During one of the most violent periods in the country’s history, over 1,100 lost their lives, 3,500 were injured, 600,000 were forcibly displaced and hundreds of women and girls were raped.

“Right to truth” needed
Article 19 urges the Kenyan state authorities to support the ICC process and to ensure that domestic processes of accountability for the post-election violence properly reflect the principles of transparency, the free flow of information and the “right to truth.”

On 15 December 2010, the Prosecutor of the ICC, Luis Moreno Ocampo, requested the ICC to issue summonses ordering six prominent Kenyan citizens, including members of the current Kenyan government, to appear before the ICC to face justice for grave international crimes committed during the post-election violence that took place in Kenya between December 2007 and March 2008.

All six men deny the charges and have vowed to clear their names. If the judges of Pre-Trial Chamber II of the ICC determine that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the six individuals identified committed the alleged crimes, they will decide on the most appropriate way to ensure their appearance before the ICC.

Will tribunal be established?
The ICC Prosecutor’s request has prompted a range of reactions, particularly within Kenya itself, on the role of the ICC and the ability of the Kenyan authorities to provide a justice mechanism through a special tribunal on the post-election violence.

Some commentators have speculated that the naming of the six individuals by the ICC prosecutor could signal the end of the “culture of impunity” in Kenya.

There have been renewed calls for the establishment of a local “special tribunal” to investigate and prosecute other individuals involved in the post-election violence, as recommended by the Commission of Inquiry Into Post-Election Violence (CIPEV) in 2008.

Meanwhile, many political figures have criticised the ICC process, with some even supporting a parliamentary motion for Kenya’s immediate withdrawal from the Rome Statute on the ICC and to “any links, cooperation and assistance” to the ICC– a proposal that was declared inadmissible on legal and constitutional grounds by the Deputy Speaker on 21 December 2010.

ICC process enjoys local support
At the same time, surveys conducted by Synovate and Infotrack Research before and after the ICC Prosecutor’s announcement indicate that the ICC process enjoys overwhelming public support locally.

In Article 19’s view, the rights of victims of the crimes committed during the post-election violence can only be properly fulfilled through complementary domestic and international criminal justice mechanisms: we note that while the ICC Prosecutor has targeted the individuals who he believes bear the greatest responsibility for those crimes, the Kenyan state authorities remain under an ongoing obligation to ensure justice for the victims of other perpetrators. Transparency and the free flow of information are critical for both international and domestic justice mechanisms.

Moreover, the “right to truth”, a developing concept in international law, obliges the Kenyan state to provide information to victims, their families and society as a whole about the circumstances of the gross human rights violations that took place during the post-election violence.

Recommendations
In accordance with international human rights law and standards on the right to information, fair trial, life and on the prohibition of torture and inhuman or degrading treatment – as contained in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Basic Principles and Guidelines on the Right to A Remedy And Reparation for Victims of Gross Violations of International Human Rights Law and Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law – Article 19 recommends the following:

• The Kenyan state organs – the executive, legislature and the judiciary – should fully support the ICC process, in connection with the six named individuals in particular, and fully cooperate with the ICC Prosecutor and the ICC;

• The Kenyan legislature should refrain from adopting any legislation that seeks to withdraw Kenya from the Rome Statute, repeals the International Crimes Act or undermines Article 2(5) of the Kenyan Constitution which states that the general rules of international law shall form part of the law of Kenya;

• The Kenyan legislature should establish, as soon as possible and through an open, transparent and participatory process involving civil society, a special tribunal on the post-election violence;

• The Kenyan legislature should adopt legislation on the right to information to enable state and non-state actors to have full access to information which may lead to arrest, detention and prosecution of persons responsible for the crimes committed during the post-election violence.

Related links:

Panic in Kenya over Ocampo’s list to ICC

Main culprits for the election-related violence in Kenya named

ICC names 20 people most responsible for post-election clashes in Kenya

ICC asks for more data for Kenyan violence probe

Victims of post-election violence in Kenya to meet ICC emissaries

ICC prosecutor targets unpunished crimes in Kenya

ICC decides to investigate Kenya