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Press
Release ·Communiqué de presse
(Exclusively for the use of the media. Not an official document)
The
Hague, 11 June 1999
JL/ P.I.S/409-E
STATEMENT
BY PRESIDENT GABRIELLE KIRK MCDONALD ON THE DEPARTURE OF PROSECUTOR LOUISE ARBOUR
Prosecutor Arbour
will leave a very different Tribunal from the one she joined three years ago.
The number of indictees in custody has more than tripled, as has our capacity
to try them. Against great odds the Tribunal and the principles on which it
is founded are beginning to prevail, ensuring that impunity will no longer be
the norm. This is due in no small part to the Prosecutors determined pursuit
of indicted persons and those who would offer them shelter. She has discharged
her mandate bringing the full force of her considerable legal skills to bear
on the unique challenges faced by the Tribunal.
Those
challenges are a consequence of the unprecedented nature of the Tribunal, the
lack of enforcement mechanisms, resource constraints and the pursuit of legal
imperatives in a difficult political climate. It is a tribute to Justice Arbours
tenacity that she has faced up to and overcome a great many of these obstacles.
I wish her well as a Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada, where I am confident
that she will serve with distinction.
There are some
who may be tempted to take comfort from the Prosecutors early departure.
However, the Tribunals mandate has not changed. Nor has its determination
to achieve the objectives for which it was established. Thus, I again call upon
all those indictees who remain at liberty to surrender to answer the charges
against them. I would also remind States of their obligation under international
law to execute arrest warrants against those persons indicted by the Tribunal.
The only way to secure peace in the former Yugoslavia remains through the pursuit
of justice.
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