Rights group says Burundi's 'cynical' ICC withdrawal will not derail wheels of justice

Imprimer

Bujumbura, Burundi, October 27 (Infosplusgabon) - Human rights group Amnesty International on Friday described Burundi's withdrawal from the International Criminal Court (ICC) as "a cynical attempt to evade justice".

 

 

“The Burundian government has made a cynical attempt to evade justice by taking the unprecedented step of withdrawing from the ICC. But perpetrators, including members of the security forces, cannot so easily shirk their alleged responsibility for crimes under international law committed since 2015," Amnesty International’s Head of International Justice Matt Cannock said.

 

Burundi’s withdrawal from the Rome Statute came into effect on Friday, amid an ongoing ICC preliminary examination into crimes under international law committed in the country since 2015,

 

Cannock said withdrawal from the Rome Statute did not in any way absolve Burundi of its obligations to end ongoing widespread human rights violations, or to address its abject failure to deliver justice for victims at the national level.

 

“The ICC can continue its preliminary investigations regardless of Burundi’s efforts to stop its work by withdrawing from the Court. Even if President Pierre Nkurunziza’s government will not cooperate with the Court, the ICC has ways and means to investigate and prosecute the crimes committed,” he said.

 

The East African country has become the first country to leave the ICC a year after it lodged its notice of withdrawal after accused the Court of deliberately targeting Africans for prosecution.

 

FIN/INFOSPLUSGABON/UIO/ GABON 2017

 

 

 

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