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From: IRIN <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, May 2, 2012 at 6:07 PM
Subject: KENYA: Rights groups oppose move to sideline ICC
To: Elisabeth Janaina <[email protected]>


KENYA: Rights groups oppose move to sideline ICC

NAIROBI, 2 May 2012 (IRIN) - Rights groups in Kenya have warned of a
potential miscarriage of justice after the government moved to have
the cases of four people charged with crimes against humanity by the
International Criminal Court (ICC) transferred to a region tribunal
which has no experience in handling such crimes.

Two of the suspects, Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta and former
higher education minister William Ruto, are likely candidates in a
forthcoming presidential election. Together with former civil service
chief Francis Muthaura and radio journalist Joshua Sang, they have
been charged in connection with the widespread violence that claimed
1,300 lives and displaced some 600,000 people in the wake of the last
presidential election in 2007.

The cases are being handled by the ICC because Kenya has failed to
establishd competent domestic judicial mechanisms.

"Post-election violence victims must receive substantive justice, but
the current attempts to move these cases from the ICC is all meant to
protect the four suspects at the expense of the victims," Lawrence
Mute, a commissioner with the Kenya National Commission on Human
Rights, told IRIN.

On 26 April, 2012, the East African Legislative Assembly, during its
fifth session held in the Kenyan capital Nairobi, endorsed a motion
urging the ICC to transfer the cases to the East Africa Court of
Justice (EACJ) [
http://www.eala.org/oldsite041111/key-documents/doc_details/266-resolution-2007-kenya-general-elections-aftermath-case.html
].

The tenth extraordinary session of the East Africa Community Summit,
held on 28 April, 2012 in Arusha, Tanzania, resolved to extend the
mandate of the EACJ to include crimes against humanity. The court's
mandate to date was to interpret the EAC protocol.

"Setting up the mechanisms, even if the mandate of the court is
extended, will take years to conclude and will delay the cases," Mute
said.

The EACJ "has never handled cases of the magnitude of the ones facing
the four individual Kenyans at the ICC. I don't think the [ICC] will
be persuaded to move these cases there," Judith Musembi, a lecturer of
international law at the University of Nairobi, told IRIN.

Activists have also called for thousands of other crimes committed
after the 2007 elections to be brought before the courts.

"There are thousands of suspects out there whose cases are not before
the ICC, and the government, must as a matter of serving justice, set
up local mechanisms to try them," James Gondi, of the International
Center for Transitional Justice, told IRIN.

"The women who were raped and people whose property were burnt want
those who carried these out to face justice," he added.

According to a recent report by Human Rights Watch, "The limited
success of cases in the ordinary courts shows that Kenyan authorities
have been unwilling or unable to effectively prosecute post-election
violence."

"In Uasin Gishu district, for instance, an epicenter of turbulence, no
one has been convicted for at least 230 killings. The fact that not a
single police officer has been convicted for shootings or rapes
directly related to the post-election violence, despite an estimated
962 police shootings, 405 of them fatal, and dozens of reported rapes
by police, also demonstrates the extent of impunity for certain groups
that appear to be protected," added the report, entitled Turning
Pebbles. [ 
http://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/reports/kenya1211webwcover_0.pdf
]

In February 2012, the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions
(DPP) set up a task force to expedite the prosecution of some 5,000
suspects.

"We are doing what we can, but we can't charge people outside the law.
We must gather evidence before we can haul people to court," a senior
legal officer in the DPP's office who sought anonymity, told IRIN.

ko/am

[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=95400



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