Prosecutors allege that Gicheru and another lawyer, Philip Kipkoech Bett, corruptly influenced six witnesses in their investigations into Kenya’s post-election violence. Bett isn’t in custody.
A judge who signed off on their arrest warrant in 2015 said there were reasonable grounds to believe that Gicheru was a manager and coordinator of a scheme to offer bribes and other inducements to prosecution witnesses in return for them withdrawing their statements.
But appearing via a video link from the court’s detention center because of coronavirus restrictions, Gicheru told a pretrial judge that “the allegations read out to me are not true. They are false.”
Liz Evenson, associate international justice director at Human Rights Watch, said Gicheru’s case could cast new light on a failed post-election violence case at the global court.
“The ICC’s now-vacated crimes against humanity case against Deputy President William Ruto was marked by allegations of witness interference,” Evenson said in a written statement. “Following his surrender, the unfolding case against Paul Gicheru could provide a much-needed window into responsibility for any interference with the search for truth in Kenya’s post-election violence.”
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