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Forget
the Hague: Mugabe must face justice in Zimbabwe
Blessing-Miles
Tendi, Pambazuka News
March 18, 2008
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/46612
Blessing-Miles
Tendi argues that if Mugabe is to stand trial for crimes against
humanity, he must do so as close as possible to the site of his
crimes - Zimbabwe.
On February 27, 2008,
the BBC-s John Simpson asked Simba Makoni if he 'would
not stand against the principle of sending President Mugabe to The
Hague-.
Makoni replied: 'No.
We will be a full member of the international community and we will
act in accordance with the normal standards of international justice-.
International newswires
immediately went into an excited frenzy about the prospect of Mugabe
standing trial at the International Criminal Court (ICC), which
functions to try individuals for genocide, war crimes and crimes
against humanity.
This 'international-
excitement needs to be shot dead in its tracks.
Since the treaty for
the ICC was assented to by countries around the globe in 1998, 105
countries have ratified the treaty to date. Zimbabwe is not one
of these 105 countries hence the ICC has no jurisdiction over Zimbabwe.
Furthermore, the ICC
treaty came into effect in 2002. The ICC can only prosecute crimes
committed after 2002. The crime that could provide the strongest
basis for Mugabe standing trial at a court such as the ICC is the
Gukurahundi atrocities. However, the Gukurahundi was perpetrated
before 2002.
Mugabe cannot stand trial
for the Gukurahundi at the ICC.
Mugabe committed many
crimes after 2002 but the burden is on those who advocate for Mugabe
standing trial at The Hague to prove how these crimes qualify as
genocide, war crimes or crimes against humanity.
And while it is within
the power of the UN Security Council to refer a human rights situation
to the ICC for investigation, this has failed to materialise for
years now and it is debatable whether consensus for such a measure
can ever be reached given some of Zimbabwe-s long standing
allies on the Security Council.
States that have not
ratified the ICC treaty can opt to accept the court-s jurisdiction
but for Zimbabwe, this option is undesirable and unnecessary.
Zimbabwe-s justice
system has been corrupted by Zanu PF over the years but it remains
competent and it has retained a considerable level of independence
despite manifold state pressures. More importantly, there is a pertinent
tension between the universal jurisdiction embodied in the ICC and
the local.
Justice that is local
or national is better felt than justice delivered in distant international
courts such as the ICC.
Justice at The Hague
is not felt by widows deep in Tsholotsho who lost their husbands
to the Gukurahundi. It is not felt by the homeless and displaced
victims of Murambatsvina who are living like cockroaches on Caledonia
farm. If Mugabe is to stand trial, he must do so as close as possible
to the site of his crimes - Zimbabwe.
The appropriate place
for Mugabe to face the judgment of history is in Matabeleland where
he had thousands slaughtered and in the areas where Murambatsvina
was conducted.
There are many unanswered
questions in Zimbabwean history, and there is a need for national
healing and reconciliation. Mugabe has a part to play in addressing
these issues, and he can only do so adequately if his fate and confessions
are a national affair.
The likes of John Simpson,
the 'international- media, the executive director of
the International Bar Association Mark Ellis, and some members of
the British House of Commons, who make a lot of noise about Mugabe
standing trial at The Hague must be reminded that Zimbabweans have
a strong historical perspective, and that Zimbabweans are not blind
to their double standards.
For instance, were it
possible for Mugabe to stand trial for the Gukurahundi at The Hague,
serious questions about British sins of omission and commission
in Zimbabwe would arise. Britain was aware of the killings in Matabeleland
but in 1983, at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Summit in India,
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher did not raise the matter
of the Gukurahundi.
In the same year, Malcolm
Rifkind, Foreign Office Minister, visited Zimbabwe and held diplomatic
consultations with Mugabe. Rifkind did not mention the Gukurahundi
in his report to the British House of Commons on his return to London.
Perence 'Black
Jesus- Shiri, the dreaded commander of the Fifth Brigade during
the Gukurahundi, was the first Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA) officer
to attend London-s Royal College of Defence Studies as an
honoured guest in 1986. The Royal College of Defence Studies describes
itself as 'the senior Defence academic institution in the
United Kingdom . . . the most prestigious institution of its kind
in the world-.
Retired General Edward
Jones, Director of the British Military Advisory and Training Team
(BMATT) in Zimbabwe from 1983 to 1985, explained the motive for
Britain-s offer of tenure at the Royal College to Shiri as
follows: "Undoubtedly, he was the man who was going to be
important in Zimbabwe and I think it was important that we should
influence him positively in so far as we could." In 2000,
Tony Blair-s Labour government authorised the sale of spare
parts for British made Hawk 200 jets to the Zimbabwe Air Force,
now commanded by the same Perence Shiri. Farm invasions during the
Third Chimurenga were coordinated by ZNA officials with Shiri playing
a key coordinating role.
The military man whose
excesses Britain had turned a blind eye to in the past, honoured
at London-s Royal College and supplied with military parts
became a key impediment to attempts at ending the violent farm invasions.
In light of this, the 'international- moral grandstanding
about Mugabe going to The Hague must be abandoned.
There is no powerful
'international- lobby for Tony Blair and his associates
- or George Bush and his cronies for that matter - to stand trial
at the ICC for their naked crimes in Iraq. The few criminal cases
the ICC is dealing with today involve countries such as the Central
African Republic, Sudan, the DRC and Uganda. Thorny questions about
African sovereignty are brought into play by this focus on crimes
in Africa. There is clearly one standard of international justice
for the powerful and another one for the weak.
The 'international-
clamour for Mugabe to stand trial at The Hague must be seen against
this background.
*Blessing-Miles
Tendi is a researcher at Oxford University.
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