getty images-Yahya Jammeh , President of Gambia
Gambia has become the third African country, following Burundi and
South Africa, to withdraw its membership from the International Criminal
Court.
"As from today, Tuesday, 25th
October 2016, we are no longer a member of the ICC," said Minister of
Information and Communication Infrastructure Sheriff Bojang in a
televised statement aired over state broadcaster GRTS on Tuesday Night.
Bojang said the government has started to complete the withdrawal process as stipulated in the statutes that established the court.
Bojang
said the Gambian government's decision to withdraw from the court is
warranted by the fact that "the ICC, despite being called the
International Criminal Court, is in fact an International Caucasian
Court for the persecution and humiliation of people of colour,
especially Africans."
"This
Infamous Caucasian Court for the persecution of Africans and especially
their leaders, showed its true colours when it declared immediately
after the United Kingdom released their investigation report on the Iraq
war pronouncing former Prime Minister Tony Blair of committing war
crimes; that the ICC will not indict Tony Blair for war crimes."
"There
are many Western countries, at least 30, that have committed heinous
war crimes against independent sovereign states and their citizens since
the creation of the ICC, and not a single Western war criminal has been
indicted," he said.
The
ICC has opened inquiries involving nine nations, all but one of them
African: Kenya, Ivory Coast, Libya, Sudan, Democratic Republic of Congo,
Central African Republic (twice), Uganda, Mali and, most recently,
Georgia.
Gambia
had taken the European Union to the ICC about a year ago for the mass
murder (genocide) of thousands of young Africans on European coastal
waters, but nothing has been heard from the ICC, Bojang noted.
"After
several warnings to the UN General Assembly and the Security Council,
in particular, about the mass murder of young African migrants on
European beaches and waters, in annual speeches to the United Nations
General Assembly, fell on deaf ears, the Gambia government engaged the
ICC to prosecute those leaders and countries responsible for the
genocide."
"We
made it very clear that if the ICC fails to bring those responsible to
justice, the Islamic Republic of The Gambia would be obliged to use
other more stringent options to make those responsible for the deaths of
thousands of young African migrants on the European coast face justice
or pay a very high price for their racist genocide," Bojang said.
Last
week, Burundi's president signed a decree making his country the first
in Africa to withdraw from the ICC. Three days later, on Friday, South
Africa became the second to withdraw.
In
Kenya, the executive decision to withdraw from the court is pending, but
the Kenyan parliament had passed two resolutions to withdraw the
country's backing for the Rome Statute that established the court.
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