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Africa needs to lead the charge for an international anti-corruption court
Africa needs to lead the charge for an international anti-corruption court

Mail & Guardian

time06-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Mail & Guardian

Africa needs to lead the charge for an international anti-corruption court

Among the participants at the launch of a policy brief, International Anti-Corruption Court: How Will It Serve Africa?, were Justice Richard Goldstone, Chief Justice Martha Koome of Kenya, Justice Key Dingake. Photo: Supplied If corruption is a disease to our society and body politic, impunity is what stops us from healing. For far too long, Africa has been left gasping, looking for a cure to overcome the devastation wrought by corruption. At the recent launch of a new policy brief titled International Anti-Corruption Court: How Will It Serve Africa?, a panel of judges, scholars and policymakers sent a clear message: African leaders must take ownership of the movement to establish a new international anti-corruption Court (IAC court) — or risk allowing the same old cycles of injustice and theft to continue unchallenged. Support for this initiative, the establishment of an IAC court is an endeavour African states can direct and help realise. The launch opened with remarks from Justice Richard Goldstone, followed by a message of support from Chief Justice Martha Koome of Kenya, and a keynote by Justice Key Dingake. Backed by the Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Freedom, Integrity Initiatives International, Transparency International Kenya and Good Governance Africa, the gathering drew together some of the continent's most critical voices against corruption. Speaker after speaker hammered home a grim but familiar reality: Africa remains one of the regions most battered by corruption's effects. From crippled development projects to weakened governance, the costs have been enormous. Worse still, grand corruption — the kind committed by those at the highest levels of power — continues to flourish, often protected by a stubborn culture of impunity. In the face of this entrenched problem, the idea of an IAC court has gained significant traction. Proponents envision a tribunal that would treat high-level corruption as a crime of international concern — similar to war crimes or crimes against humanity. This court would not replace national justice systems, but complement them, stepping in where domestic courts are unable or unwilling to hold the powerful to account. The IAC court proposal is gaining momentum. In 2021, a global Declaration calling for its creation was signed by more than 300 leaders from 80 countries, including dozens of former presidents and Nobel laureates. By 2024, a draft treaty and commentary were well under way, prepared by a task force of judges, prosecutors and legal scholars. The vision is clear: a court capable of pursuing the kleptocrats and corporate enablers who now operate with near-total impunity. Africa's own experience is central to this conversation. The Malabo Protocol, designed to create an African criminal court with jurisdiction over crimes such as corruption, shows that African states have already contemplated regional accountability mechanisms. With only one ratification (Angola), however, the Protocol has remained little more than a good idea on paper. Meanwhile, the scale of theft remains staggering. The High-Level Panel on Illicit Financial Flows chaired by former president Thabo Mbeki estimated that Africa has lost more than $1 trillion to illicit outflows over the past 50 years — roughly equivalent to all foreign aid received over the same period. The IAC court could play a transformative role here, helping to recover and repurpose stolen assets, returning funds to the communities they were stolen from through orders of restitution and civil suits. Yet Africa's relationship with international justice is fraught. Understandably so. Many African leaders and citizens remember how international legal mechanisms have often marginalised African voices or served Western interests under the guise of 'universal values'. Scepticism is healthy; but disengagement would be a mistake. African lawyers, scholars and policymakers have long been at the forefront of reimagining corruption as a human rights violation and a threat to democratic governance. It is African states that pushed for stronger commitments under the African Union Convention Against Corruption, going beyond even the UN Convention Against Corruption in some areas. The choice ahead is stark. Africa can either sit back and let others design yet another international institution with little regard for African priorities or it can seize this moment to demand a court that truly serves African interests: one that respects sovereignty, enforces accountability and helps return stolen wealth to the people to whom it belongs. Corruption thrives when accountability is absent. The IAC court is not a magic bullet, but it could be an essential tool in breaking the cycle of impunity that continues to rob Africa of its future. Prosper S Maguchu is an assistant professor of law specialising in financial crimes and international asset recovery from a human rights-based approach. Karam Singh is the deputy director of the Integrity International Initiatives.

Stream It Or Skip It: ‘The Takedown: American Aryans' on MAX, A Docuseries About Fighting A White Supremacist Gang And Finding Justice For Its Victims
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘The Takedown: American Aryans' on MAX, A Docuseries About Fighting A White Supremacist Gang And Finding Justice For Its Victims

Yahoo

time06-03-2025

  • Yahoo

Stream It Or Skip It: ‘The Takedown: American Aryans' on MAX, A Docuseries About Fighting A White Supremacist Gang And Finding Justice For Its Victims

