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Uganda’s President, to urge African Union to withdraw from ICC

Friday, December 12, 2014

Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni. PHOTO/File

Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni on Friday called on African nations to withdraw from the Rome Statute that established the International Criminal Court (ICC), amid accusations that it unfairly targets Africans.

“I will bring a motion to the African Union’s next session. I want all of us to get out of that court of the West. Let them (Westerners) stay with their court,” he said in Kiswahili.

Prosecutors dropped charges of crimes against humanity against Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta last week, but the trial of his deputy William Ruto on similar charges is under way at the Hague-based court.

Museveni, addressing a ceremony to mark Kenya’s 51 years of independence, criticized the ICC for continuing with Ruto’s case despite an African Union (AU) resolution that no sitting African head of state or deputy should be tried at the court.

According to Museveni, “with connivance, they are putting Deputy President Ruto, someone who has been elected by Kenyans, in front of the court there in Europe,” he said.

The AU is scheduled to hold its annual summit of heads of state in Ethiopia at the end of January 2015.

The collapse of the Kenyatta case was a blow to the court, which has secured only 2 convictions, both against Congo-based “warlords”.

Many Africans accuse the ICC of unfairly targeting their continent. Museveni said he had backed the court before it turned into a tool for “oppressing Africa”.

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