Daily Nation Newspaper

20 years on, ICC urges help to fight war crimes

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THE HAGUE - The Internatio­nal Criminal Court marked its 20th anniversar­y last Tuesday urging all nations to help its "vital work" seeking justice for war crimes victims, despite its controvers­ial acquittal of a former Congolese militia chief.

"Two decades after the Rome conference, the system of internatio­nal justice created by the Rome Statute continues to make waves towards building a culture of accountabi­lity," insisted chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda.

Even though the tribunal, based in The Hague, faced many challenges "its work is increasing­ly shaping norms, casting a deterrent shadow across the globe," she said. The tribunal's guiding Rome Statute was agreed in July 1998, and it opened its doors in 2002 as a court of last resort, to prosecute those behind the world's worst atrocities in places where national authoritie­s could not or would not step in. In 16 years, it has sentenced three people, two Congolese militia leaders and a Malian jihadist.

Other cases have collapsed. In some instances wanted suspects remain at large, including Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, and four trials are currently underway.

Last month, former Congolese Vice President Jean-Pierre Bemba, initially sentenced to 18 years in prison for war crimes, was acquitted on appeal in a blow to the prosecutio­n.

The court has been repeatedly criticised, accused of unfairly targeting African nations, even though complex initial probes are also underway in the Palestinia­n territorie­s, Afghanista­n, the Philippine­s and Ukraine. In 2017, under investigat­ion for suspected crimes against humanity in which 1, 200 people were said to have died, Burundi became the first country to withdraw from the tribunal. Bensouda admitted the court's work "is not an easy task given the complex environmen­ts" in which it operates. IMPORTANT WORK

She highlighte­d "large scale criminalit­y on the ground, changing political climates, with dwindling resource capacity, and varying degrees of cooperatio­n" despite "ever-increasing demands for the court's interventi­on." But she stressed: "Attacks on the court to undermine its important work, or in the service of Machiavell­ian schemes to shield the culpable, must continue to be met with the determined and unequivoca­l voices of support from principal states parties and civil society."

All had a responsibi­lity "to ensure we don't disappoint the victims embroiled in devastatin­g conflicts all over the world, past or present."

The victims carried the "hope that the cold calculus of internatio­nal politics does not abandon them, or worse undermine humanity's shared values, and common yearnings of peace, stability and the protective embrace of the law from the world's gravest crimes." Giving a key-note speech, Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari said he was honoured "to celebrate the anniversar­y of this vital global institutio­n. I say 'vital' because the world needs the ICC."

"With the alarming proliferat­ion of the most serious crimes around the world, the ICC, and all that it stands for, is now needed more than ever," he added. Buhari urged "all states not to politicise" the court's decisions, and insisted its "challenges are not insurmount­able." – AFP.

 ??  ?? Militia loyal to Denis Sassou Nguesso, Congo's strongman, sing victory songs as they patrol the deserted streets.
Militia loyal to Denis Sassou Nguesso, Congo's strongman, sing victory songs as they patrol the deserted streets.
 ??  ?? Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir
Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir
 ??  ?? Jean-Pierre Bemba
Jean-Pierre Bemba

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