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AU summit on ICC

Ludger Schadomsky / mc October 14, 2013

AU leaders may have decided against a mass withdrawal from the ICC, but confrontation is still in the air. As trial of President Kenyatta draws near, Kenyans are reacting with a mixture of defiance and resignation.

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ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA - MARCH 18: A plaque stands outside the headquarters complex of the African Union (AU), which was a gift by the government of China and completed in 2012, on March 18, 2013 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Ethiopia, with an estimated 91 million inhabitants, is the second most populated country in Africa and the per capita income is $1,200. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
Image: Getty Images

Kenya's foreign affairs minister Amina Mohamed told the media in Nairobi on Monday that the International Criminal Court would have to wait "until afer the president leaves office."

President Uhruru Kenyatta's trial on charges of crimes against humanity is due to start in The Hague on November 12.

High-level United Nations executive Amina Mohamed of Kenya attends a press conference following a hearing on January 30, 2013 at the World Trade Organization (WTO) headquarters in Geneva. WTO is interviewing nine candidates to replace Pascal Lamy as director general. The WTO's 158 member countries is to make its decision known by May 31. AFP PHOTO / FABRICE COFFRINI (Photo credit should read FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images)
Amina Mohamed told the media in Nairobi that Kenya "has support on the continent"Image: Getty Images

Some Kenyans, like political anaylst Egara Kabaji, are clearly worried. "It basically means Kenya becomes a pariah state. Nobody will want to do business with us," he told DW's Nairobi correspondent James Shimanyula.

Lucy Mwangi, who sells chicken in Kariobangi on the eastern outsikirts of the Kenyan capital, said she didn't suport Kenyatta going to ICC because it would be "unfair for Kenyans."

Kenyan computer specialist Andrew Wasike, also speaking to DW, said Kenyatta should go to The Hague and "comply with all the protocols that the ICC has set up so he doesn't look defiant."

Those Kenyans were speaking after an African Union (AU) special summit in Addis Ababa, which was called to review the bloc's relationship with the ICC.

Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta makes his statement to the nation at the State House in Nairobi on September 22, 2013, following the overwhelming numbers of casualties from the Westgate mall shooting in the Kenyan capital. Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said Sunday a nephew and his fiancee were among the 59 people confirmed killed in an ongoing siege in an upmarket shopping mall by Somali militants. AFP PHOTO / JOHN MUCHUCHA (Photo credit should read John Muchucha/AFP/Getty Images)
Uhuru Kenyatta's supporters are concerned about a "power vacuum" while he is in The HagueImage: John Muchucha/AFP/Getty Images

Kenyatta and his deputy, William Ruto, are alleged to have masterminded a vicious campaign of ethnic violence that left at least 1,100 people dead and more than 600,000 homeless after the disputed elections in 2007. That is why they are going on trial.

"Unfair and unjust"

At the AU summit, Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda put forward a resolution urging for a withdrawal from the Rome Statute, the legal foundation for the ICC. This failed to obtain majority backing. Before the summit started, there was support for the ICC from political heavyweights Nigeria, South Africa and Ghana.

The AU's deliberations were opened by the chairman of its executive council, Ethiopian Foreign Minister Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who branded the treatment of Africa by the ICC as "unfair and unjust." He insisted that Kenyan President Uhruru Kenyatta should be allowed to "govern his country," an apparent reference to his expected enforced absence from Kenya while he is in The Hague.

Kenya's Deputy President William Ruto reacts as he sits in the courtroom before their trial at the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague on September 10, 2013. Ruto appeared at the International Criminal Court on Tuesday for the opening of his trial on charges of co-orchestrating a post-election bloodbath five years ago. Ruto and his co-accused, the broadcaster Joshua arap Sang, could face long prison terms if convicted. AFP PHOTO/Michael Kooren (POOL) (Photo credit should read MICHAEL KOOREN/AFP/Getty Images)
William Ruto, Kenyatta's deputy, is already on trial in The HagueImage: Michael Kooren/AFP/Getty Images

AU leaders want the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) to defer Kenyatta's trial for a year. The UNSC has the authority to do this under article 16 of the ICC's Rome Statute.

Solomon Derso is an expert on the AU at the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) in Addis Ababa. He told DW the UNSC would only agree to such a deferral when there was a threat to international security and that was not in evidence in the case of Kenya.

"I really don't see any positive response coming from the side of the UN Security Council," he said.

Permanent representatives

On examining the possible voting intentions of two permanent members of the UNSC, Harmen van der Wilt, professor of international criminal law at the University of Amsterdam, came to a similar conclusion. "It is well known that the UK and France are supporters of the International Criminal Court so they could say, well, we could veto the decision," he told DW.

AU leaders have decided to set up a contact group, composed of five members of the AU's executive council, to consult with the UNSC, in particular the five permanent members, and raise the AU's concerns about its relationship with the ICC. Whether the groups achieves anything depends on the decision made in Kenya's case and time is running out. Kenyatta's trial is just weeks away.

The AU recommended that as a last resort Kenyatta should simply refuse to appear at the court in The Hague.

In summary Solomon Derso said the relationship between the AU and the ICC was "as sour as it was before the summit."