Media Monitoring - OSESG-GL, 2 JULY 2015

2 juil 2015

Media Monitoring - OSESG-GL, 2 JULY 2015

GENERAL NEWS


The ICC now an instrument of imperialism

OPINION

Source: The Herald (Harare)

1 July 2015 - The Rome Statute is the treaty that established the International Criminal Court (ICC). The ICC was to be an international tribunal and intergovernmental organisation that would prosecute all individuals for international crimes of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.

One hundred and twenty states voted for it and China, Iraq, Israel, Libya, Qatar, the United States of America and Yemen voted against.

Twenty one states abstained. The Rome Statute entered into force on July 1, 2002. Almost all African countries ratified the Rome Statute; the largest number to do so. They agreed with its objectives of punishing those who commit crimes against humanity, genocide and war crimes.

However, the ICC clearly targeted African leaders, turning a blind eye to countries like America and Britain, which committed war crimes and crimes against humanity in non-Western countries.

When the International Criminal Court was debated in the South African Parliament on June 19 2009, I participated as a member of parliament.

“Madam Speaker, African leaders who have the propensity for tyranny and commit crimes against humanity must be severely punished in Africa through appropriate judicial institutions of the African Union. This is not to cast an aspersion on the integrity of the ICC.

“It cannot, however, be disputed that sophisticated weapons of war that kill Africans in civil wars in Africa and elsewhere, come from foreign powers. These are proxy wars fought for foreign interests. The African Union must be careful that it does compromise the sovereignties of its member states in an international game, which is not clean and whose credo is ‘might is right’.

“The Pan Africanist Congress on whose behalf I was speaking observes that there is still a great deal of selective morality and legality in international politics. For instance, America and Britain occupied Iraq and killed thousands of Iraqi women and children under the false pretence that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction. But this did not attract the attention of the International Criminal Court. Former President George W. Bush and former Prime Minister Tony Blair were never summoned to appear before the ICC. A country like America has not even signed the Rome Statute.

“Meanwhile former Liberian President Charles Taylor, who claims to have been initially supported by the American government in his atrocities in Liberia and Sierra Leone, has been hauled before the ICC. Recently, another African leader in the DRC Mr Jean-Pierre Bemba is reported to have been arrested and sent to the ICC at the Hague in the Netherlands to stand trial for alleged gross violations of human rights.

“Sooner than later, the International Criminal Court will be full of violators of human rights from Africa, but none from Europe and America.”

Thus far it is reported that the ICC has indicted 36 individuals. Those in the public eye have been Laurant Gbagbo, former president of the Ivory Coast, Muammar Gaddafi, President Uhuru Kenyatta, Deputy President William Ruto and President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan. The Sudanese leader was the subject of media headlines in South Africa recently. There was an order on behalf of the ICC that South Africa must arrest him.

This was despite the fact that he had officially come to attend the African Union Summit and was not a visitor to South Africa. He, therefore, had diplomatic immunity according to the principles of international law.

This was also in spite of the fact that since 2009, this African leader has visited a number of countries, such as Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia and Egypt. These countries rejected the ICC request that they arrest the Sudanese president for alleged crimes in Darfur.

The United Nations Security Council has been divided over the issue of crimes allegedly committed by Omar al-Bashir in Darfur. It is not clear why the ICC expected South Africa to arrest al-Bashir. In December 2014 the ICC was reported to have suspended its investigations against the man.

Moreover, the African Union meeting in Kampala in 2010 reaffirmed that its member states must not co-operate with the ICC in the arrest of al-Bashir.

A judicial body must have the substance and manifestation of justice and fairness. It is difficult for fair-minded people and lovers of justice to ignore that not long ago, Britain and the United States invaded Iraq and sentenced to death its President Saddam Hussein for “weapons of mass destruction” his country did not have, except oil. The damage that the American and British invasion has done has incubated the “Islamic State of Iraq and Syria” (ISIS). This has destabilised and created unprecedented chaos in the Middle East and poses danger to world peace.

What about Libya? As a result of the United Nations Security Council Resolution of 1973, that was manipulated to invade Libya by America, France, Britain, Norway, Belgium, Denmark and Spain, Libya is today described as “a failed state”. Muammar Gaddafi had made Libya emerge in Africa as a home of citizens enjoying a “first world economy”.

A British columnist Owen Jones has written, “Libya is a disaster we helped to create. The West must take full responsibility for it.”

