In
Wake of India - UK Duel, 7 ICJ
Judges Take Outside
Arbitration Work, Good
Riddance
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, Nov
28 – Unreported during the
recent International Court of
Justice battle in which India's
Dalveer Bhandari bested the UK's
Christopher Greenwood, in the
General Assembly and then
overall when Greenwood withdrew,
is the scandal of moonlighting
ICJ judges. While the Statute of
the ICJ bans judges from
engaging “in any other
occupation of a professional
nature," seven sitting judges
have been paid for private
investor - state dispute
settlement cases. IISD reports
that "Greenwood worked as an
arbitrator in at least nine
investment arbitration cases
during his tenure at the ICJ. He
was paid more than USD 400,000
in fees in two of those nine
cases. It did not identify any
cases in which Bhandari worked
as an arbitrator during his
tenure." Inner City Press is
informed that Bhandari, in fact,
doesn't do this type of investor
- state
dispute
settlement arbitration
work, as a
conscious
choice. But
others do -
we've reported
on this in the
past, here
and here,
and will stay
on the
beat. In
other news, on November 3 Inner
City Press asked Guterres'
spokesman Stephane Dujarric, who
had just cut short Inner City
Press' questions about Guterres'
inaction on the killings by the
Cameroon government, these
questions: "is the Secretary
General having a one-on-one
lunch on 38th floor today? is it
with a journalist / editor? is
it on or off the record? why
isn't this lunch on the SG's
public schedule? is it with
Gillian Tett?" Dujarric's and
the UN's answer on this: "I have
nothing to say to the SG’s
schedule that’s not public." Now
Tett's FT interview
belatedly came out, with no
mention of Guterres and his
Deputy's involvement in
corruption scandals, it led with
Guterres complaining about the
quality of his private chef and
wine cellar. Even UN supporters
told Inner City Press it was
distasteful. The interview,
tellingly, had little Africa
where Guterres took 42-year
ruler Paul Biya's golden statue;
he said he is not a professional
tweeter. So who is sending that
pablum out? And why did the FT
go so soft? We'll have more on
this.
***
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