International
Criminal
Court and al-Bashir:
Ocampo’s
Justice
By Ramzy
Baroud
28/07/08
"ICH" -- -
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).
