This is a good read, for
those who have an unbiased mind.
The International
Criminal Court burst only to our consciousness when the critics of President
Rodrigo Duterte made it or “weaponized” it against him. Prior to all of these,
we didn’t know anything about it, only when lawyer Jude Sabio accused the
President and other government officials last April of 2017 of crimes against
humanity due to the war on illegal drugs, that we came about the intricacies
and functions of the Rome statute that created the International Criminal
Court.
Last week the President
gave the marching orders for the Philippines immediate withdrawal from the Rome
Statute. He has given his reasons both as President of the Republic and the
legal grounds that comes with it. *
Dr. Dan Steinbock exposes what is the ICC today, its relevance, biases , and cons for its creations (photo credit to owner) |
In the article fully
quoted below, Dr. Dan Steinbock who is the founder of Difference Group and has served as the research director at the India,
China and America Institute (USA) and visiting fellow at the Shanghai
Institutes for International Studies (China) and the EU Center (Singapore)
wrote and fully explain what is the ICC now, the future it might be in and
where is the Philippines in all of it.
Below is the full
article titled “The real story behind the ICC” published today (March 19, 2019),The
Manila Times. For the full consumption and understanding of our reading public.
As the Philippines is
withdrawing from the International Criminal Court, the ICC is blaming the
Duterte government. In reality, the withdrawal is still another example of the
erosion of the ICC’s credibility, its failure at judicial independence and gross
bias against the emerging world.
LAST February, the ICC said it was investigating
allegations that the Philippines’ president had committed “crimes against
humanity.” These charges have been pushed, especially by two Duterte critics.
Known for his coup attempts, controversial Sen. Antonio Trillanes has spent
much time in Washington and Europe to gain support, while his obscure sidekick,
lawyer Jude Sabio, has gained notoriety as a hitman lawyer. What’s not known is
who funds the two and why leading Western media companies have bought their
stories with hardly any source scrutiny.
*
Since Duterte’s democratic 2016 election
victory, critics have accused the government of facilitating extrajudicial
killings and other rights abuses to stamp out illegal drugs. These accusations
have often relied on flawed data and misguided reports. Moreover, Philippine
polls indicate that more than 70 percent of Filipinos stand behind Duterte and
are more satisfied with his government than any previous one.
Yet in March, the controversial UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights, Prince Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, joined the ICC
debacle saying that Duterte needed a psychiatric evaluation. During Zeid’s
tenure, the UN Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights (OHCHR) has
repeatedly been accused of efforts at domestic policy intervention, which
impinges on state sovereignty. As Zeid played a central role in the founding of
the ICC from the mid-1990s to 2010, his statement triggered valid concerns in
Manila about the institution’s neutrality.
The withdrawal of the Southeast Asia’s most
rapidly growing economy from the ICC would not be either the first or the last
of its kind. The credibility of the ICC is under rapid erosion. The case of the
Philippines is just the latest nail in the coffin.
Targeting poorest and weakest
For a decade or two, the ICC has suffered from an odd inclination to go after the poorest countries in Africa, which has suffered the worst and longest from colonial massacres and plunder – and still does. The prosecution of President Uhuru Kenyatta led to the Kenyan parliament’s call for withdrawal from the ICC and the call on more than 30 African member states to withdraw their support. *
The frustration led to a special African Union
(AU) summit in 2013 in which Uhuru accused the ICC of being “a toy of declining
imperial powers.”
ICC Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo charged Uhuru
as an indirect co-perpetrator in the violence that followed the 2007-2008
Kenyan crisis. Uhuru is a popular, highly regarded politician and the son of
the famed anti-colonial leader Jomo Kenyatta. After a three-year juridical
chaos, the ICC charges were dropped in March 2015 for lack of evidence. If the
case undermined the ICC’s credibility, wasting resources and causing gratuitous
political turmoil, why was Uhuru targeted?
Certainly, his political opposition hoped to
benefit from his demise. It was led by Raila Odinga and his Orange Democratic
Movement, which was reportedly named after the Ukrainian “Orange Revolution” as
billionaire George Soros’ Open Society funded the pro-Odingakey NGOs, and
Kenyan think-tanks to stop President Uhuru from running in the 2013 general
election due to the ICC trials. As the ICC process began to penalize Kenya’s
political leadership, economic growth almost halved to 4.6 percent in 2012,
stabilizing thereafter but at a significantly lower level than in 2010.
In the past few years, many African leaders have
accusesd the ICC of “mishandling complex African issues,” and several
countries, including South Africa, intend to withdraw from the ICC. In addition
to President Uhuru, almost 40 individuals have been indicted by the ICC,
including Ugandan rebel leader Joseph Kony, Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir,
Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, Ivorian president Laurent Gbagbo, and Congolese
vice president Jean-Pierre Bemba. *
Many cases suggest a pattern of sequence and
orchestration: promising development, political destabilization in the name of
“democratization,” financial speculation, new leaders, weaker development.
ICC’s compromised former prosecutor
Since fall 2017, even Ocampo’s ICC role has elicited questions. While his legal expertise is highly regarded, his ties to Soros-supported organizations stem from the early 1990s, when Soros began to infuse funds into a real estate conglomerate (IRSA), a prominent backer of Ocampo’s NGO in Argentina. In the mid-1990s, Ocampo began to work for Transparency International, a corruption watchdog that has been criticized for bias against developing countries, overseeing work on Latin America. A decade later, he participated in a roundtable by Soros’ Open Society called “Restoring American Leadership – the International Criminal Court.”
When the UN Security Council assigned Ocampo the
task of investigating war crimes in Libya, which was soon hit by air strikes by
France, Britain, the US and other countries, Ocampo reportedly shared
confidential information about ongoing investigations with a party to the
conflict—the French foreign minister’s cabinet chief.