The four-episode MAX docuseries The Takedown: American Aryans recounts a 2008 investigation led by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives into an organized criminal group known as the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas. Operating inside and outside of state and federal prisons in Texas, and driven by their violent white supremacist ideology, the ABT were well-known to authorities for their long list of crimes. But it was the torture and murder of a woman in suburban Dallas – 'slaughtering innocent people at will,' a federal agent says in The Takedown – that brought the six-year investigation to bear. Opening Shot: 'Little did I know, when I was assigned to Houston, Texas,' says retired ATF agent Rich Boehning, 'that I would be targeting one of the most violent extremist groups in the country.' The Gist: 'She was a naive 19-year-old, and didn't see that the people she was around could be evil.' For the family of Brianna Taylor, their concern over her use of methamphetamines turned to dismay in 2006, when she stopped returning their phone calls. Taylor had been dating a man named Jason Hankins, who as an Aryan Brotherhood of Texas 'general' coordinated the group's drug-selling and gun-running activities. But as authorities circled the ABT for a series of crimes, they discovered another shocking truth: Hankins' associate, Dale 'Tiger' Jameton, had murdered Brianna over the unfounded suspicion that she was a snitch to the cops. In The Takedown: American Aryans, Rich Boehning describes how the ATF's investigation unfolded, and how it involved numerous other agencies as well as infiltration of the ABT at significant risk to life and limb. Whether inside a prison or out on the streets, these guys were indiscriminate killers, to the point that Boehning describes their torture and murder of someone just to steal his pickup truck. As is usual for true crime stuff, The Takedown often relies on reenactments for its visuals. But it also has access to police interrogation tapes, footage from inside the prison system, the account of a former ABT 'captain,' and a collection of still photos from inside the brotherhood, where tatted-up men strike menacing poses with weapons in front of flags emblazoned with Nazi imagery. The access goes even further. Armed with a series of lingering questions about the senseless murder from Brianna Taylor's sister Kate, investigative journalist Caroyln Canville interviews Dale Jameton inside the Texas prison where he is serving a life sentence. Why did he feel the need to abduct and hurt Brianna, to kill her and dump her body in a Dallas lake? (Taylor's body has never been recovered.) But while Jameton admits he did it, his allegiance to the brotherhood is unshakeable. Takedown makes it clear that there is no credence to the ABT's suspicion that Brianna was working with law enforcement. But incredibly, Jameton, completely unmoved by the questions from her family, still says she had it coming. What Shows Will It Remind You Of? Once it gets into its jailhouse interview sessions with Dale Jameton, The Takedown begins to feel like a mirror on the Netflix series I Am A Killer. Takedown director/producer Neil Rawles has also helmed numerous episodes of Locked Up Abroad, and in the Apple TV+ docuseries Cowboy Cartel, a Texas-based FBI agent leads an investigation into a Mexican criminal organization's infiltration of the American quarter horse industry. Our Take: The crimes and investigations detailed in The Takedown: American Aryans are by now years-old. But they still resonate, especially as white supremacist beliefs and apparent Sieg Heil salutes are now part of the daily news cycle. And while the juggernaut of true crime content doesn't seem like it will ever stop populating the world of streaming, and which creates an open window for a docuseries about violent Nazi-worshipping gangs, for Brianna Taylor's family, it's the resonance of her murder that provides The Takedown with its most effective emotional peg. Documentary-style material like this series can also benefit from a strong personality at its center, and The Takedown has one in former ATF agent Rich Boehning, whose Queens New York accent and deeply-felt descriptions of how crucial the case against the ABT became – 'I realized the Brianna Taylor murder was just the tip of the iceberg' – lend it a strident sense of urgency Sex and Skin: None, but be aware that in addition to its lead disclaimer about the mayhem and racism of the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas, The Takedown also describes incidents of torture and sexual violence toward women. Parting Shot: We're back with Rich Boehning, who says his investigation of the supremacist gang took another significant turn when it hit even closer to home. 'I discovered one of the ABT generals was living in my neighborhood…' Sleeper Star: Interviews with Michael Bianculli, aka 'Crash,' who describes himself as a former captain in the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas, provide firsthand insight into the group's command structure. The rigid hierarchy Bianculli describes supports Rich Boehning's statement about the ATF's investigation of the ABT: 'They were built like an army, so we had to build our own army.' Most Pilot-y Line: 'Tiger treated her with the kind of violence that you can't imagine,' journalist Carolyn Canville says in The Takedown. 'Violence that you can't imagine any human being could feel against another human being, no matter what.' Our Call: STREAM IT. True crime fans should have a lot to chew on with The Takedown: American Aryans, as the docuseries details not only the broad federal response to the violence perpetrated by a criminal group of white supremacists, but the emotions felt by the loved ones their victims left behind. Johnny Loftus (@ is a Chicago-based writer. A veteran of the alternative weekly trenches, his work has also appeared in Entertainment Weekly, Pitchfork, The All Music Guide, and The Village Voice.

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