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Will
Robert Mugabe face trial?
Yarik
Turianskyi, AllAfrica.com
August 06, 2008
http://allafrica.com/stories/200808060042.html
Johannesburg - Whether
Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe-s ruler for the past 28 years, relinquishes
power now or in a few years- time, Yarik Turianskyi of the
South African Institute of International Affairs believes the prospects
of him being tried for forced removals of his people or the election
violence of his militia are remote.
Will the current negotiations
between rival Zimbabwean political parties end the 28-year rule
of Robert Mugabe? The leader of the Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) Morgan Tsvangirai seems to think so, stating that talks are
meant to devise Mugabe-s "honorable exit." But will
Mugabe face legal action for crimes committed while in office, as
have many other deposed leaders in recent years? There are two legal
means potentially available for putting Mugabe on trial. One would
deploy the principle of "universal jurisdiction" and the
other would be to seek an indictment before the recently-established
International Criminal Court (ICC), based in The Hague. The former
is an international legal concept stating that certain actions should
be considered crimes against all, punishable by any state, even
if they were committed outside of its territory. The most notable
example of the principle being applied was when former Chilean dictator
Augusto Pinochet was arrested in the United Kingdom in 1998, even
though his crimes were committed in Chile, which had made no demand
for his prosecution.
The ICC has been set
up as a permanent institution to hear cases involving crimes against
humanity, genocide and war crimes. It is currently considering cases
arising from conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda,
the Central African Republic and Sudan. (The high-profile trials
of the former presidents of Yugoslavia and Liberia - Slobodan
Milosevic and Charles Taylor - and those of the perpetrators
of the Rwandan genocide have been conducted by specially-constituted
tribunals.) The statute which established the ICC defines crimes
against humanity as "any of the following acts when committed
as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against any
civilian population, with knowledge of the attack: murder . . .
forcible transfer of population . . . torture . . . rape . . .
[or] other inhumane acts of a similar character intentionally causing
great suffering, or serious injury to body or to mental or physical
health."
It is important
to bear in mind that the ICC is legally able to deal only with crimes
committed after its establishment in July 2002. Some of the worst
allegations against Mugabe - of involvement in the killing
of thousands in Matabeleland in the 1980s and of allowing the violent
seizure of farms by war veterans beginning in 2000 - took
place before that date. However, the expulsion from their homes
of tens of thousands of people living in informal settlements ("Operation
Murambatsvina") in 2005 and the acts of violence committed
by his militia preceding and during the 2005 and 2008 elections
took place after the treaty establishing the ICC came into effect.
According to the MDC, this year-s polls have led to the death
of 100 opposition supporters, with an estimated 6,000 people tortured
and 200,000 displaced. Mugabe himself could be liable for prosecution
under the concept of "command responsibility," according
to which authority figures can be held accountable for acts committed
by their subordinates, including the army and police forces.
However, accepting there
is a legal basis on which to indict Mugabe, what are the chances
of him ever facing trial? The prospects are extremely unlikely.
Firstly, applying "universal jurisdiction" would require
two ultimately political decisions - a state would have to
decide to prosecute Mugabe, and Zimbabwean authorities would have
to hand him over for trial. Guarantees of immunity from prosecution
- domestically and internationally - are likely to form
a key issue in negotiations. (Mugabe would be well advised to stay
away from Canada. Its 'Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes
Act- allows for prosecution of anyone who is present in Canada
and allegedly committed such crimes.) Secondly, the ICC can exercise
jurisdiction only over states which have ratified its founding statute,
and Zimbabwe is not one of them. That does not prevent the ICC-s
prosecutor from starting legal proceedings against Mugabe -
last month the prosecutor asked the court to issue a warrant for
Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir for genocide, crimes against humanity,
and war crimes.
However, just as South
Africa and Libya have led efforts by developing countries, with
support from Russia and China, to defer the Sudanese indictment,
so can action to save Mugabe from a similar fate be expected. Russia
and China have already quashed a bid in the United Nations Security
Council to impose tighter sanctions on the Zimabwean elite. So while
there are legal instruments and precedents for Mugabe-s indictment,
political considerations are likely to trump the quest for justice
in the current scenario. Right now Zimbabwe would benefit more from
dislodging Mugabe from power than from putting him on trial. To
quote Henry Kissinger, "it is an important principle that those
who commit war crimes or systematically violate human rights should
be held accountable. But the consolidation of law, domestic peace,
and representative government in a nation struggling to come to
terms with a brutal past has a claim as well." Thus the main
goal of the MDC is likely to be to secure Mugabe-s removal
from office - whether now or in a few years- time, depending
on the deal struck in negotiations - even if the price is
granting him immunity from prosecution.
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