Cape Times

Stance on Bashir deserves a bashing

- Eusebius McKaiser

SOMETIMES there is just no gentle way of responding to ridiculous­ness. Many South Africans, including the ANC, but also South Africans who are not members of the ANC or any other party, have come up with bad reasons why it was a good thing for Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir to be allowed to run away to his country before we could arrest him here in South Africa.

Let’s examine the defences that popped up:

Defence One: “The ICC is biased so we can ignore the arrest warrant!”

Let’s assume, for the sake of argument, not only that the ICC is biased, but that it is a despicable court out to protect the West and to hate Africa. Let’s falsely assume further, just for fun, that the court has never and would never ever prosecute a white man or anyone from Europe – even including Eastern Europe – and that it exists solely to find Africans to scapegoat for wars committed across the Milky Way.

Is that a good enough reason to have let Bashir leave, despite a court order that asked the state to keep him here pending a final court hearing on the matter? No. And the reason is breathtaki­ngly simple.

We cannot afford to allow the South African state to mess up the separation of powers by ignoring the authority of court orders. This is tantamount to sanctionin­g a lawless state and government impunity. It is trampling on the rule of the law, and it is as good as burning the constituti­on itself. If, in turn, we are not interested in having a law-abiding state, how the hell do we hope ever to have citizens who routinely obey the law or comply with court orders?

The state must role model what it means to take court judgments seriously. This past week was a vicious assault on the very principle of constituti­onal supremacy, just to prop up a warmonger. What a ridiculous price to pay: messing up the rule of law and in exchange getting… Getting what, actually? Getting to say you helped a man escape who needs to answer for war crimes he possibly committed? If he’s innocent, why fear legal processes anyway?

Defence two: “Why doesn’t the ICC go arrest him in Sudan!”

They can’t because Sudan is not a signatory to the Rome Statute. It would be illegal for them to do so. We signed that treaty. Not them. Not only did we sign it, we even domesticat­ed it into our own law. This means it is now South African law that requires us to comply with the ICC’s request that we arrest Bashir. In effect, South Africa broke its own laws by failing to arrest him.

If South Africa didn’t want to arrest him, we needed to first get out of the treaty using the necessary legislativ­e processes to do so. We didn’t. So any moral or political critiques of the ICC are utterly irrelevant to our legal duties.

Only someone who thinks being law-abiding isn’t important would be fine with the idea of the state ignoring a law now and only repealing it later. This is a shockingly inconsiste­nt commitment to the rule of law, and demonstrat­es at best a capricious commitment to a set of values that can be whimsicall­y changed when convenient and expedient.

I don’t want to live in a society with such scant regard for legal rules. I hope no one else does either, regardless of what you think politicall­y or morally about the ICC or the global system of governance being unjust. Put the rule of law first. The apartheid government didn’t. Let’s live up to the normative standards we set ourselves in 1994.

Defence three: “First arrest George Bush and Tony Blair!”

This one really is bizarre. Even political analyst Adam Habib was punting it on Twitter, but it was after midnight so maybe he was tweeting after a night of fine dining. Look, firstly, we don’t only arrest one rapist if, and only if, we can find all rapists. The law rightly doesn’t work like that. You work towards maximum consistenc­y in your legal system continuous­ly to increase and maintain its legitimacy. But one thief can’t be let off the hook until all the others are arrested.

Yet while we all lobby for criminal justice systems to be more fairly, consistent­ly and regularly applied, we don’t ask for no arrests to be made when we do know of someone who needs to answer a case before the court. Obviously not. Jeez, imagine the impact on law and order if the condition for bringing a suspect before court is that it can be done only once other suspects are before the court too? That is daft.

In no society is the legitimacy of the legal system fatally flawed if justice is not yet administer­ed with complete perfection.

Now remember also that we are talking here not about ICC inconsiste­ncy but about the South African judicial system. Why? Because that is what it means for a treaty to have been incorporat­ed into our domestic legal system. If we currently want police to arrest a suspected rapist and let him answer before a court even while others are not yet arrested, why are you asking us to first arrest Blair or Bush before we can arrest Bashir?

