Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, who is also the African Union
(AU) chair, says Africa must establish its own International Criminal
Court (ICC) which would be mandated to prosecute Western leaders who
have committed crimes on the continent.
According to the state-owned Chronicle newspaper, Mugabe said it was
high time Africa set up a criminal court which would seek justice for
“serious” war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by the West,
particularity during the colonial era.
“They committed crimes, colonial crimes galore – the slaughter of our
people and all that imprisonment… I have a case, why was I imprisoned
for 11 years? We forgave them, but perhaps we’ve not done ourselves
justice… You set up the ICC, we set our ICC to try Europeans, to try Mr
[George] Bush and Mr [Tony] Blair,”
Mugabe was quoted as saying.
Mugabe said the International Criminal Court was a court for Western countries, dispensing Western injustice on Africans.
Mass withdrawal
Mugabe said this while addressing journalists at the Harare
international airport where he was seeing off his Malian counterpart
Ibrahim Boubacar Keita after his three-day state visit to the southern
African country.
Keita concurred, adding it was “up to Africans, not Europeans or Americans to judge their leaders”.
Mugabe’s remarks came a few days after Sudanese President Omar
al-Bashir evaded an ICC arrest order by leaving early from an African
Union summit that was held in Johannesburg.
At the summit, Mugabe wanted a mass withdrawal of African states from the ICC.
The veteran leader harshly criticised the ICC after Al-Bashir
dodged his arrest, saying the international court was not wanted in
Africa.
“This is not the headquarters of the ICC, we do not want it in this region at all,” Mugabe said.
Mugabe also took a swipe at the “foreign” funded non-governmental
organisations (NGOs), whom he said were angling for Al-Bashir’s arrest.
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