Mao slams ICC double standards
http://www.observer.ug/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=25459:mao-slams-icc-double-standards&catid=34:news&Itemid=114
Thursday, 23 May 2013 21:57
Oxford - The
International Criminal Court lacks impartiality and its selective justice
targets only the weak, the president general of the Democratic Party has said
in a speech at Oxford University, London.
Norbert Mao said that much as it’s necessary to
have an international court that overrides local jurisdiction, there should be
a required level of impartiality. Mao spoke at an event hosted by Oxford
Central African Forum at the Oxford
University’s Department
of Politics and International Relations.
His presentation was under the theme: ‘When Law
Meets Reality: The International Criminal Court (ICC) and Challenges of
Transitional Justice in Africa.’
The DP leader questioned why the ICC has never
indicted some Islamist terrorists who have committed crimes against humanity.
“Could this be out of fear that they will blow up
the train stations and buildings in Europe?”
asked Mao.
He castigated the ICC for undermining the peace
talks that were meant to end the Lord’s Resistance Army war in Northern Uganda. Mao, a key player in the dialogue while
serving as chairman of Gulu District, said the LRA leader, Joseph Kony, never
came out to sign the agreement because of the continuous threats issued by the
then ICC prosecutor, Moreno Ocampo.
“One day I asked Ocampo, had your mother been
living in Internally Displaced Persons’ camps, would you issue those press
releases from your air conditioned office in The Hague in the middle of the talks?”
Mao said even if Kony was guilty of terrible atrocities, it was still possible to talk to him in the interest of people’s lives. He added that justice is not only about punishment but also accountability and reconciliation.
Mao further questioned why the ICC has not
indicted President Museveni yet there is evidence to warrant such an
indictment.
“Ocampo says the UPDF atrocities were not grave
enough to warrant an indictment, but that is wrong. Did Kony have helicopter
gunships? Is it only Kony’s guns that killed people?” he asked.
“Why is the bar being lowered for certain leaders
like Museveni and [Paul] Kagame? Why is the net wider for them and closer for
other leaders?”
Mao’s audience comprised mainly students and
lecturers at the Department of Politics and International Relations, Oxford University.
Arguing that there was no need to displace people, Mao said internally
displaced people’s camps in northern Uganda had killed more people than
the rebels themselves.
Mao accused Western governments of turning a
blind eye because they still need President Museveni for their strategic
interests in the Great Lakes region.
“How come he spends debt relief money to buy
himself the latest jets and not even the British Foreign Secretary William
Hague makes mention of it?” he said.
Mao also accused President Museveni of trying to
impose his son, Brig. Muhoozi Kainerugaba, on Ugandans as a future president.
Asked by his co-presenter, Dr Phil Clerk of the School
of Oriental and African Studies
(SOAS), whether change in Uganda
will come from a united opposition or within the NRM, Mao said his party DP is
eager to work on an agenda-driven unity rather than a personality-driven unity.
Mao wants Museveni probed over northern war killings
By Robert Mwanje
Posted Wednesday, March 17 2010 at 00:00
Posted Wednesday, March 17 2010 at 00:00
In Summary
Senior Presidential Advisor on media, Mr John
Nagenda, criticised Mr Mao’s demands saying that he should realise that the
President was protecting Ugandans to fight the rebels in northern Uganda.Democratic Party president Norbert Mao has asked the International Criminal Court [ICC] to investigate President Museveni over the northern Uganda war killings.
The developments come a day after the newly-elected Uganda People’s Congress president, Mr Olara Otunnu, called for an independent inquiry into the killings in Luweero during Mr Museveni’s fight against the UPC government between 1981 and 1985.
The Youth Right, a human rights assembly under the Inter Party Cooperation, also last month petitioned the ICC to investigate the September 2009 riots that left at least 27 people dead.
Mr Mao said; “The ICC should investigate President Museveni over the two-decades war and its atrocities. It’s not enough to investigate the Lord’s Resistance Army [LRA] when Mr Museveni is the man who has been giving orders as the commander-in-chief.”
He was speaking during a press conference in Kampala on Tuesday.
“We should not allow any acts of impunity to prevail in this country. We shall not shut our eyes to any wrong character. The ICC should not let us down,” Mr Mao said.
Civilian protection
But the Senior Presidential Advisor on media, Mr John Nagenda, criticised Mr Mao’s demands saying that he should realise that the President was protecting Ugandans to fight the rebels in northern Uganda.
“He should not make irresponsible statements. It’s as if he is putting President Museveni and Kony at the same level,” Mr Nagenda said yesterday.
In October 2005, the ICC indicted LRA leader Joseph Kony and top lieutenants for war crimes and crimes against humanity. Meanwhile, Mr Mao on Monday lost a travelling bag, a laptop, two flash disks and mobile phones after unknown people broke into his car at Nakasero, a Kampala suburb.