That’s just not convincing. Until there is a warrant of arrest issued for Bush and Blair, this point is moot.

At any rate, there is no warrant of arrest out for Blair that we are legally duty-bound to assist with if he comes to give a speech in Sandton. What domestic South African law compels the state to do so? Political responsibi­lity for the war in Iraq is very different to domestic South African law requiring us to arrest Blair. The Blair-Bush-Bashir analogies are badly thought through.

But the most important problem, finally, with this defence is that it tells us that we should take our cue from the Americans and the Brits when we decide what to do. So if America and Britain behave like lawless thugs, or refuse to be subject to accountabi­lity mechanisms for atrocities that their leaders or citizens committed, then we should be equally disinteres­ted in justice for victims.

That is setting the bar for leadership accountabi­lity shamefully low. Why should we take American thuggery as the model to emulate?

Defence four: “South Africa would have lost diplomatic face!”

I’m sorry fellow citizens, but the AU has been useless for years now – like its predecesso­r, the Organisati­on for African Unity – in demonstrat­ing that “African solutions for African problems” isn’t just an aspiration but a feasible, demonstrab­le plan for policing, rehabilita­ting and developing our own.

Wars still ravage the region; dictators abound and are not held accountabl­e by peers in the AU, and meanwhile tens of thousands of citizens in many countries remain victims of the worst violations of human rights, routinely. And this is not even to talk about the developmen­tal lag in most countries.

We do not have a standing regional rapid response unit that

Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir (left) and then South African president Thabo Mbeki in Cape Town. Bashir and Mbeki held talks at the time focusing on tension in southern Sudan and the deteriorat­ing situation in the western area of Darfur. can quickly step in to ensure that innocent citizens are protected once a regime turns on its own people. And we do not have an alternativ­e to the ICC that is based on the continent where we can try leaders accused of war crimes if they do not have the legal capacity in their domestic legal systems to ensure justice for victims, given the prosecutor­ial complexiti­es of war crimes.

So, if the AU suffers from these problems and other ills like constant resource shortages, then the diplomacy defence of Bashir is simply disingenuo­us. How can we lose face when the regional body itself lacks credibilit­y and has no impressive track record dealing with crises here?

We only lose credibilit­y diplomatic­ally if the AU is a body to already be proud of. But it isn’t, and so I fail to see why President Jacob Zuma would have reason to be embarrasse­d if some AU members had to cry if we arrested Bashir.

This thing of citing the diplomatic card, as if doing so constitute­s an argument, doesn’t wash. If anything, arresting Bashir was a chance to set a new standard which could have become Zuma’s legacy, one upstaging Thabo Mbeki’s quiet diplomacy-cum-renaissanc­eintellect­ualism.

For the diplomacy defence to be a slam-dunk, the proponent of this defence must spell out for what happens now that Bashir isn’t going to the ICC. What’s the alternativ­e legal adjudicati­on mechanism, in Sudan or on the continent, that will guarantee that justice is done and seen to be done?

Diplomacy that blocks legal and political accountabi­lity isn’t worth defending.

Defence everything!”

It is very sad to see so many people thinking that if the state

five:

“Law

isn’t ignores the law, that that isn’t a bad idea. I have already made reference in my responses to other defences of Bashir’s escape that legal duties matter.

Some defences have explicitly focused on the rule of law and constituti­onal supremacy, suggesting that the constituti­on is a political text and as a living document we can change it as we see fit. So why bang on about this arrest warrant thingy, they ask?

As I pointed out earlier, laws can’t be changed or amended after you have committed a wrongdoing to accommodat­e your wrongful act. A legal system isn’t like my arm that can be fixed if I fall and I crack it.

The health of the legal system is much more precarious­ly a function of how many of us – citizens, the state, corporates, other legal persons – choose to respect the system.

The system’s legitimacy is at our mercy. The more we diss it, ignore it, inconsiste­ntly comply with the orders of the court, the more the authority of the judiciary is undermined.

