THE AFRICAN UNION AND MORAL ABDICATION
African leaders want respect from the International
Criminal Court and the United Nations Security Council to take them
seriously. The lack of both is why the recent
extraordinary summit of the heads of state of the African Union gave for asking
that the Hague-based International Criminal Court spare President Uhuru
Kenyatta of Kenya the indignity of being tried for crimes against humanity by
it. They went on to accuse the
International Criminal Court of being a tool of Western imperialism and of
carrying out a witch-hunt against African heads of state, and so on. Their demands are that the Kenyatta trial be
stopped and delayed till he is out of office, five years down the road; and no
African president should be tried by the court as long as he or she is in
office.
Some Africans might see reason with the African leaders
but there are many Africans like me who disagree vehemently with their
position. What just transpired at their
meeting in Addis Ababa is a moral abdication.
The charge that the ICC is the centerpiece of a Western
plot is laughable. Did Western countries
coerce or trick 34 African countries into ratifying the protocols that
established the Court? Where were they
when Kenya repeatedly, till as late as this year, asked the ICC to take
over the prosecution of those accused of masterminding the post-election mayhem
in 2008? Kenya insisted that she did not
have the means to prosecute those suspected of sponsoring the carnage. Meanwhile, having been indicted before the
elections, both the president and his deputy, William Ruto, promised to
cooperate fully with the court, even if they won the election. They did not hint then that they would use
their elective to subvert the course of justice.
The last point is important and it is why I consider the
latest demands from Africa’s leaders dangerous and embarrassing. The summit did not question the validity or
legitimacy of the charges brought against all the leaders indicted by the
court. Neither Kenyatta nor Ruto has
said that the charges against him were bogus or political in nature. Côte d’Ivoire’s ex-president, Laurent Gbagbo,
had to be forced out of office by French forces after a dithering
African Union would not insist that the results of legitimate elections be
respected by one of its members.
Given that the legality of the charges is not questioned,
it means that what irks Africa’s leaders is that being in the dock does not
bode well for their image and their sense of their own importance. In short, they don’t look good in the
dock! They think that it is disrespectful to make
them answer to grievous charges of doing horrific injury to humanity in their
citizens.
The Nigerian President, Goodluck Jonathan, takes the
cake with his demand that African leaders enjoy immunity from prosecution as
long as they are in office. This should
not surprise anyone in the know since the immunity clause in the Nigerian
constitution has been used to shield rapacious office holders from being held
accountable for their misdeeds. And, of
course, should the world concur, it would enable more African crooks to run for
office for no other reason than to escape prosecution for criminal acts as used
to happen not too long ago in Russia.
The irony is lost on our rulers that they are demanding
the world’s respect while they disrespect their citizens. What respect do African leaders have for the
more than 1,000 Kenyans who perished in the post-election violence? Or for the tens of thousands that have fallen
victim to Omer el-Beshir’s goons and killer squads in Darfur? Or the 3,000 or more Ivoirian citizens that
perished when Gbagbo elected to defy the expressed will of the plurality of
Ivoirian voters?
African leaders and their intellectual enablers in the
cozy confines of their Chinese-donated palatial headquarters in Addis Ababa
think nothing of justice, forget respect, for the lowliest Africans killed,
maimed, or displaced by the acts charged under the indictments the prosecution
of which they are shameless enough to ask the world to delay. A people who worked so hard to force the
world to recognize the crime against humanity perpetrated against their
forebears should not deign to be seen making light of any similar allegations
against its own ranks. When it does, it
is an act of moral abdication.
That African leaders were more agitated by a concern
with respect the same week that saw 350 or more Africans lose their lives at
sea fleeing their homeland, in this instance, Eritrea, with no public thought
given to that tragedy, is the best evidence that we have that African leaders
deserve no respect. They should get
none. Uhuru Kenyatta, a scion of
patriots some of whom have recently forced the perpetrators of unspeakable
violence against them to own up, must pay it forward. This is the only path to true respect. African leaders should earn it.
Published in http://pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/89685