January 29, 2011 5:21:16 PM
* Ping says Africa not against the ICC
* Kenya: will set up a local tribunal to try
suspects
By Richard Lough
ADDIS ABABA, Jan 29 (Reuters) - African countries
support the International Criminal Court (ICC) but its chief prosecutor is guilty of double standards, the chairman of the African Union Commission said on Saturday.
Jean Ping's comments came a day after Africa's foreign ministers threw support behind Kenya's bid to defer the trials of key suspects
accused of masterminding the ethnic bloodshed that followed a disputed election
in 2007.
That vote, although still to be rubber-stamped by heads of
state, is expected to embolden the east African nation to ask the U.N. Security
Council -- which helped set up The Hague-based court -- to invoke article 16
and defer or suspend the cases.
"We Africans and the African Union are not against the International Criminal Court. That should be
clear," Ping told a news conference at an African Union summit in Ethiopia.
"We are against Ocampo who is rendering justice with
double standards," he said, referring to ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo.
The ICC's active cases all target crimes against humanity
committed in the African states of Sudan, Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic, Uganda and Kenya.
Moreno-Ocampo has rejected criticism from African states,
saying the ICC is only a court of last resort for countries that are either
unable or unwilling to try suspects themselves.
The ICC is also conducting preliminary examinations to
determine whether it has the jurisdiction to open formal investigations in Afghanistan, Colombia, Georgia, Guinea, Honduras, Ivory Coast, Nigeria and the Palestinian territories.
The case of Kenya's post-election violence was referred to
the ICC after east Africa's largest economy failed to set up a local
tribunal to try suspects.
The ICC's pre-trial chamber is expected to announce by early
March whether Finance Minister Uhuru Kenyatta and suspended ministers William Ruto and Henry Kosgey have a case to
answer.
Kenya says it is now better placed to hold local
hearings after adopting a new constitution in August that was designed to
strengthen the judiciary.
(Editing by David Clarke/Maria Golovnina)
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