By TREVOR ANALO
Posted Friday, September 18 2015 at 16:00
Posted Friday, September 18 2015 at 16:00
In Summary
- In its 13 year history, the court has only charged African nationals, but perhaps more interestingly, some regions within continent are more likely to attract the attention of the Court than others.
The International Criminal Court (ICC) has come under heavy
criticism, particularly from the African Union (AU), for
disproportionately targeting Africa.
In its 13 year history, the court has only charged African
nationals, but perhaps more interestingly, some regions within continent
are more likely to attract the attention of the Court than others.
The wider eastern Africa region leads the continent in having the most active cases at the Hague-based Court.
Of the 29 cases currently before the ICC, 25 are from the
Eastern and Central African region – a list that not only includes rebel
leaders and senior military generals, but also a former vice president,
a current vice president and a sitting head of state.
In East Africa, authorities in Kenya are still reeling from the
recent decision by ICC judges to admit recanted evidence from five
witnesses in the cases against the country’s Deputy President William
Ruto and radio journalist Joshua arap Sang.
Mr Ruto is the last high profile Kenyan individual charged at
the Court over the 2007 post-election violence that lead to the deaths
of over 1,000 people and displaced more than 600,000.
The Court has since dismissed the cases against four other
senior Kenyan political and government figures, including the country’s
President Uhuru Kenyatta, whose charges were dropped last December by
the prosecutor for lack of evidence.
Deputy President Ruto, and Mr Sang, who is accused of using his
position as a radio talk host to coordinate attacks, will be filing an
appeal against the decision by the Trial Chamber to allow the
prosecution to use recanted evidence.
In 2013, the ICC also issued a warrant of arrest against another
Kenyan journalist, Walter Baraza, for three counts of attempting to
obstruct justice by “corruptly or attempting to corruptly influencing
three ICC witnesses.”
LRA commanders at large
Uganda has three cases before the Court, with the notorious
warlord Joseph Kony, being the most high profile individual from the
country to be charged at the Court.
Mr Kony, a self-styled “commander-in-chief” of the Lord’s
resistance Army (LRA) militia, terrorised Northern Uganda and the Great
Lakes region for more than a quarter of a century.
He is facing 33 counts of crimes against humanity and war crimes committed in Uganda since 2002, but he is still at large a decade since his arrest warrant was issued in 2005.
He is facing 33 counts of crimes against humanity and war crimes committed in Uganda since 2002, but he is still at large a decade since his arrest warrant was issued in 2005.
Vincent Otti, LRA’s second in command, faces eleven counts of
crimes against humanity. Even though he is rumoured to have been killed
in 2007, prosecution still has his case open until it can independently
verify his alleged death.
Another suspect, Raska Lukwiya, a deputy commander in LRA, was confirmed dead in 2006. The Court has since withdrawn his case.
In July, ICC prosecutors terminated the case against another LRA
deputy army commander, Okot Odhiambo, whom the Court confirmed was
killed on February 2014 in Central African Republic (CAR) during combat
with the Ugandan army.
With almost all top LRA commanders either dead or captured,
Dominic Ongwen, the lowest ranking of the five LRA leaders charged at
the ICC, was captured by Seleka rebels in CAR in January.
Seleka rebels handed him over to US forces, who in turn handed
him over to the Ugandans who returned him to CAR forces to be sent him
to The Hague for trial for crimes against humanity.
On Thursday, the Pre-Trial Chamber recommended holding Ongwen’s
confirmation of charges hearing in Uganda, close to the location of
where the alleged crimes were committed. He faces three counts of crimes
against humanity and four counts of war crimes.
Sudanese evasion
In Sudan, all suspects are still at large, including President
Omar al Bashir who has been evading arrest from ICC since the Court
issued an arrest warrant against him in 2009.
He has since been able to travel to more than a dozen countries
in Africa, the Middle East and Asia without being arrested. South Africa
was criticised by world leaders for failing to detain President Bashir
during an AU summit in Johannesburg in June.
Mr Bashir faces five counts of crimes against humanity,
including murder and torture; two counts of war crimes, and three counts
of genocide committed in Darfur.
Other Sudanese nationals indicted alongside the president
include Ahmad Muhammad Harun, who is a former minister of Interior
facing twenty counts of crimes against humanity and 22 counts of war
crimes.
Ali Muhammad Ali Abd-Al-Rahman, the alleged leader of the
ruthless militia, has been charged with 22 counts of crimes against
humanity and 28 counts of war crimes.
The Court has only declined to confirm charges in the Sudan case against one suspect.
On April 2010, the Court refused to confirm the charges against
Bahar Idriss Abu Garda, who was the chairman and general coordinator of
military operations of the United Resistance Front (URF).
