Kenya is calling on the United Nations’ judicial body to issue
an opinion on whether national leaders should get immunity in
international legal proceedings.
The request is
contained in a recent letter to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres by
Kenyan UN ambassador Lazarus Ombai Amayo, acting for the African group
of UN member-states.
Mr Amayo asked Mr Guterres to
include the African group's request for an advisory opinion as an agenda
item for the UN General Assembly session that starts next month.
If
the General Assembly agrees to support the Kenya-led initiative, the
UN’s International Court of Justice, often referred to as the “World
Court,” would be asked to offer a nonbinding opinion on the question of
immunity for heads of state and other high-ranking national officials.
“In
recent years, the issue of immunities has become one of the most
pressing issues in international law,” Mr Amayo told the UN chief.
The
move spearheaded by Kenya takes place amid opposition by some African
countries to the International Criminal Court’s long-standing effort to
prosecute Sudan President Omar al-Bashir for alleged crimes against
humanity, genocide and war crimes related to the conflict in the Darfur
region.
The Kenyan government waged a long campaign against the ICC’s
indictment of President Uhuru Kenyatta and Deputy President William Ruto
for crimes against humanity, stemming from the violence that took the
lives of at least 1,200 people and displaced thousands of others after
the 2007 election, whose presidential result was disputed.
The
case against President Kenyatta was dropped in 2014, while Deputy
President Ruto’s was dismissed in 2016 for lack of evidence.
Kenya
also kicked off a campaign at the African Union, lobbying members to
pass a resolution for mass withdrawal from the Rome Statute. Early in
2017, the AU adopted the resolution for the mass withdrawal of member
states from the International Criminal Court.
The resolution was, however, non-binding, with Nigeria and Senegal opposing a withdrawal.
South
Africa, Burundi and the Gambia had announced their intention to
withdraw, accusing the ICC of undermining their sovereignty and unfairly
targeting Africans.
While Burundi successfully pulled
out of the Rome Statute, South Africa’s bid was thwarted by a national
court, which declared it unconstitutional.
Gambia reversed its decision after its president, Yahya Jammeh, was replaced by Adama Barrow in the 2016 elections.
Mr Amayo says that the issue of immunity for national leaders is “of crucial concern” to UN member-states.
The
Kenyan envoy said the legal obligations of UN members are derived from a
variety of sources, including “customary international law.” And that
form of law makes provision for “the immunities of heads of state, a
member of a government or parliament, an elected representative or a
government official.”
The diplomat acknowledges in the
memorandum that an ICC Pre-trial Chamber has ruled that under
international law immunity cannot be invoked for heads of state in
regard to prosecution by an international court.
In
response to Mr Amayo’s letter, Human Rights Watch said that immunity
should not be granted to heads of state and other national officials
accused of war crimes, genocide or crimes against humanity.
Elise Keppler, deputy director of the rights group’s international justice programme, told The EastAfrican that “there should be no escape hatch for leaders.”
-The EastAfrican
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