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AU
leaders seek licence to kill and oppress
Gwynne
Dyer
October 25, 2013
http://www.theindependent.co.zw/2013/10/25/au-leaders-seek-licence-kill-oppress
Surprise of
the week: the club of African presidents (aka the African Union)
has held a special meeting and declared that African presidents
should be immune from prosecution for genocide, crimes against humanity
and war crimes while they are in office.
They are taking
this step, they say, because the International Criminal Court (ICC)
is unfairly targeting Africans: all eight cases currently under
investigation are about crimes committed in African countries.
“We would
love nothing more than to have an international forum for justice
and accountability, but what choice do we have when we get only
bias and race-hunting at the ICC?” said President Uhuru Kenyatta
of Kenya (who by a strange coincidence is currently under indictment
by the ICC). “The ICC . . . stopped being the home of justice
the day it became the toy of declining imperial powers.”
The AU is not
demanding perpetual immunity for its presidents. It only wants to
reject the evil meddling of Western imperialists, and to keep African
heads of state free from prosecution while they are still in office.
What could be more reasonable than that?
If the AU gets
its way, the victims of current African leaders who commit crimes
against humanity will only have to wait until they retire to see
justice done. True, some African leaders stay in power for a long
time - for example, Teodoro Obiang Nguema of Equatorial Guinea (32
years), Jose Eduardo dos Santos of Angola (32 years), Robert Mugabe
of Zimbabwe (33 years) and Paul Biya of Cameroon (29 years) - but
Africans are patient people.
Except that
they may not be that patient any more. Twenty years ago the accusation
that the ICC is just an instrument of imperialist oppression and
Western racism would still have played well in Africa, but the audience
has got a lot more sophisticated. The AU’s modest proposal
has been greeted with an outcry all over the continent, from Africans
who know that their leaders can be just as cynical and self-serving
as leaders anywhere else.
The most eloquent
protest came from Archbishop
Desmond Tutu, the 82-year-old hero of the anti-apartheid struggle
in South Africa. “Those leaders seeking to skirt the (ICC)
are effectively looking for a licence to kill, maim and oppress
their own people without consequence,” he said. “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.”
So is the ICC
really a racist organisation that unfairly targets African states?
The fact that all eight cases currently being prosecuted involve
African countries certainly sounds suspicious.
So does the
fact that three of the five permanent members of the United Nations
Security Council, which has the right to refer cases to the ICC,
have not accepted the court’s jurisdiction themselves. But
things are more complicated than they seem.
One hundred
and twenty-two countries have already ratified the Treaty of Rome
that created the ICC in 1998, including two-thirds of the countries
in Africa and all the countries in Latin America except Cuba and
Nicaragua. The chief prosecutor of the ICC is an African (Fatou
Bensouda of Gambia), as are five of its 18 judges.
Four of the
eight cases now before the court (Uganda, Mali, Democratic Republic
of the Congo and Central African Republic) were referred to the
ICC by the African countries themselves. Two were begun by the ICC’s
chief prosecutor (Kenya and Ivory Coast). And only two of the seven
new cases under consideration (Afghanistan, Georgia, Guinea, Colombia,
Honduras, Korea and Nigeria) are in African countries.
This is not
a conspiracy against Africa, nor is the AU defending African rights.
It is an exclusive club of African presidents attempting to get
its own members, the leaders of Sudan and Kenya, off the hook, and
to protect the rest of the membership from any future legal proceedings.
As former UN
secretary general Kofi Annan said, it would be a “badge of
shame” for Africa if they get away with it, but they may not.
They can easily dismiss the opinions of the “international
community” (whatever that is), but they may find it harder
to ignore the indignation they are arousing among their own citizens.
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