Kenya is asking the UN Security Council to delay the International Criminal Court trials of its two top leaders for crimes against humanity for a year, citing the terrorist threat in east Africa.
Kenyan opposition to the trials of President Uhuru Kenyatta and Deputy President William Ruto have gained traction since last month's deadly terror attack by militants on an upscale Nairobi shopping mall, which underscored the country's strategic importance in eastern Africa.
The ICC has charged Kenyatta and Ruto with crimes against humanity for their alleged roles in Kenya's 2007-08 postelection violence that killed more than 1,000 people. Both deny the charges.
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Kenya's UN Ambassador Macharia Kamau said in a letter obtained Wednesday by The Associated Press that the Security Council should take into account threats to peace or an act of aggression "likely to transpire in light of the prevailing and continuing terrorist threat existing in the Horn of and eastern Africa."
Kamau said the council should also take into account the need to prevent "an aggravation" to peace and security in Kenya and neighbouring countries.
A delay would provide time for Kenya to consult the International Criminal Court "to consider how best to respond to the threat to international peace and security in the context of the Kenya situation," the ambassador said.
"Kenya therefore seeks action of the United Nations Security Council to prevent the aggravation of the threat, breach of peace or act of aggression that the terrorism menace poses to national, regional, continental and international peace and security," Kamau said.
Kamau's letter was accompanied by a letter from the African Union's member states supporting a deferral for the Kenyan leaders.