THE HAGUE: The International Criminal Court yesterday gave prosecutors a final week either to strengthen or drop crimes against humanity charges against Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, saying a trial could not be postponed any longer.
“The Chamber directed the prosecution to file a notice, within a week, indicating either its withdrawal of the charges... or that the evidentiary basis has improved to a degree which would justify proceeding to trial,” The Hague-based tribunal said in a statement.
Kenyatta, 53, faces five charges of crimes against humanity for allegedly masterminding deadly post-election violence in the east African country in 2007-08 in which more than 1,200 people died and 600,000 others were displaced.
ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda in September asked for an indefinite delay in the Kenyan leader’s long-running and troubled case, citing a lack of evidence and Nairobi’s refusal to cooperate in the investigation.
But judges yesterday slapped down Bensouda’s request for an indefinite postponement until the Kenyan government cooperated, saying it “would be contrary to the interest of justice under the circumstances”.
In an apparent final push against the African leader, prosecutors earlier this year asked Nairobi for financial documents which they believed could have proven their case.
Prosecutors hoped documents — among the company records, bank statements, records of land transfers, tax returns, phone records and foreign exchange records — would prove a link between Kenyatta and the deadliest unrest in Kenya since independence in 1963.
Judges however said that if “the prosecution had genuinely considered such compliance to be so central to establishing the charges in this case, the Chamber would have expected it to be vigorously persued at a much earlier stage.”
The judges also added there was no evidence to substantiate allegations that Kenyatta abused his position as president to interfere in the prosecution’s investigation.
Kenyatta in October became the first sitting president to appear before the ICC. AFP