The African Union summit in Ethiopia has demanded a deferral of
The Hague trial of Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, due to start in November.
It also agreed a resolution stating no sitting African head of
state should appear before an international court.
With both Kenyan and Sudanese presidents facing ICC cases,
African leaders have long complained that the court unfairly targets them.
The AU had discussed withdrawing from the ICC, but failed to get
support.
Senior figures including Kofi Annan have criticised plans to
quit the ICC.
The AU leaders, meeting in Addis Ababa, agreed to back immunity
for any sitting African head of state.
They also asked Kenya to write to the UN Security Council
seeking a deferral in the International Criminal Court (ICC) case against
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, who faces charges of crimes against humanity.
Both he and his deputy, William Ruto, deny charges of organising
violence after the 2007 election.
While Mr Ruto went on trial in September, President Kenyatta has
repeatedly requested his trial - due next month - be postponed.
Addressing the summit, Mr Kenyatta accused the court of bias and
"race-hunting", AFP reports.
"The ICC has been reduced into a painfully farcical
pantomime, a travesty that adds insult to the injury of victims. It stopped
being the home of justice the day it became the toy of declining imperial
powers."
Ethiopian Prime Minister and AU chairman Hailemariam Dessalegn
said the summit was not a crusade against the ICC but a call for the court to
address Africa's concerns seriously.
He said the ICC's cases against the Sudanese and Kenyan presidents
could hamper peace and reconciliation efforts in their countries.
"The unfair treatment that we have been subjected to by the
ICC is completely unacceptable," he said.
The ICC issued a warrant in 2009 for Sudanese President Omar
al-Bashir over alleged war crimes in the Darfur region, but he has not yet been
arrested.
The ICC relies on the authorities of national governments to
hand over suspects, but Mr Bashir has avoided arrest despite travelling to
countries that have signed up to the ICC statute.
Ethiopian Foreign Minister Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who is
the current chairman of the AU's Executive Council, said the ICC had failed to
respond to the African Union's previous complaints.
"What the summit decided is that President Kenyatta should
not appear until the request we have made is actually answered," he said.
Thirty-four of the AU's 54 members have signed up to the ICC.
Kenya's parliament has already passed a motion for the country
to withdraw.
Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan has said that withdrawing
from the court would be a "badge of shame".
Nobel Peace laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu has also voiced his
support for the ICC.
"Those leaders seeking to skirt the court are effectively
looking for a license to kill, maim and oppress their own people without
consequence," he wrote in an article carried by
several newspapers.
"They simply vilify the institution as racist and unjust,
as Hermann Goering and his fellow Nazi defendants vilified the Nuremberg
tribunals following World War II."
All eight of the cases currently open at the ICC are in Africa but
it is also investigating possible cases elsewhere.
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