Why is the West having such a short memory of its own atrocities in Africa through slavery, colonialism and racism? Writing about the enslavement of Africans by European countries and their allies, the Rev. J.H. Soga has written, “Murder was the order of the day. Men, women and children were massacred, and the captives sold without regard to the ties of fatherhood, motherhood or offspring; the one ruthlessly torn from the other, as if the bond of love and compassion had no existence. Family on family, tribe on tribe were often completely swept away, not even an infant being spared; millions of the sons and daughters of Africa were sent to destruction as if they had been wild animals.”

Corroborating this historical fact, Stanton A. Coblentz has recorded . . . villages had been left desolate . . . children had been orphaned, mothers wrested from their sons from their mothers, husbands from their wives. For these strangers from across the waters were pitiless hunters — hunters of human beings.”

In the “Belgian” Congo, “Each village was ordered by the Belgian authorities to collect and bring a certain amount of rubber. If they failed to bring the required amount, their women were taken away and kept as hostages . . . in the harems of government employees . . . if this method failed . . . troops were sent to the village to spread terror, if necessary by killing some of the men . . . They were ordered to bring one right hand amputated from an African victim for every cartridge used.”(As quoted in “Introduction to African Civilisations” by John G. Jackson page 310-311, also “The Long Road to Humanity” by Stanton A. Coblentz)

The result, according to British philanthropist Sir H. H. Johnston, was the reduction of the Congolese population in the Congo from twenty million people to nine million in 15 years.

The worst known genocide occurred in Namibia in 1904. A well armed German army under General Lothar von Trotha drove Africans out of their land to the desert. Eighty percent of the Herero population perished there.

It is a good thing for Africa and justice loving people of the world that South Africa did not arrest President Omar Al-Shabir and handed him over to the International Criminal Court.

This act would have caused an African wound of divisions and instability that would take many years to heal, particularly because South Africa wrongly voted for the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973, which Western countries manipulated to kill Gaddafi and destroy Libya.

The 21st century demands a new world order of peace, stability and prosperity for all nations of the world.

The practice of Western countries to sweep their atrocities under the carpet and want to bully Africa and other nations of the world shall dig a grave for them sooner than later.

The International Criminal Court must go to the drawing board. It must do what the Rome Statute established it for or gave way for better things to be done for the happiness of mankind on this planet.

Dr Motsoko Pheko is author of several books and a former representative of the victims of apartheid at the United Nations in New York and at the UN Commission on Human Rights in Geneva as well as a former member of the South African Parliament.

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DRC


Joseph Kabila épingle 4 « obstacles » à la tenue apaisée des élections 2015-2016

NEWS STORY

Source: Le Potentiel (DRC)

1 Juillet 2015 - Le président Joseph Kabila Kabange a épinglé lundi 29 juin 2015, dans son message à la nation prononcé la veille du 55ème anniversaire de l’indépendance de la République démocratique du Congo (RDC) célébré mardi 30 juin à Matadi (Kongo Central, ouest du pays), quatre (4) obstacles à la tenue apaisée des élections que la Commission électorale nationale indépendante (Ceni) doit organiser en 2015 et 2016.

« La mise en place des animateurs de la CENI, le vote et la promulgation de la nouvelle loi électorale et de la loi des finances 2015, ont généré des défis qui naturellement n’avaient pas été pris en compte lors des Concertations nationales », a-t-il expliqué.

« Ces obstacles, a-t-il énuméré, sont liés:

1.

Au calendrier électoral global. Exigé à cor et à cri par l’opposition, il a été contesté par la même opposition sitôt publié.

2.

Au financement du processus électoral. Evalués bien après l’adoption du budget 2015, à eux seul, les besoins pour l’organisation réussie des élections s’élève à plus d’un milliard de dollar américain; alors que ledit budget, pour l’ensemble des besoins de l’Etat, était arrêté à l’équivalent, en Francs congolais, de neuf milliards de dollars américains.

3.

A la participation aux scrutins de 2015 d’anciens mineurs devenus majeurs, en cours du cycle électoral qui du fait de la loi électorale en sont exclus, et donc injustement privés d’un droit que j’estime légitime. Cette loi prévoit, en effet, que cette frange importante de notre population ne pourrait être prise en compte que lors des scrutins à venir, après le renouvellement du fichier électoral.

4.

