Can Ruto escape the ICC guillotine a second time?
Can Ruto escape the ICC
guillotine a second time?
By Makau Mutua
The 2013 presidential elections
fell victim to the International Criminal Court (ICC).
The country was engulfed in an orgy of
acrimony over the indictments for crimes against humanity of Jubilee
presidential candidate Uhuru Kenyatta and his running mate William Ruto.
Some have argued Central Kenya
and the Rift Valley were whipped into an emotional, if irrational, primordial
frenzy to vote to a man to protect “their own” from a “colonial court”.
That’s water under the bridge
now.
Mr Kenyatta is putting a full stop on his last
term at State House, while Mr Ruto seeks to open a stanza on his first.
The ICC is again menacingly
swinging the sword of Damocles over Mr Ruto’s head. Can Mr Ruto escape the
guillotine a second time?
In 2015, the ICC terminated the
case against Mr Kenyatta. The language of the withdrawal of the charges
suggested that the court was unlikely to revisit Mr Kenyatta’s case unless he
acted in an egregious manner, such as interfering with a witness, or there was
new evidence.
I interpreted this language to
mean that Mr Kenyatta’s case was permanently closed, barring extraordinary
circumstances.
In 2016, Mr Ruto’s was also
withdrawn but with a strong caveat.
The ICC terminated the case
without prejudice to re-prosecution in the future.
The court pointedly ruled that
the termination didn’t amount to an “acquittal” but only the “vacation of the
charges and discharge of the accused”. This means the case is live but in
limbo.
Unlike Mr Kenyatta’s, Mr Ruto’s
ICC case can be resuscitated any time. The prosecutor has only to adduce new
evidence to revive the case, or seek new charges.
That’s why I wouldn’t sleep easy
if my name was Samoei arap Ruto, the same person who’s the Deputy President of
Kenya, and who’s trying to succeed Mr Kenyatta.
Mr Ruto must sleep with one eye
open. He may even be sleeping with both eyes open because of the tribulations
of lawyer Paul Gicheru at the ICC.
Mr Gicheru, after being sought in futility by
the ICC for years over the corruption of witnesses, shocked the bejesus out of
everyone when he appeared at The Hague and voluntarily surrendered to the
court.
Mr Gicheru’s act of legal
self-immolation was completely unprovoked – and flummoxing.
Rational people, no matter how
law-abiding, don’t willingly take themselves to the slaughterhouse.
But perhaps I should credit Mr
Gicheru with a conscience of which most people are bereft. Maybe he’s a rare breed,
or maybe there’s more than meets the eye.
Specifically, Mr Gicheru is
accused of very dastardly and repugnant crimes against what the ICC Statute
calls “offences against the administration of justice”. To wit, corruptly
influencing witnesses through bribery, intimidation and even much worse.
If convicted, Mr Gicheru would
face a serious jail term. Perhaps Mr Gicheru simply wants to face his demons,
exorcise them and close that sadly malignant chapter of his life.
Mr Ruto is in a bit of legal hot
soup. Mr Kenyatta’s case collapsed because of insufficient evidence. But Mr
Ruto’s was terminated because of witness interference and political meddling.
I emphasise this distinction
because the prosecutor alleges that evidence against Mr Gicheru “establishes
that the lawyer and associated persons engaged in a concerted effort to
identify, locate and contact witnesses to recant their evidence”.
The prosecutor alleges, further,
that Mr Gicheru said that Mr Ruto “wanted no stone left unturned” in uncovering
every witness to corrupt, or stop, them from testifying against him.
He concludes that the “evidence
establishes that the pattern of witness interference was conducted for the
benefit of, and in coordination with, William Samoei Ruto”.
In a word, Mr Ruto is in the
direct crosshairs of the ICC. He could be indicted any time because of new
evidence and, or, testimony of Mr Gicheru.
This is the million-dollar
question. Why would Mr Gicheru turn himself in to take the bullet, no pun
intended, all by his lonesome? He’s playing Russian roulette. He most likely
will be convicted.
Can he save himself by turning
evidence against Mr Ruto, or will he throw himself at the mercy of the court
for a lesser sentence by turning on Mr Ruto?
I see no scenario which would
give Mr Ruto comfort. His fate lies squarely in the hands of Mr Gicheru. Will
Mr Gicheru slay Mr Ruto?
Question – whether, how and when
will the Gicheru ICC case impact Mr Ruto’s drive for State House?
In 2013, the combined emotion and
manipulation of the ethnic psychology drove Central Kenya and the Rift Valley
to the polls. The key was that Mr Kenyatta and Mr Ruto weren’t barred from
running. Would Mr Ruto be barred from running if the ICC indicted him – again?
Secondly, if he wasn’t barred,
could he gin up the same sympathy that he, and Mr Kenyatta, marshalled from the
ethnic duopoly? Or would he be met with opprobrium from Central Kenya given his
calamitous falling out with Mr Kenyatta? Get your popcorn, amigos.
Makau Mutua is SUNY Distinguished
Professor and Margaret W. Wong Professor at Buffalo Law School. He’s chair of
KHRC. @makaumutua (Source: Nation)
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