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The
International Criminal Court: Africa Beware! Europeans Are
Coming To Get You
11 June 2010 By Dr. David Hoile
This week, in Kampala, Uganda, state members of the
International Criminal Court begin their first ever
review conference of the Court since its establishment
in 2002.
There is certainly a case for examining the
activities of the ICC over the past 8 years. When the
Assembly of States parties, those states that have
signed up to the ICC statute binding them to its
jurisdiction, meet in Kampala there is a lot they
should be worried about, not least of which the fact
that the ICC has proved to be manifestly unfit for
purpose. The ICC’s claims to international
jurisdiction and judicial independence are
institutionally flawed and the Court’s approach has
been marred by blatant double-standards and serious
judicial irregularities. The Hague-based ICC is
increasingly being seen as the European equivalent of
the US tribunal at Guantánamo Bay, which similarly
claims international jurisdiction.
While the ICC presents itself as an international
court this is quite simply not the case. Its members
represent just over one quarter of the world’s
population: China, Russia, the United States, India,
Pakistan, and Indonesia are just some of the many
countries that have remained outside of the Court’s
jurisdiction.
The truth is also that the ICC is as independent as
the United Nations Security Council and the Court’s
European Union funding lets it be. Far from being an
independent and impartial court, the ICC’s own statute
grants special “prosecutorial” rights of referral and
deferral to the Security Council, or more specifically
its five permanent members. Political interference in
the legal process was thus made part of the Court’s
founding terms of reference.
The Court is also umbilically tied to the European
Union which provides over 60 percent of its funding.
The expression, “He who pays the piper calls the
tune”, could not be more accurate. The ICC has ignored
all European or Western human rights abuses in
conflicts such as those in Afghanistan and Iraq or
human rights abuses by Western client states. Instead,
the Europeans have chosen to focus the Court
exclusively on Africa. Despite over 8,000 complaints
about alleged crimes in at least 139 countries, the
ICC has started investigations into just five
countries, all of them African. Given Africa ’s
previous traumatic experience with the very same
colonial powers that now in effect direct the ICC,
this must create an alarming déjà vu for
those who live on the continent. The EU is
additionally guilty of economic blackmail in tying aid
for developing countries to ICC membership – while at
the same time having criticised Washington for tying
aid to bilateral immunity deals with countries that
were members of the ICC.
The Court’s proceedings have often been
questionable where not farcical. Its judges – some of
whom have never been lawyers, let alone judges – are
appointed as the result of vote-trading amongst member
states. The Court has produced witnesses who recanted
their testimony the moment they got into the witness
box, admitting that they were coached by
non-governmental organisations as to what false
statements to make. There have been prosecutorial
decisions which should have ended any fair trial
because they compromised the integrity of any
subsequent process. The ICC’s first trial stalled
because of judicial decisions to add new charges
half-way through proceedings. Simply put, the Court
has been making things up as it goes along.
The ICC claims to be “economical”, yet it has cost
half a billion Euros to put on one deeply flawed
trial, which subsequently ground to a halt for months.
The ICC claims to be victim-centred, yet Human Rights
Watch has publicly criticised the ICC’s ambivalence
towards victim communities. The ICC claims to bring
“swift justice” but it has taken several years to
bring the first accused to trial for allegedly using
child soldiers. The Nuremberg trials, which addressed
infinitely more serious charges, were over within a
year. The ICC claims to be fighting impunity, yet it
has afforded de facto immunity and impunity
to several serial abusers of human rights who happen
to be friends of the European Union and United States.
Africa fought long and hard for its independence.
It must reject this new “legal” colonialism. The ICC’s
double-standards and autistic legal blundering in
Africa has derailed delicate peace processes – thereby
prolonging devastating civil wars. There is a clear
lesson for countries in Africa and elsewhere: do not
join the ICC and do not refer your country to the ICC.
The ICC does not have Africa’s welfare at heart, only
the furtherance of Western, and especially European,
foreign policy and its own bureaucratic imperative –
to exist, to employ more Europeans and North Americans
and where possible to continue to increase its budget.
Dr David Hoile, an African scholar and consultant,
is the author of The International Criminal Court:
Europe’s Guantánamo Bay? He can be contacted at:
drdavidhoile@yahoo.co.uk.
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