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Monday, March 18, 2013
The International Criminal Court in The Hague is to hold a special hearing to review its case against Kenya's President-elect, Uhuru Kenyatta.
He denies accusations of instigating violence after the disputed 2007 poll.
The hearing comes a week after charges against his co-accused, Francis Muthaura, were dramatically dropped.His lawyers will argue charges against Mr Kenyatta are now
compromised but the ICC prosecutor has said she has additional evidence
against him.
The trial of Mr Kenyatta, who narrowly passed the 50% threshold to
win elections earlier this month, is scheduled to start in July.
Last week, ICC prosecutor Fatou Bensouda said the case against Mr
Muthaura had been dropped as some witnesses were too scared to testify,
while another had recanted his statement.
At the hearing, expected to begin at 14:00 GMT, defence lawyers will
urge the judges to send Mr Kenyatta's case back to the pre-trial chamber
for judges to assess what remains of the evidence - and decide whether
it is substantial enough to justify a trial.
The BBC's Anna Holligan in The Hague says after the collapse of the
case against his co-accused, there has been significant speculation that
the charges against Mr Kenyatta may also be thrown out.
But an ICC spokesman has told the BBC that this is not something that will be discussed on Monday.
In the aftermath of the election in December 2007 - when Raila Odinga
narrowly lost to incumbent President Mwai Kibaki - more than 1,000
people were killed and about 600,000 were left homeless.
Mr Kenyatta, the son of Kenya's founding president, is accused of
organising attacks on members of ethnic groups seen as supporting Mr
Odinga following the 2007 vote.
This month's election in Kenya was largely peaceful, though Mr Odinga
- again the defeated candidate, has filed a Supreme Court appeal
against Mr Kenyatta's victory.
He says the electoral authorities have manipulated the result.
He has been serving as prime minister in the coalition government set up in the wake of the 2007/8 violence.
Mr Kenyatta's running mate in the recent poll, William Ruto, is also
due to stand trial at The Hague for orchestrating violence against
supporters of Mr Kibaki in 2007 - he strongly denies the allegation.
Analysts say the ICC cases bolstered their ticket, as voters saw it as interference in Kenya's domestic affairs.
If Mr Kenyatta's trial on charges of crimes against humanity does go
ahead, his lawyers are still hoping that the judges will allow him to
attend via a virtual video link - rather than abandon his presidential
seat in Nairobi, our reporter says.
The ICC originally charged six people over the violence in Kenya but charges against two others were previously dropped.