The United Kingdom has welcomed the new
rules for trials at the International Criminal Court (ICC) which will
allow President Uhuru Kenyatta and his Deputy William Ruto to skip
sessions or attend them via video link. (READ: UK supports video link trials for Kenya)
UK
Parliamentary Under-Secretary for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office,
Mark Simmonds, said on Friday the new rules create a balance of pursuing
justice while ensuring the trials do not inconvenience suspects who
also hold the highest offices in the land.
“These
changes agreed will help address Kenyan and the African Union’s concerns
around trial procedures, while upholding the principles of justice and
accountability. It is right that these issues were addressed as part of
the dialogue between State Parties on the Court’s work,” Mr Simmonds
said in a statement posted on the Foreign Office website.
“The
UK is strongly committed to the Rome Statute principles of delivering
justice and ensuring accountability for the worst crimes. We welcome
Kenya’s continued co-operation with the Court, and we will continue to
engage with them and other ICC State Parties on this important work.
The
comments came just hours after the United States also welcomed the
decision by the Assembly of State Parties which has been meeting at The
Hague for the past one week. The US Envoy to the UN said the amendment
“protects the rights and interests of both victims and defendants while
allowing the judicial process to proceed without delay”.
NEW RULES
On
Wednesday, the Assembly of State Parties to the Rome Statute (ASP)
adopted a set of new rules on procedures for trials at the ICC which
allows accused persons with high level public duties to fulfil to be
excused from attending their trials in person, instead being represented
by their lawyers.
The Parties also agreed for the use
of video conferencing in certain parts of ICC trials although the judges
at the Court would still retain discretion on which mode to adopt.
The
comments from both the US and the UK come in the wake of a cooling of
relations between the Western powers and Kenya after the two abstained
from a UN Security Council vote on a resolution proposing the suspension
of the ICC cases against President Kenyatta and Deputy President Ruto.
(READ: Leaders criticise UN council)
(READ: Leaders criticise UN council)
Kenya
had also accused the UK of hijacking proposed amendments to a
video-link proposal, when it was claimed Kenya was seeking total
immunity for the president as endorsed by the African Union (AU).
But
it later emerged that Kenya had in fact presented the request through
Mr Kenyatta’s lawyers then later by Kenya’s envoy to the UN Macharia
Kamau, long before the UNSC voted on the deferral bid.
On
Friday, Mr Simmonds said the new rules reflect a “constructive working
partnership between the UK, Kenya and all other State Parties.
Although
these rules would give President Kenyatta and his Deputy some breathing
space, they will not apply to the third suspect Joshua Arap Sang who
does not fit the definition of “extra-ordinary public duties.”
Still,
these rules would not apply if judges choose to go with Article 63 of
the Rome Statute. The relationship between the Rules of Procedure for
Evidence and that of the Statute is similar to that of the Constitution
and an Act of Parliament; the Constitution remains supreme.
Article
63 reads: “(I) The accused shall be present during the trial. (II) If
the accused, being present before the Court, continues to disrupt the
trial, the Trial Chamber may remove the accused and shall make provision
for him or her to observe the trial and instruct counsel from outside
the courtroom, through the use of communications technology, if
required. Such measures shall be taken only in exceptional circumstances
after other reasonable alternatives have proved inadequate, and only
for such duration as is strictly required.”
This
article together with Article 27 of the Statute which says that the
accused are taken in regardless of their standing in the society were
not amended during the recent State Parties’ conference. However, the
Kenyan delegation led by Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Amina Mohamed
has indicated that they had issued a notice for special meeting in
February next year to discuss amendments to these articles
.
.
WHAT THE AMENDMENTS SAY:
(a) Presence through use of video-link
(I)
An accused subject to summons to appear may submit a written request to
the Trial Chamber to be allowed to be present through the use of
video-link technology during part of parts of his or her trial.
(II)
The Trial Chamber shall rule on the request on case-by-case basis, with
due regard to the subject matter of the specific hearings in question.
(b) Excusal from presence at trial
(I)
An accused subject to a summons to appear may submit a written request
to the Trial Chamber to be excused and to be represented by counsel only
during part or parts of his trial.
(II) The Trial Chamber shall only grant the request if it is satisfied that:
- Exceptional circumstances exist to justify such an absence
- Alternative measures, including changes to the trial schedule or a short adjournment of the trial, would be inadequate
- The accused has explicitly waived his or her right to be present at the trial
- The rights of the accused will be fully ensured in his or her absence
(III)
The Trial Chamber shall rule on the request on a case-by-case basis
with due regard to the subject matter of the specific hearings in
question. Any absence must be limited to what is strictly necessary and
must not become the rule.
(c) Excusal from presence at trial due to extraordinary public duties
(I)
An accused subject to summons to appear who is mandated to fulfill
extra-ordinary public duties at the highest national level may submit a
written request to the Trial Chamber to be excused and to be represented
by Counsel only; the request must specify that the accused explicitly
waives the right to be present at the trial.
(II) The
Trial Chamber shall consider the request expeditiously and, if
alternative measures are inadequate, shall grant the request where it
determines that it is in the interests of justice and provided that the
rights of the accused are fully ensured. The decision shall be taken
with due regard to the subject matter of specific hearings in question
and is subject to review at any time.
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