ecstacy wrote:Nandwa wrote:
Nauliza swali nijibiwe
All those 'Kenyans' who are vigorously supporting the ICC trials at the moment.
In the event that kina Ruto implicate RAO and ICC is convinced and moves to summon him, will they remain consistent!
Will the tune change!!!!
Your guess as good as mine.
'Kenyans'!
Valid question given the ICC has since been reduced to a PNU vs ODM[half of the 'maisha bora'] affair at the leadership level. It's good to see some pro-'PNU' supporters support the Hague process. As you ask, will the same hold if RAO or his field marshall Nyong'o is implicated?...
@Ecstacy
Am surprised you know that Nyong'o was initially in the Waki envelop but be careful here as guys tend to get very emotional when you touch their own.
Am still asking questions and digging and learning.
A passage from some serious review column
"What this illustrates is that accusations of neocolonial intent on the part of the ICC are misguided. The Court’s selections are not informed by nefarious intentions.
Rather they are indicative of its shrewd political calculus (
or lack of it). The ICC does not have the
legitimacy or backing at this point to go to politically sensitive places—places where a major power might object (
Talk of a Judiciary system where a select few cannot be charged). This is especially true of the Court’s dealings with American interests. The attitude of the United States toward the Court during the Bush administration was one of acrimonious dismissal at best.
Therefore, these early cases for the ICC must not only be supported by strong evidence; they also must not obtrude on major power interests.
The Court knows that it must build its legitimacy on the edges of international politics and grow slowly in stature and legitimacy. The Court is aware that it is too weak to challenge a P5 country directly, so it avoids Iraq and Georgia.
It is cognizant too of challenging a country that enjoys a major power’s alliance (
Israel), and so it does not open an investigation in Palestine.
The ICC knows that it must carve out its place in the larger realm of international institutions. But it can only do so where interests of the powerful do not collide.
So it goes to Africa.
A case of crucify the man on the street and protecting the elite = the other definition of impunity.http://www.iar-gwu.org/node/87
Italicized words are mine.
Go overdrive in purchasing the goods when there's blood on the streets, expecially if the blood is your own