Mystery of ICC letter as prosecutor answers Uhuru
The mystery on a letter petitioning the United Nations to  terminate the ICC charges facing President Uhuru Kenyatta and Deputy  President William Ruto threatens to be the biggest test to face their  Jubilee government.
The chief government legal adviser could neither deny nor confirm if the President was aware of the letter.
Said Attorney-General Githu Muigai: “We were not  aware the letter had been written… we have been pursuing the case with  the court and worked closely with the president of the court, the  registrar and the prosecutor.”
Multiple sources told Saturday Nation the letter  by Kenya’s ambassador to UN Macharia Kamau on May 2 was traced to senior  civil servants in the Kibaki administration.
Last evening, questions were still lingering on  who authorised Mr Kamau to write the letter and whether Mr Ruto’s  denouncement signified a split between the two men over the strategy of  handling the cases facing them at the International Criminal Court.
While Mr Ruto has unequivocally denounced the  petition through  lawyer Karim Khan, President Kenyatta had not  commented on the matter as we went to press.
Prof Muigai said the government wanted the matter  settled expeditiously by the court, but   added that ambassadors had an  independent mandate.
“The government applied to co-operate with the  court and we were granted. In pursuit of this, a high powered government  delegation will be at The Hague next Wednesday to meet court  officials,” he disclosed.
On Wednesday, a letter sent by Mr  Kamau to the  Security Council became subject of debate with Rwanda’s amabassador to  the UN accusing the International Criminal Court of bias in execution of  its mandate.
The strongly worded 13-page letter was circulated  among members of the United Nations Security Council ahead of the visit  by the ICC prosecutor Fatou Bensouda, who was before the Council to  brief it on a Libyan case.
“We thus ask the UN Security Council to take the  much-needed political stance that Kenya must be given the time and  opportunity to apply the principle of pre-eminence of national courts.  The security council has a duty and obligation to assist Kenya overcome  this serious politically sensitive and potentially destabilising and  disabling situation,” the letter said. It then concluded that the Kenyan  delegation was not asking for a deferral, but the immediate termination  of the case at The Hague.
Saturday Nation has learnt that  Ms Bensouda did  not meet the Security Council to talk about the Kenyan cases but was  briefing the Council on the Libyan case when an impromptu exchange on  Kenya came up from Rwanda’s intervention.
Rwandan envoy Eugene-Richard Gasana had remarked  on Wednesday’s Council meeting that the letter made  “a compelling case  against the methods of work of the office of the prosecutor on the  Kenyan cases.”
He accused the ICC of being “selective in its  methods of investigating and prosecuting perpetrators of serious  international crimes as it has failed to prosecute similar crimes  committed in other parts of the world.”
Sources told Saturday Nation that Mr Khan on Thursday called Mr Ruto and advised him that the petition could be injurious to their cases.
“It was then that the Deputy President okayed him  to send out the denouncement distancing himself from the letter,” said  an MP, a close ally of Mr Ruto.
Mr Khan said: “I have spoken to my client, Mr  William Ruto, and I can confirm and he has made it clear that he was not  consulted on anything to do with New York. A letter being circulated is  not government policy,” Mr Khan said in a telephone interview.”
He said that Mr Ruto believes in the rule of law and in Kenya observing its international obligations.
 

 
 
 
 
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