Ocampo indicted Gaddafi and his son Saif
al-Islam for war crimes in 2011 before leaving his job at the ICC for a lucrative
career in private practice. According to a French investigative website
Mediapart, and a Spiegel team, he then agreed to a contract worth $3 million
over three years, plus $5,000 a day, to “protect” and advise an influential
Libyan oil billionaire Hassan Tatanaki who had close links with Col. Muammar
Gaddafi and was deeply involved with the Libyan civil war; Ocampo used insider
information to protect his client from possible prosecution by the ICC. More
recently, Tatanaki has been linked to a Libyan militia accused of extrajudicial
killings and other rights violations. Reportedly, the contract was terminated
after three months, with the ex-prosecutor earning $750,000. Yet, he used ICC
employees to continue to carry out PR work for Tatanaki and was paid to do so,
which was still another potential breach of the ICC’s code of conduct. *
As the champion for transparency, Ocampo made
millions of dollars in such deals routing monies to his offshore companies in
several tax havens, as evidenced by the Panama Papers. Ironically, he used what
he had learned about corruption to benefit from illicit capital flows. As he
later said, he wanted to “make some more millions” because the ICC salary
(€200,000) was inadequate for his needs.
Unsurprisingly, perhaps, the ICC secured its
first verdict only in 2012, when Ocampo’s nine-year tenure at the ICC was about
to end. Last fall, the ICC said that its current prosecutor Fatou Bensouda had
asked Ocampo to “refrain from any public pronouncement or activity that may —
by virtue of his prior role as ICC prosecutor — interfere with the activities
of the office or bring it into disrepute.”
Who controls the ICC
Usually, economic power translates to political control. The ICC is not an exception. Yet, the ICC’s funding is not transparent. It is financed “primarily” by its member states. The contributions of each state are determined by the method used by the UN, which roughly corresponds with a country’s income. In 2017, the ICC’s budget was €145 million. About two-thirds came from only 10 countries, more than half from Europe’s former colonial powers and the rest from Japan, South Korea, and Canada. *
In the world economy, the EU accounts for about
a fifth of the total; its funding of the ICC is thus three times its share of
the global economy. Yet, according to the ICC, “additional funding is provided
by voluntary government contributions, international organizations,
individuals, corporations, and other entities.”
The lack of transparency and accountability
creates potential for gross moral hazard. For instance, multinationals that
have funded warlords in Africa to extract oil, gas, minerals and conflict
diamonds might be particularly interested in targeting African politicians in
the ICC.
Critics believe that as the ICC ignores the
governments and focuses on their leaders, it may support flawed investigations
that ignore the role of the governments while tacitly supporting regime change
through new leaders. In some cases, prosecution of leaders in the ICC has made
them less likely to peacefully step down. Also, success in investigations
requires state cooperation, which the ICC mandate shuns and that can result in
inconsistent and discriminatory selection of cases.
Unsurprisingly, the half a dozen countries that
voted against the ICC Statute in 1998 included both the US and China. While
President Clinton signed the statute, he knew that it would never be ratified
on Capitol Hill.
More recently, the US and Russia have said they
no longer intend to become ICC members and thus have no legal obligations
arising from their signature of the statute. China’s view is that the ICC goes
against the sovereignty of nation states.
Beginning of the end *
It was the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court that led to the creation of the ICC in 1998. Nevertheless, its ability to investigate and prosecute is severely restricted by its mandate and, due to its creation in 2002 it can only prosecute crimes after that date. That conveniently suspends the worst genocides, crimes against humanity, war crimes and crimes of aggression – the four core international crime categories that the ICC claims to focus on.
Today, there are more than 120 state parties to
the Rome Statute. Over 30 countries have signed but not ratified the statute,
and there are more than 50 non-signatory countries. Let’s look more closely at
the countries that are parties to the Rome Statute and those that aren’t.
The overwhelming majority of the world
populations have not joined the Rome Statute. The most populous middle-income
economies remain outside the ICC. Only the smaller populations of high-income
economies see the ICC as useful. Among the poorest economies, half have joined
the ICC and another half hasn’t. Many have been forced to adjust to major
powers’ status quo (Figure 1a). The economic story is even clearer. It has been
very much in the interest of the high-income economies to join the ICC.
Conversely, it has been very much in the interest of the less prosperous
middle-income economies to stay away from the ICC, along with low-income
countries (Figure 1b). *
According to the Philippines government, its
withdrawal from the ICC could be “the beginning of the end” for the
institution, as more countries may follow suit and non-members would be
discouraged from joining. After all, the ICC can only investigate criminal
cases if domestic courts are unable or unwilling to do so, and neither
circumstance applies to the Philippines.
In Asia, neither China nor India is a signatory.
In Southeast Asia, both relatively wealthier countries (Singapore, Brunei,
Malaysia) and emerging economies (Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, Myanmar, Lao)
have not signed the Statute.
Cambodia did ratify the Statute in 2002, which
may be currently contributing to elevated tensions in the country. The
Philippines signed the Statute in 2000 but did not ratify it. That’s what most
US partners did at the time emulating Washington’s stance. Yet, President
Aquino did sign the Statute in February 2011, right before he aligned Manila’s
foreign policy with President Obama’s security pivot to Asia – but in contrast
with almost all BRIC and ASEAN economies.
The simple reality is that, in the past two
decades, the ICC’s credibility has deflated and its judicial independence has
been compromised. Distressingly, it has shown gross bias against emerging and
developing economies. A membership in such an international court is no litmus
test for the advocacy for human rights in which the Philippines has a long
history.
Report from Manila Times
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