A l’impératif de la sécurisation du processus électoral, les expériences malheureuses du passé, notamment l’intolérance politique et la non acceptation des résultats des élections par les perdants ayant conduit à des violences meurtrières avant, pendant et après les scrutins de 2006 et 2011 ».

Le chef de l’Etat congolais a insisté sur le fait que, « ne pas régler ces questions tant voulues et de manière consensuelle pourrait plonger le processus électoral dans une impasse et engendrer des conflits de tous ordres ».

« C’est pourquoi j’engage ce jour toutes les Congolaises et tous les Congolais à s’inscrire dans la voie du règlement pacifique de toute divergence politique, conformément à la tradition congolaise de prévention, de gestion et de résolution des conflits », a-t-il souligné.

MESSAGE DU PRESIDENT JOSEPH KABILA KABANGE PRONONCE A L’OCCASION DU 55EME ANNIVERSAIRE DE L’INDEPENDANCE DE LA RDC

Mes chers compatriotes,

30 juin 1960, 30 juin 2015, cela fait exactement 55 ans que notre beau pays a accédé à la souveraineté nationale et internationale en s’émancipant du joug colonial.

Il y a cinq ans, à l’occasion du cinquantenaire de cette accession à l’indépendance, nous avons célébré cette date avec une fierté d’autant plus légitime pour notre pays, d’un demi-siècle de liberté retrouvée et d’autodétermination dont les limites des frontières héritées de la colonisation n’étaient pas acquises d’avance.

En effet, la République démocratique du Congo, ce précieux héritage, de nos aïeux, était un sujet à convoitise et objet de machinations de toutes sortes de la part de ceux qui pensent que ce territoire est trop grand et trop riche pour revenir aux Congolais, et à eux seuls. Evoquer ce défi permanent à notre souveraineté, à notre intégrité territoriale, c’est donner un sens et un contenu à la date du 30 juin et, partant, à la célébration de la fête nationale. Et cette année, elle le sera de manière solennelle au Congo central.

Par-delà la stabilité macro-économique retrouvée et les perspectives de croissance à deux chiffres qui rassurent, quant à notre détermination à hisser le Congo au rang des pays émergeants d’ici à l’horizon 2030, la célébration de cette date est d’abord et avant tout le renouvellement tant par notre génération et par celle d’avenir de l’engagement individuel et collectif à préserver l’unité nationale, à garantir l’indépendance nationale et à sauvegarder l’intégrité territoriale de notre beau et grand pays.

Un engagement aussi à protéger nos échos systèmes, gage de l’avenir de nos enfants et petits enfants et à œuvrer sans nous lasser à la moralisation de la vie publique et à l’éradication de la corruption et de toutes formes d’antivaleurs. Condition sine qua non pour l’amélioration des conditions de vie de nos populations.

Mes Chers Compatriotes,

Pour nous Congolais, la République démocratique du Congo est le bien le plus précieux au monde, nous devons l’aimer, la chérir et la protéger. Quoi qu’il en soit, quoi qu’il en coute. Dans cette optique, la paix, la sécurité et la stabilité s’imposent en nous comme un impératif non négociable.

Notre destin commun en dépend. Nous nous devons, dès lors, d’apprécier à sa juste valeur le don de soi allant souvent jusqu’ aux sacrifices suprêmes que sont nos filles et fils qui servent sous le drapeau, acceptent privations diverses, nuits et jours, et bravent des dangers de toutes sortes sur différents théâtres d’opérations afin que la sécurité de chacun soit de nous soit assurée et qu’aucun mètre carré de notre territoire n’échappe au contrôle du pouvoir central.

Aujourd’hui, avec persévérance, ils mènent ce combat contre les groupes terroristes à Béni, dans toutes les zones opérationnelles du Nord-Kivu et du Sud-Kivu ainsi qu’en Ituri, en Province orientale. Offrant ainsi à nos populations de ces contrées, longtemps meurtris, la perspective d’une aire de paix et de sécurité véritable et durable. De la Nation, ces vaillants éléments de nos forces armées, de Police et de sécurité, méritent reconnaissance, respect et soutien.

Mes Chers compatriotes,

Conscient de cette exigence de paix et de stabilité, si vitale pour notre pays, et dans le souci de mieux faire aboutir le processus électoral, j’ai depuis trois semaines entrepris les consultations avec les représentants des forces politiques e