African
Union (AU) leaders have backed a strategy for a collective withdrawal from the
International Criminal Court (ICC). But it seems that many countries have
reservations and that very little will change for now.
Deutsche Welle, 1 February 2017
The news of
the adopted AU strategy to withdraw from the Hague based court, came as more of
a footnote of the AU summit. There were no big announcements but an AU official
who asked not to be identified told the Reuters new agency that "the
leaders of AU member states endorsed the strategy of collective withdrawal,
with reservations."
At a closer
look, the strategy is however more of a recommendation than an actual decision
to withdraw from the ICC and a treaty which established the court known as the
Rome Statute. The decision is not binding and as country representatives who
are in support of the ICC noted, the decision to leave the ICC is up to each
individual country.
According
to DW's reporter in Addis Ababa, Coletta Wanjohi, several countries which
include Nigeria, Senegal and Tanzania had reservations about the paper. Other countries asked for more time to
consider the withdrawal strategy.
No concrete steps to withdraw
The call by
countries like Kenya, Burundi and South Africa to withdraw from the ICC is,
however, not new. The "withdrawal strategy" was initially tabled by
Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta a year ago. Until 2014, Kenyatta and his vice
president William Ruto were themselves accused of instigating war crimes during
the 2007/2008 post-election violence in Kenya. The proposed strategy was then
discussed by AU foreign ministers, who wanted to bring their grievances to the
UN Security Council. Many African countries are of the opinion that the court
is unfairly targeting them.
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Cape Verde
is one of the countries which
wants to remain in the Rome Statute
|
"What
happened in Addis Ababa is unprecedented" said Allan Ngari an expert on
international crime with the Intstitute for Security Studies in Pretoria.
"That a regional body would adopt a decision to withdraw from an
international instrument." Ngari however noted that the AU itself is not party
to the Rome Statute and it remains up to individual states to decide whether
they want to remain within the statute or leave it.
Ngari moreover explained that even the
countries which have said that they will leave the ICC and the Rome Statute
have so far failed to take any concrete measures to do so. "Kenya
introduced a bill in its national parliament to repeal that act that
domesticated the Rome Statute," Ngari explained. The bill, he explained, however, was not
passed and expired in January 2017.
Similarly
South Africa has proposed several amendments to the Rome Statute. The country
was heavily criticized for its failure to cooperate with the court and detain
Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir during his visit South Africa in 2015.
"If you want to amend the Rome Statute, you must be a party to the Rome
Statute," explained Ngari. There are processes to change the treaty from
the inside and this is what South Africa and other AU members are doing.
Last year,
The Gambia also threatened to leave the ICC. Under the new President Adama
Barrow, the country might however review this decision.
Strengthening
African justice systems
Whether
African countries will follow the recommendations of the strategy paper or not,
a handful are still adamant that they will withdraw if nothing changes.
"We believe that it needs to improve its working methods. It has been in
place for 12 years and it has had three or four convictions," argued Sam
Kutesa, Uganda's foreign affairs minister. "It spends $ 180 million (167
million euros) per annum. This is totally incompetent," he added.
Sudan's
Secretary of Economics and Development, Hussain Karshaoum, also argued that
instead of sticking with the ICC, African countries should instead strengthen
their own justice systems. "You have to strengthen the African Courtof
Justice and to call for every African state to ratify it as a last resort. The
second thing is to strengthen the judicial system at the domestic level,"
he said.
The
outgoing vice chairperson of the AU Commission Erastus Mwencha said what
African countries really want is a level playing field. "What happens at
the ICC should apply throughout the world and African leaders have said we are
ready to sit down and see how we can reform it."
The foreign
affairs ministers had planned to discuss a possible reform of the ICC and
amendments to the Rome Statute with the UN Security Council. The ministers
however said that officials who were sent to the meeting were not senior enough
to discuss the proposed changes.


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