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Press Release
. Communiqué de presse
(Exclusively
for the use of the media. Not an official document)
The
Hague, 4 December 2000
JL/P.I.S./544-e
THE ICTY WELCOMES THE ESTABLISHMENT
OF A POOL
OF ADDITIONAL JUDGES
At
their 23rd Plenary Session, the Judges of the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) welcomed the adoption, on 30 November
2000, of resolution 1329 by the United Nations Security Council, establishing
a pool of 27 ad litem judges and enlarging the Appeals Chamber of both
the ICTY and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) by two members.
The
Security Council voted unanimously in favour of the resolution and in doing
so, decided to amend articles 12, 13 and 14 of the ICTY Statute.
In
the resolution, the members of the Security Council stated that they were
"convinced
of the need to establish a pool of ad litem judges in the International Tribunal
for the former Yugoslavia and to increase the number of judges in the Appeals
Chambers of the International Tribunals in order to enable the International
Tribunals to expedite the conclusion of their work at the earliest possible
date,"
THE
ICTY SATISFIED
The
President of the Tribunal, Judge Claude Jorda, gave the following reaction:
"This
resolution, which is the outcome of more than a year of work, approves the implementation
of the ad litem judges mechanism and the creation of two additional posts for
both the ICTY and ICTR Appeals Chambers. We have every reason to be satisfied.
As
I had the opportunity to indicate to the members of the Security Council, we
are now under an absolute obligation to produce results which will once again
require a great deal of effort and, above all, close cooperation among the three
organs of the Tribunal."
The
adoption of this resolution follows the submission of a report to the UN Secretary-General,
by President Jorda, in May 2000 on behalf of the Judges at the ICTY.
In
the report, President Jorda reviewed the current situation regarding the conduct
of trials before the Tribunal and projected how its activities were likely to
evolve in the future, both in the medium and longer term. He concluded that,
should the Tribunal maintain its current structure and should it continue to
function in accordance with its existing procedures, it would need considerable
time to complete the trials of all of those persons who are currently being
and will be prosecuted. He proposed three measures to address this situation.
The
first of these suggested measures was to enhance and conduct in ‘real time’
the pre-trial procedure by making more extensive use of the Senior Legal Officers,
thus allowing the judges to concentrate on trials.
The
second measure involved the creation of a pool of ad litem judges, from
which the Tribunal could draw to supplement the existing three Trial Chambers.
The
third of the measures was to enlarge the Appeals Chambers of both Tribunals
by adding two judges, drawn from the Trial Chambers of the Rwanda Tribunal.
AD
LITEM JUDGES
Composition
of the Chambers
The
new composition of the Chambers, as set out in an annex to resolution
1329, will be as follows:
1. The
Chambers shall be composed of 16 permanent independent judges, no two of whom
may be nationals of the same State, and a maximum at any one time of nine
ad litem independent judges appointed in accordance with article 13
ter, paragraph 2, of the Statute, no two of whom may be nationals of
the same State.
2. Three
permanent judges and a maximum at any one time of six ad litem judges
shall be members of each Trial Chamber. Each Trial Chamber to which ad
litem judges are assigned may be divided into sections of three judges
each, composed of both permanent and ad litem judges. A section of
a Trial Chamber shall have the same powers and responsibilities as a Trial
Chamber under the Statute and shall render judgement in accordance with the
same rules.
3. Seven
of the permanent judges shall be members of the Appeals Chamber. The Appeals
Chamber shall, for each appeal, be composed of five of its members.
Election
and appointment
In
adopting resolution 1329, the Security Council requested "the
Secretary-General to make practical arrangements…for the election as soon as
possible of 27 ad litem judges in accordance with Article 13 ter of the Statute
of the International Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia".
UN
Member States will be asked to nominate candidates to fill the new judges’ positions.
The judges will then be elected by the General Assembly, from a list submitted
by the Security Council. The procedure for selection and election of the ad
litem judges is set out in detail in an annex to resolution 1329.
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