Abdallah Banda Abakaer Nourain, the commander of the Justice and
Equality Movement, faces three counts of war crimes. He is still at
large.
Meanwhile, the current defence minister, Abdel Raheem Muhammad
Hussein, has a pending arrest warrant for six counts of crimes against
h
The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Sudan have the most
cases at the ICC compared to any other country in Africa, perhaps
because of the many protracted conflicts that have rocked these two for
decades.
There are 11 on-going cases from these states including the Court’s first and second convictions from DRC.
Thomas Lubanga, a former Congolese vice president, was found
guilty in 2012 of enlisting children into his militia Patriotic Force
for the Liberation of Congo (FPLC).
He was jailed for 14 years. The time he spent in ICC's custody
will however be deducted from this total sentence, while Germain
Katanga, the leader of Patriotic Resistance Force in Ituri (FRPI), was
convicted on March 2014 on five counts of war crimes and crimes against
humanity.
Meanwhile, Lubanga’s second in command is facing 18 counts of
war crimes and crimes against humanity allegedly committed while serving
as the deputy chief of staff of Union of Congolese Patriots (UPC).
Mr Bosco Ntaganda is accused of murder, rape, sexual slavery,
forcible transfer of population; including conscripting child soldiers
and pillaging that were allegedly committed during the Ituri conflict in
2002-2003 that claimed over 60,000 lives.
His arrest warrant was issued in 2006, but Ntaganda had been in
hiding since and only turned himself in early 2013 at the US embassy in
Kigali, Rwanda which then handed him over to ICC dentition facilities at
The Hague.
The former militia leader started his trial in early September
where he told judges he was a “revolutionary” and not a mass killer.
Mr Callixte Mbarushimana, a Rwandan and a former employee of the
United Nations, was released from ICC custody in December 2011 after
the Court declined by majority to confirm the charges against him.
He was the alleged executive secretary of FDLR in eastern DRC.
Mr Mbarushimana was charged with five counts of crimes against humanity
and eight counts of war crimes committed in 2009.
He was arrested in France in October 2010 and extradited to the
ICC on January 2011. Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui, an alleged leader of the
National Integrationist Front (FNI) in Ituri region, was also released
from custody in December 2012.
The prosecutor appealed the decision but on February 2015, the Appeals Chamber confirmed, by majority, his acquittal.
Sylvestre Mudacumura, indicted in 2012 for committing nine
counts of war crimes from 2009 to the end of September 2010 during the
Kivu conflict, is still at large.
Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo, a Congolese national who led the
Movement for the Liberation of Congo (MLC), is charged with two counts
of crimes against humanity and three counts of war crimes committed in
in CAR in 2002 when he sent his militia to help put down a coup against
President Ange-Félix Patassé.
umanity and seven counts of war crimes.
In the Bemba case, four individuals from DRC and CAR, have a
hearing on September 29 on charges of attempting to obstruct justice.
Aimé Kilolo Musamba, Jean-Jacques Mangenda Kabongo, Fidèle
Babala Wandu and Narcisse Arido are charged with corruptly influencing
witnesses by giving them money and instructions to provide false
testimony in the case against Mr Bemba between the end of 2011 and 2013.
CAR closely watched
CAR is also one of the countries being closely watched by the
ICC prosecutor following the outbreak of sectarian violence in the last
three years.
On May 2012, the prosecutor received a request from authorities
in Bangui to investigate crimes committed in the country since the
ouster of President François Bozizé.
Other Cases
In 2013, ICC prosecutor also announced that they were
investigating crimes committed in Mali since 2012, making it the second
country in West Africa with a case at the Court.
Côte d'Ivoire’s former president, Laurent Gbagbo, the first head
of state to be taken to the Courts custody, is charged alongside his
wife Simone Gbagbo, and former flamboyant youth leader Charles Blé
Goudé.
He is charged with four counts of crimes against humanity
including murder and rape committed during a post-election crisis
triggered when he attempted to cling to power after being defeated by
current President Allasane Ouatara in 2011. Opening of the trial is
scheduled for 10th November.
In North Africa, Libya is the only Arab country with cases at the ICC.
After the collapse of Mohammad Gaddafi’s regime during the Arab
Spring in 2011, the new administration refereed the country to the Court
to prosecute former government officials who allegedly committed crimes
against civilians.
Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi, who is the son of Gadaffi, is charged
with two counts of crimes against humanity as an indirect
co-perpetrator. Abdullah Al-Senussi, a colonel in the Libyan military
and current head of intelligence, had his case dismissed last year for
lack of evidence.
The Court also terminated Mr Gaddafi’s case following his demise in 2011.
Central Africa dominates cases
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