In the worst-case scenario, that means a legal system that doesn’t function and, in turn, a state will be unable to guarantee security nor citizens able to exercise their rights.

Now let’s not exaggerate, of course. Bashir’s escape won’t by itself have that impact. But the cumulative effect of unlawful actions, and failure to comply with court orders that seek to remedy laws that were broken, will eventually have that effect.

That is why the willy-nilly refusal to comply with a court order is a very dangerous thing that we shouldn’t make light of. And not even the promulgate­d diplomacy granted to Bashir side-steps the violation of the rule of law, because that argument was hit out of the park for a giant six by a full bench of the high court which must be respected.

Active

citizens

will know

of examples of state failure to comply timeously and faithfully with court orders. Already. Section27, for example, have had to fight for years to get the SANDF to comply with a court order to stop discrimina­ting against soldiers who are HIV-positive.

There are many examples of litigants having to go back to court, after celebratin­g a victory for social justice, to then get the state to actually play ball and comply. If we as citizens give the state the space to choose when to comply with court orders, we are opening the floodgates for more routine noncomplia­nce.

What will you say if the court refuses to comply with an order to dispense textbooks to Limpopo, say? By then the erosion of the rule of law will be normal. Is that what we want?

Defence six: “Who the hell is the Southern African Litigation Centre?!”

Who cares about the history of the Southern African Litigation Centre (SALC)? Whether they existed for years or one week, I could not give a rat’s behind. And any focus on their board members, their donors or their motives are misplaced for several reasons.

First, if someone or an organisati­on has a legal standing in court, then they have the lawful prerogativ­e to bring a case before court if they want to. If the case has merits, then society should thank them for the litigation. If it doesn’t, then they will lose the case and life goes on. Why obsess about them at all?

In this particular case we all owe the SALC a huge thank you. They are an exemplar of civil society excellence and vigilance. Either state action is lawful or it is unlawful. If it is unlawful, then it is a good thing to have the unlawful actions nipped in the bud by a court of law. If a civil society organisati­on decides to go to court, like it did in this case, and the court agreed that the state had a legal duty to arrest Bashir, why hate on the SALC?

Anyone dissing the SALC are an enemy of one or two things (or both): active citizenshi­p and constituti­onal supremacy.

If you value active citizenshi­p, including the many unsung heroes in our civil society organisati­ons operating on shoestring budgets, then you should write letters to the press praising the SALC rather than asking red-herring questions about their motives.

If you value constituti­onal supremacy, then you should be hugely upset that our government violated our own constituti­on. The court made it clear that the state had a duty to arrest Bashir even if civil society had not brought this case before it.

And if you do not value constituti­onal supremacy, then I am afraid there’s nothing I can say to you about your anti-democratic tendencies. Clearly, such a celebratio­n of Bashir’s fleeing, with the collusion of someone in the South African state, sends the additional message that black lives, this time in Darfur, do not matter.

Bashir, lest we forget, stands accused of playing “an essential” role in the torture, rape, murder and displaceme­nt of civilians, including an attempt to exterminat­e the Fur, Masalit, and Zaghawa ethnic groups. This constitute­s a charge of genocide. How do those cheering in favour of Bashir’s fleeing feel about the victims of state-aided war crimes on our continent?

Many in the West would agree Sudanese lives don’t matter. After all, black lives don’t matter in the US.

Are defenders of Bashir happy to share many Western leaders’ disregard for justice for African victims?

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? CENTRE STAGE: Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir (on vehicle, centre) parades through the street in Al-Fasher, northern Darfur, in this March 2009 file picture. If South Africa didn’t want to arrest him, we needed to first get out of the treaty...
Picture: REUTERS CENTRE STAGE: Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir (on vehicle, centre) parades through the street in Al-Fasher, northern Darfur, in this March 2009 file picture. If South Africa didn’t want to arrest him, we needed to first get out of the treaty...
 ?? Picture: AP ?? PREVIOUS VISIT:
Picture: AP PREVIOUS VISIT:

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