Imperial Valley Press

Africa asks UN to seek court opinion on immunity for leaders

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UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Kenya is asking the United Nations on behalf of African states to request an advisory opinion from the Internatio­nal Court of Justice on immunity for heads of state and government and other senior officials.

The request by Kenya’s U.N. ambassador, Lazarus Ombai Amayo, follows a decision by the African Union in January to seek an opinion from the court, the U.N.’s highest judicial body that deals with disputes between states.

Some African countries have been highly critical of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court for pursuing the continent’s leaders, including President Omar alBashir of Sudan and President Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya.

In a letter circulated Wednesday, Amayo asked Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to request that the General Assembly put the African request for an advisory opinion on immunity on the agenda of its upcoming session starting in September. A referral to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice has to be made by a U.N. body like the 193-member General Assembly.

An “explanator­y memorandum” attached to Amayo’s letter says that “in recent years, the issue of immunities has become one of the most pressing issues in internatio­nal law.”

In the case of an ICC referral, it said, General Assembly members are faced with “competing obligation­s” from the U.N. Charter, the Rome Statute that establishe­d the ICC, customary law, “or even internal legislatio­n with respect to immunities of heads of state, a member of a government or parliament, an elected representa­tive or a government official.”

The memorandum said U.N. member states “will benefit from a General Assembly request for an advisory opinion of the Internatio­nal Court of Justice that will provide clarity to the evident ambiguity and to competing obligation­s under internatio­nal law.”

The court has sought the arrest of Sudan’s al-Bashir since 2009 for allegedly orchestrat­ing atrocities in Darfur, including genocide. It indicted Kenyatta on charges of crimes against humanity for 2007 postelecti­on violence in which more than 1,000 Kenyans died, but the case collapsed because of what the prosecutor called lack of cooperatio­n by Kenya’s government.

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