In a move that comes as a surprise to many, South Africa has announced
it is pulling out of the International Criminal Court and has initiated
the withdrawal process. This comes on the heels of Burundi's
announcement that it was leaving the court.
A written notice of South Africa's intention was submitted to the UN
secretary general, said Tshililo Michael Masutha, the country's justice
minister. The withdrawal from the international court will be formalized
one year after the notification.
The court in the Hague, Netherlands, comprises 124 states from around
the world. The ICC is the "court of last resort" and tries four types of
crimes: genocide, crimes against humanity, crimes of aggression and war
crimes. The court was created by the Rome Statute, a treaty first
brought before the United Nations. In recent years, African leaders have
complained of bias in the court's activities as most of its cases have
been against African leaders.
All six current prosecutions or
prosecutions in the process are of Africans, and so far, the ICC has not
indicted or pressed charges against any other people from any other
part of the world. South Africa has complained of interference from the
ICC, a case which began when the court requested the arrest of Sudanese
president, Omar Al Bashir who was in South Africa last year for a
meeting of African leaders on charges of war crimes, crimes against
humanity and genocide stemming from the conflict in the Darfur region in
western Sudan.
South Africa's justice minister added that the country
remains committed to holding those who committed crimes against humanity
accountable, and that it intended to work closely with the African
Union and other African countries.
The ICC's 124 members is made up of
34 African nations, heavyweights such as America, China, Israel and
Russia are signatories but are not active members.
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