Kenya's Deputy President Promises To Cooperate With Hague

Kenya's deputy president, William Ruto, promised the International
Criminal Court on Tuesday he and the president would cooperate despite
calling their charges over election violence the result of a
"conspiracy of lies".


 15 May 2013





William Ruto (C) sits in the courtroom of the International Criminal
Court (ICC) in The Hague May 14, 2013. [ Reuters/Lex van Lieshout]

 By Thomas Escritt

THE HAGUE, 14 May 2013 (Reuters) - Ruto was attending a pre-trial
hearing in The Hague, where he and President Uhuru Kenyatta face
charges of orchestrating clashes in which some 1,200 people were
killed five years ago after a presidential election.

"The new Kenyan administration ... will cooperate with the court,
because President Kenyatta and myself believe in the rule of law," he
said at the end of the two-hour hearing, at which his lawyers asked
permission for him to appear in future via video link to allow him to
carry out his official duties.

Wearing a blue suit and a maroon tie, Ruto looked at ease throughout
the hearing, chatting and smiling with his lawyers.

Kenyatta and his running mate Ruto won this year's largely peaceful
presidential election, leaving the court case as a complication in the
West's relations with Kenya, an ally in the fight against Islamist
militancy in the region.

Analysts said the ICC charges boosted their poll performance in a
country where sensitivities about post-colonial interference run deep.

Prosecution and defence lawyers repeatedly clashed over the question
of whether the prosecution should be allowed to introduce new
witnesses to bolster its case against Ruto and his co-accused, the
broadcaster Joshua arap Sang.

Ruto dismissed the evidence against him, saying that he was the
"victim ... of a syndicate of falsehood and a conspiracy of lies
choreographed by networks which are obviously against truth and
justice".

Prosecutors have struggled to pin charges on suspects in several other
countries' cases they have examined, with judges repeatedly
criticising them for failing to line up convincing witnesses.

In March, prosecutors dropped charges against Francis Muthaura,
Kenyatta's co-accused, saying witnesses had been intimidated into
withdrawing their testimony.

There were tense scenes in the courtroom as Ruto's lawyer, Karim Khan,
attempted to list witnesses whose testimony he said was of little
value, before being interrupted by prosecution lawyers who accused him
of placing witnesses in jeopardy by reading out confidential material
in open court.

Prosecutors said allowing Ruto to attend by video link would do a
disservice to the victims of the violence.

"Witnesses need to be reassured that there are people listening to
their testimony, not just your honours but also the parties who are
present. The victims need confidence in the system, to be heard," said
Cynthia Tai, a prosecution lawyer.

Judges will rule on the requests at a later date. They have yet to set
a date for the start of the trial.

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