Homa Bay Senator Otieno Kajwang |
Busia, Kenya: Senior CORD coalition leaders Saturday
asked President Uhuru and his deputy William Ruto to continue with their
cases at the International Criminal Court.
They also cautioned that Kenya could end up with a
fugitive President and Deputy President if Uhuru and Ruto stop attending
cases at the Hague.
The ICC
issue took centre stage as four senators, 10 MPs, two governors and
local leaders attended the burial service of Alice Amuoma Wako, the
mother of Senator Amos Wako at St Stephens Lwanya Girls, Matayos in
Busia county.
High threshold
Homa
Bay Senator Otieno Kajwang’ dismissed Foreign Cabinet Secretary Amina
Mohamed’s statement that no President has appeared before the court.
“Amina
said she has never seen a country where a sitting President is called
to court, but I have also never seen anywhere in the world where a
suspect of crimes against humanity is elected President,” said Kajwang’.
Siaya
Senator James Orengo said the best solution for the country is for the
two to continue with cases. “The threshold is very high. They are likely
to come out if they hire good lawyers,” he said.
Kakamega
Senator Boni Khalwale asked Uhuru to address Parliament as required by
the Constitution and state his foreign policy before the end of the
year.
“Every calendar year, he is expected to state his foreign policy and we therefore want him to tell us his position on ICC,” said Khalwale.
He
said the President’s absence at the Commonwealth meeting because of a
decision made by the African Union does not serve Kenya’s interests.
Kenyan problem
Funyula MP Paul Otuoma started the debate when he claimed
that since the President took over leadership while facing the charges,
the ICC case automatically became a Kenyan problem.
“They
should not engage in sideshows. The writing is on the wall because the
case is going to full process. The African Union and others will not
help them,” said Otuoma.
The UN Security Council on Friday rejected Kenya’s bid to delay the ICC
cases by a year. The 15-member Security Council was split with seven
members, including Russia and China, voting to approve the move, while
eight members, including France, the US and UK, abstained.
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