ICC and al-Bashir: Ocampo’s Justice
By Ramzy Baroud
ccun.org, August 1, 2008
The crimes committed against innocent people in Darfur represent
a shameful episode in the history of Sudan and its neighbours,
including Chad, which has played a dubious role in sustaining the
seething conflict. Equally disgraceful is the politicising of the
bloody conflict in ways that will ensure its continuation.
The decision of the International Criminal Court's (ICC)
prosecutor-general, Luis Moreno- Ocampo, to file an arrest warrant
for Sudan's current President Omar Hassan Al-Bashir, and the
international responses to his decision, demonstrate both the
politicising of the crisis and the selectiveness of international
law.
Consider this bizarre twist. The US Congress passed a resolution,
on 22 June 2004, declaring that the violence in Darfur was
state-sponsored genocide. The resolution -- named the Darfur Peace
and Accountability Act -- was signed into law by President Bush in
October 2006.
Between the vote and Bush's signature the United Nations
conducted a sweeping investigation -- unlike Congress's rash
decision which was based almost entirely on lobby and interest group
pressure -- declaring, in early 2005, that both the government and
militias were systematically abusing civilians in Sudan's western
province. It insisted, however, that no genocide had taken place.
The US is not a signatory of the ICC -- understandably so, given
that many legal experts deem the war crimes of invading and
occupying Iraq as the worst since World War II. Although the ICC is,
in theory, an independent body, it often investigates or provides
legal opinions on cases passed on by the United Nations Security
Council which is dominated by the United States, its vetoes and
foreign policy interests.
It is anomalous that Moreno-Ocampo's request adhered to
Congress's political labelling of the conflict in western Sudan and
not that of the United Nations' own comprehensive and less
politicised report.
Equally interesting is the response of the US and other
governments, as well as regional and international bodies to the
decision.
The US, which like Sudan doesn't recognise the jurisdiction of
the ICC, was pleased by the court prosecutor-general's move. "In our
view, recognition of the humanitarian disaster and the atrocities
that have gone on there is a positive thing," said US State
Department Spokesman Sean McCormack.
China and Russia -- both of which have immense and growing
economic interests in Africa -- found the decision unhelpful and
called for restraint. It's not only the Sudanese government that
they wish to woo but other African states, alarmed by the court's
move which is likely to worsen the tribal war and jeopardise the
safety of the people of Darfur and the numerous humanitarian
missions and workers in the region. (The UN has already declared its
intent to pull back staff from a joint UN-African Union mission, one
welcomed by the Al-Bashir government and which is credited for
contributing to the slight improvement in the situation there).
The African Union, often discounted, if not entirely undermined,
by Western political institutions, has called on the ICC to suspend
its decision until the crisis in Darfur is resolved. In fact,
intense efforts have succeeded in bringing warring parties to the
negotiation table and extracting important concessions that, with
international support, could bring the crisis to an end. But the
call made by AU chairman, Tanzanian Foreign Minister Bernard Membe,
is unlikely to be heeded as economic and political interests in
Darfur are too significant for Western countries to allow Africa's
own leaders to meddle.
While some human rights organisations and many media pundits,
largely based in Western capitals, welcomed Moreno-Ocampo's request
-- conveniently ignoring the hypocrisy of the decision and the
mayhem and instability it will create in the already fractious
region -- others in Africa and the Middle East are not impressed.
African and Middle Eastern media decried the selectiveness and
rigidity of international law when the conflict concerns poor
countries, and its blindness and flexibility when the perpetrators
of crimes are countries that wield military and economic might, and
often the power of veto.
The ICC was established in 2002, immediately before the US
aggression against Iraq. Interestingly, the ICC's jurisdiction --
for obvious reasons -- doesn't include the crime of aggression.
Equally telling is that the court has so far investigated just four
conflicts -- in Northern Uganda, Congo, Darfur and the Central
African Republic. One cannot help but wonder if only Africans are
capable of committing war crimes, crimes against humanity and
genocide.
It's this selectiveness that makes Moreno-Ocampo's request a
textbook example of the inner-workings of international law. It
exposes governments like the US and Britain which condemn war crimes
and authoritarian regimes in Sudan, Zimbabwe and elsewhere while
perpetrating war crimes of their own, aiding and abetting
authoritarian regimes in the Middle East, Africa and elsewhere, as
hopelessly addicted to double standards.
For Moreno-Ocampo's decision -- and the entire international
legal apparatus in the West -- to be taken seriously, impartiality
and fairness are essential. They are qualities, however, that remain
conspicuously absent, vetoed, or otherwise shunted, into the sidings
of history.
Regardless of whether the ICC judges will honour Moreno- Ocampo's
request to issue an arrest warrant for the Sudanese president the
Darfur conflict cannot be settled by selective justice, self-
serving politics or contract-seeking oil corporations. Justice in
Sudan, or anywhere else for that matter, cannot be obtained through
such practices which are at best "unhelpful" and at worse could be
used by the international order's self-appointed policemen to
further legitimatise their destructive policies of "intervention" --
economic sanctions, war, and the rest.
-Ramzy Baroud (
www.ramzybaroud.net ) is an author and editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published in many
newspapers and journals worldwide. His latest book is The Second
Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto
Press, London).
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