An
almost evenly divided Security Council, lacking the requisite nine affirmative
votes, today ( 15th November) failed to adopt a resolution seeking a
one-year delay in International Criminal Court proceedings against the
President and Deputy President of Kenya.
Seven Council members voted in favor of the text
(Azerbaijan, China, Morocco, Pakistan, Russian Federation, Rwanda, Togo), none
voted against, and 8 abstained (Argentina, Australia, France, Guatemala,
Luxembourg, Republic of Korea, United Kingdom, United States). The draft
was, therefore, not adopted.
Had
it passed, the Council would have requested the International Criminal Court,
under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter, to defer the investigation and
prosecution of President Uhuru Muigai Kenyatta and Deputy President William
Samoei Ruto for 12 months, in accordance with Article 16 of the Rome Statute,
which established the Court. By other terms, the Council would have
decided that Member States would take no action inconsistent with their
international obligations.
Following today’s
action delegates explained the
differences of opinion reflected in their respective actions.
The
representative of the United States said the Assembly of States Parties to the
Rome Statute, which oversaw the Court’s administration, would meet next week to
help address outstanding issues. Since the Court and the Assembly were
the proper venues for addressing the concerns of Kenya and the African Union,
the United States had abstained rather than voting against the draft
resolution.
France’s
representative said the vote had been unnecessary when the Council was in the
midst of consultations with African States. The United Kingdom’s
representative stressed that the sponsors had failed to establish the Charter
VII threshold beyond which the Court’s proceedings against the Kenyan leaders
would pose a threat to international peace and security.
Guatemala’s
representative said it was offensive to suggest that those who had not voted in
favor of the draft were somehow against Africa. However, today’s vote had
erected a “barrier of distrust”. That some countries had submitted a
draft resolution in full knowledge that it would not be adopted did not accord
with the goal of promoting Council unity, he emphasized. Today’s exercise
had left a balance of losers, he said, adding that the vote was detrimental to
the African Union, which perceived its proposal as having been rejected; to the
Court, whose aspiration for universal membership was under assault; and to the
Council, which now appeared divided.
The
Russian Federation’s representative said African countries had presented
compelling arguments at a critical time for Kenya, whose military was playing a
key role in Somalia. Their request did not undermine the integrity of the
Rome Statute, and there had been no attempt to turn them against the
Court. The application of Article 16 would have increased the credibility
of the international system of justice among African countries, showing its
readiness to address “complicated and ambiguous” situations, he said.
Council
President Liu Jieyi ( China), speaking in his national capacity, said Africa’s
request was a matter of interest to the entire continent. It was well
grounded and based on the principles of the Charter.
Pakistan’s
representative said Kenya’s case rested on sound, solid strategic, political
and legal grounds, adding that its logic was compelling. From a strictly
legal standpoint, the principle of complementary must respect national
jurisdiction, he said, noting that the functioning of the offices of the
President and Deputy President was under question. A provision on
deferral was already available in the Rome Statute, he pointed out.
Rwanda’s
representative emphasized that the Council was indeed the proper place to
discuss today’s issue, and expressed his delegation’s deep disappointment at
what had transpired. “Let it be written in history that the Council
failed Kenya and Africa on this issue,” he stressed. Today’s vote
undermined the principle of sovereign equality and confirmed the long-held view
that international mechanisms were manipulated to serve select interests.
Article 16 had never been meant to be used by an African State; it appeared to
be a tool used by Western Powers to “protect their own”, he added.
The
representative of Ethiopia spoke in that country’s capacity as current Chair of
the African Union, stressing that the Rome Statute’s Article 16 gave the
Council authority to defer cases under the Court’s remit for 12 months.
The African request could not be rejected on legitimate grounds, and abstention
under the circumstances amounted to rejection, he added.
Kenya’s
representative noted that some Council members had chosen to tie the denial of
the African Union’s request to a paranoid fear of imaginary possible future
abuse of Article 16. “Indeed, our understanding is now clear. The
Security Council is no institutional destination for solving complex and fluid
international security and political problems,” he said, adding that the Rome
Statute had failed its first crucial test.
Also
speaking today were representatives of Luxembourg, Argentina, Morocco,
Azerbaijan, Australia, Republic of Korea and Togo.
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