
resolution failed to garner support, with seven members voting in favor,
while the other 8 members abstained.[15] 

In the lead-up to the 2013 ASP (November 20-28), several amendments to the
Statute were proposed by Kenya, including to article 134 on Rules and
Procedures of Evidence to exempt those holding extraordinary duties and
responsibilities from personally attending their trials in order to fulfill
their governing obligations. Kenya’s proposed amendments to article 27 to
grant sitting Heads of State and other high-ranking government officials
exemption from ICC prosecutions during their term(s) in office didn’t make
it on the agenda because they weren’t submitted in time, but Kenya intends
to pursue them this year before the next Assembly of State Parties meeting
(ASP 13). The Kenya Amendments submitted to the Office of Legal Affairs last
November were circulated to UN member states on March 14, 2014 and the
Permanent Mission of Kenya to the UN is asking the Working Group on
Amendments to start discussions on their proposals. 

WHAT’S NEXT FOR AU MEMBER STATES IN RELATION TO THE ICC?

The AU appears intent on pushing forward with the implementation of the
decisions taken at its XXI and Extraordinary Summits with regard to the ICC,
namely strengthening and capacitating African judicial mechanisms to deal
with the crimes that currently fall under the ICC’s jurisdiction. During the
22nd AU Summit, which was held from 21 to 31 January in Addis Ababa, a
closed session was convened on January 31 to discuss, inter alia, the
implementation of Decision Assembly/AU/Dec.482(XXI) on International
Jurisdiction, Justice and the International Criminal Court. Another agenda
item of this closed session, “Consideration and adoption of draft protocol
on the African Court of Justice and Human Rights, in implementation of
decision Ext/Assembly/AUDec.1(Oct.2013) on Africa’s Relations with the
International Criminal Court”[16], was eventually removed because it is not
yet ready for deliberation. 

At least one State Party has already taken steps to withdraw from the ICC.
On September 5, 2013 the Kenyan Parliament adopted a motion to repeal the
International Crime Act, which domesticates the Rome Statute. Therefore,
though some African States may not pull out of the Rome Statute for now, it
could happen, possibly in the not-too-distant future. Certainly, this
potential move will have serious implications and consequences for the
Continent, the ICC, international criminal justice mechanisms in general and
the fight against impunity.

There are those who have questioned the ability of the African Court to
adequately handle crimes of international concern when, in their view, it
has yet to make a real impact on the Continent.[17] Not only has the Court
been slow in passing judgments, but where it has done so, many of the
rulings have been on matters that are “inconsequential” or the judgments
have been unenforceable as they pertain to countries that have not ratified
the Court’s Statute. Currently, only 26 of the 54 AU member states have
ratified the Statute. Moreover, as Professor Dr. Ademola Abass argues in his
aforementioned article, the likelihood that African leaders will muster the
necessary political will to empower the African Court and permit its
prosecutor free reign within the ambit of the law is very slim. He suggests
that the best assurance for international criminal justice is for the ICC to
carry out its mandate as responsibly and impartially as it can. 

Now, assuming African Judicial Mechanisms, eventually vested with the
mandate and the capacity to prosecute crimes of international concern, and
ratified by all member states, take the task of fighting and ending impunity
on the continent with the utmost dedication and seriousness, then this is
arguably a very good thing: African solutions to African problems and the
strengthening of the African human rights system. As things stand, it
appears there is quite a ways to go before the African Court will have the
necessary capacity and jurisdiction to do so in a satisfactory manner.
Nonetheless, it should be noted that there has been a positive development
in this regard; in 2012, Senegal in partnership with the African Union,
established a special court to prosecute ex-Chadian dictator Hissène Habré,
sometimes referred to as “Africa’s Pinochet”. Habré, who has been living in
exile in Senegal for the past two decades, has been accused of presiding
over the systematic torture and murder of thousands of Chadian citizens from
1982 to 1990. In July of last year, the Extraordinary African Chambers
formally charged him with torture, war crimes and crimes against humanity. 

However, if these mechanisms are used instead to enable leaders in getting
away with criminal behavior, then it will be a very sad day, indeed, for the
continent and more largely the global quest to end impunity. The precedent
that the AU has set by calling for immunity for its sitting Heads of States
is a disturbing sign that this intergovernmental body might not be as fully
committed to fighting impunity as it claims, despite its constant
reiteration of “the unflinching commitment of Member States to combating
impunity and promoting democracy.” If justice is to be truly universal, then
it should pertain to all, regardless of their official capacity. 

It is, therefore, of fundamental importance that Civil Society Organizations
throughout the world and particularly in Africa continue to press African
State Parties to reaffirm their cooperation with the ICC and urge the AU to
address its grievances with the Court constructively through the available
channels, including through proposals that seek to broaden and strengthen
rather than narrow and weaken the jurisdiction of the Court. We must also
call on the AU and the ACHPR to embrace criminal accountability, including
of Sitting Heads of State, as part and parcel of the fight against impunity,
while encouraging States to strengthen their national judicial mechanisms
and processes to try cases of national concern domestically, because as the
Rome Statute itself asserts, the ICC is a court of last resort. And lastly,
we must all call on our respective countries to affirm their commitment to
this universal criminal justice project, which, though it may not be
perfect, represents a monumental global step in the fight against impunity. 

END NOTES

[1] see http://tinyurl.com/n4wassl
[2] Algeria, Angola, Cameroon, Egypt, Eritrea, Guinea-Bissau, Morocco,
Mozambique, São Tome & Principe, Sudan, and Zimbabwe.
[3] Assembly of the African Union, “Decision on the Meeting of African
States Parties to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court
(ICC),” Assembly/AU/Dec.245 (XIII), Sirte, July 3, 2009, para. 10.
[4] See http://tinyurl.com/nczz9r7
[5] See http://tinyurl.com/nkqt5pz
[6] See http://tinyurl.com/omnhojh
[7] China, the Russian Federation, and the U.S.A.
[8] See http://tinyurl.com/ao7xekx
[9] See http://tinyurl.com/qzktgjz
[10] See http://tinyurl.com/nlngl82
[11] Lamony, Steve. “International Justice and the ICC: Neither ‘Europe’s
Court for Africa’ Nor ‘Africa’s Court.”
[12] See http://tinyurl.com/oz7swmf
[13] See http://tinyurl.com/ogklrbr
[14] For full draft protocol see: http://tinyurl.com/nq6t3gb
[15] Members who voted in favor: Azerbaijan, China, Morocco, Pakistan,
Russian Federation, Rwanda, and Togo. Members who abstained: Argentina,
Australia, France, Guatemala, Luxembourg, the Republic of Korea, the United
Kingdom, and the United States. For more information, please visit
http://tinyurl.com/mz2lk4r
[16] See http://tinyurl.com/mo353l4
[17] See http://tinyurl.com/k3e8a7k

* Arlette Afagbegee works at Conectas Direitos Humanos
(http://conectas.org/en), an international human rights organization based
in São Paulo, Brazil, whose mission is the protection and promotion of human
rights in the Global South (Africa, Asia, and Latin America).

 

            Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
           Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni na Dk. Kiiza Besigye Uganda ni katika machafuko"

 

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