Kenya: International Criminal Court judges told to throw out Ruto case
Lawyers for Kenyan Deputy President William Ruto asked judges to throw out charges against him at the International Criminal Court on Thursday, saying witness withdrawals had left the prosecution's case in tatters. Ruto, present at the hearing in The Hague, faces crimes against humanity charges stemming from the ethnic violence that followed Kenya's 2007 presidential election in which 1,200 people died.
The ICC has suffered a number of setbacks in its Kenya cases, the highest-profile dossiers on its docket. Prosecutors withdrew charges against President Uhuru Kenyatta last year, saying witness withdrawals had left them without a case. Ruto's lawyers argued the withdrawal of six prosecution witnesses left prosecutors making allegations unrelated to their assertion that he conspired to drive opposition supporters from their homes. "The foundations of the case are gone," Karim Khan said. "Every last one of them."
Prosecutors no longer alleged that planning meetings took place at which financial, military and political backers coordinated attacks under Ruto's leadership, he said. "It makes a good story for an opening speech, but what's happened to this network?" he asked. Prosecutors argued earlier this week that there was still sufficient evidence to proceed with the case.
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- Ngwa Bertrand
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