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| Saif al Islam Gaddafi |
It
is not often that African governments and the continent’s civil society groups
agree on any issue. Both sides are most times at loggerheads. African
governments, it is trite to state, are hardly the best advertisements for responsible
political leadership. That is the reason its extensive natural resource
endowments have done little to stop the continent lagging behind all other
regions of the world in developmental terms. But the International Criminal
Court (ICC) is already changing all of that. It is pressuring Africans,
government and civil society alike, into an uneasy coalition of forces. This
coalition believes strongly and with justification that the ICC is upon a worn
stereotype. They say the court is traveling a bombed out route. Along that
route is a conspicuous sign with as clear a message as daylight which is that bad
things happen only in Africa. While
there has always been and might continue to be challenges in Africa, the ICC
has apparently landed the continent at a crossroads of a different kind. A
court established for the highest values and best intentions (that of bringing
the worst war criminals and human rights violators to justice) is seen to be
openly victimizing Africa and redefining the very idea of global criminal
justice. All current cases
at the ICC
involve African countries – Cote D’Ivoire, Libya, Central African Republic,
Darfur in Sudan, Democratic Republic of Congo, Northern Uganda and Kenya. The
court also claims to be examining different situations in countries such as Afghanistan, Chad, Colombia, Georgia,
Guinea, Honduras, Nigeria, the Occupied Palestinian Territories, and the
Republic of Korea. But only a few Africans are taken in by what seems to
be the afterthought of examining situations outside the continent. The
statistics that count are far more poignant. Earlier this year, Thomas Lubanga
Dyilo of the Democratic Republic of Congo became the first
individual ever convicted
by the ICC of war crimes for
enlisting and conscripting children under the age of 15 years and using them to
participate actively in hostilities in the DRC between September 2002 and
August 2003. More of such indictments involving citizens of the
DRC are still pending at the court. Last year the ICC’s pre-trial Chamber
issued warrants of arrest against the late Libyan leader, Muammar Mohammed Abu Minyar Gaddafi, his
son Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi, and Abdullah Al-Senussi, Director of Military
Intelligence, for alleged crimes against humanity (murder and persecution)
committed in Libya from 15 February until at least 28 February 2011.
There is also currently a pending global warrant for the arrest of Sudanese
leader, Omar Al Bashir for alleged crimes related to the Darfur crisis. Besides the situations referenced
above in which the court claims to be looking at events in some countries
outside Africa, the roll call of those either already indicted or facing the
court’s indictment process show a troubling picture for equality before the
court and the credibility of its procedures. There is a strong, justifiable
feeling among African political leaders that the ICC is biased against the continent. And nothing better
illustrates this feeling than the difference in international response to the
analogous Libyan and Syrian crisis situations. Bashar Assad has by far exceeded
whatever crimes may have excused the indictment of Gaddafi, his son and chief
spy. Yet the same international community that acted with some urgency on Libya
has simply not shown up in the case of Syria. No system of justice survives
such blatant discrimination without forcing its legitimacy to the surface.
While one is not excusing the atrocities of Gaddafi, Lubanga or Bashir, yet the
processes of international accountability for crimes against humanity must go
round all those whose actions merit them. Significantly, the major global powers
that should have their weight firmly in support of the ICC have chosen to
operate outside its jurisdiction. Yet the court has remained attractive to
Africans only because accountability procedures at domestic and continent-wide
levels are either lacking or inefficient. And this is the core of the continent’s
dilemma. Are victims of atrocities in Africa to be left without justice? Or
should a discriminatory international system be relied upon even where its
methods merely reinforce anti-African stereotypes? In my view while non-justice
is unacceptable, discriminatory justice sinks to that same level.

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