Speech by H.E. Mr. Abdulqawi A. Yusuf, President of the International Court of Justice, on the occasion of the Seventy-Fourth Session of the United Nations General Assembly

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000-20191030-STA-01-00-EN
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SPEECH BY H.E. MR. ABDULQAWI A. YUSUF, PRESIDENT OF THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF
JUSTICE, ON THE OCCASION OF THE SEVENTY-FOURTH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
30 October 2019
Mr. President,
Excellencies,
Distinguished Delegates,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is an honour for me to address the General Assembly for the second time as it considers
the annual report of the International Court of Justice. The Court greatly appreciates the interest
shown in and support given to its work by this august Assembly.
At the outset, I would like to take this opportunity to congratulate
H.E. Mr. Tijjani Muhammad-Bande on his election as President of the Seventy-fourth Session of
this eminent Assembly and wish him every success in carrying out this distinguished role.
*
Since 1 August 2018  the starting-date of the period covered by the Court’s annual
report  the Court’s docket has remained full, with [16] contentious cases currently pending
before the Court despite the fact that a number of other cases have been disposed of during the past
year. As my presentation today will show, the cases before the Court involve States from all
regions of the world and touch on a wide range of issues, including questions of consular
protection, the formation of customary rules of international law in the area of decolonization, and
maritime and territorial disputes.
Over the course of the year, the Court has held hearings in five contentious cases and
one advisory procedure. It began with hearings in two pending cases involving claims by the
Islamic Republic of Iran against the United States of America concerning alleged breaches by the
Respondent of a 1955 bilateral Treaty of Amity. The first set of oral proceedings was on a request
for the indication of provisional measures submitted by Iran and the second was on preliminary
objections raised by the United States. The Court then held hearings on the merits in a case brought
by the Republic of India against the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, concerning alleged violations of
the consular rights of an Indian national. This was followed by hearings on the request for the
indication of provisional measures submitted by the United Arab Emirates in a case brought against
it by Qatar concerning allegations of racial discrimination. More recently, oral proceedings were
held on preliminary objections raised by the Russian Federation in a case brought against it by
Ukraine concerning allegations of terrorism financing and racial discrimination. In addition, the
Court heard the oral statements of participants in the advisory procedure concerning the status of
the Chagos Archipelago, which was held as a result of a request made by this Assembly.
In the period under review, the Court delivered three Judgments, one Advisory Opinion and
two orders on provisional measures. On 1 October 2018, it rendered its Judgment on the merits in
the case concerning Obligation to Negotiate Access to the Pacific Ocean (Bolivia v. Chile). On
13 February 2019, it delivered its Judgment on the preliminary objections in the case concerning
Certain Iranian Assets (Islamic Republic of Iran v. United States of America). On 25 February
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2019, the Court gave its Advisory Opinion on the Legal Consequences of the Separation of the
Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius in 1965. Finally, on 15 July 2019, it delivered its Judgment on
the merits in the Jadhav case (India v. Pakistan).
In addition to numerous procedural orders, the Court issued two Orders on requests for the
indication of provisional measures: the first one on 3 October 2018 related to the case concerning
Alleged Violations of the 1955 Treaty of Amity, Economic Relations, and Consular Rights (Islamic
Republic of Iran v. United States of America). The second was rendered on 14 June 2019 in the
case concerning Application of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Racial Discrimination (Qatar v. United Arab Emirates).
*
As is customary, I will now give a brief account of the substance of the decisions and the
opinion delivered by the Court in the period under review. I used the opportunity of last year’s
address to give an overview of the Court’s Judgment in the case between Bolivia and Chile
mentioned in my introduction, since the Court rendered that decision in the autumn of 2018. I will
thus focus today on the other decisions rendered by the Court in the period under review, beginning
with the Judgment of 13 February 2019 on the preliminary objections raised by the United States in
the case concerning Certain Iranian Assets.
*
This case was initiated by Iran on 14 June 2016 on the basis of a compromissory clause in
the 1955 bilateral Treaty of Amity, Economic Relations and Consular Rights. The case relates to
the legislative and executive acts adopted by the United States that had the practical effect of
subjecting the assets and interests of Iran and Iranian entities to enforcement proceedings in the
United States. Iran claimed in its Application, inter alia, that this was contrary to the immunities
enjoyed by Iran and Iranian entities as a matter of international law and as required by the
1955 Treaty.
The United States raised five preliminary objections. In its Judgment, the Court rejected
three of those objections, upheld one and found that one did not possess an exclusively preliminary
character, meaning that the Court would consider it when dealing with the merits of the case. Thus,
the case will proceed to the merits stage, although it will not include claims relating to sovereign
immunity, the subject of the preliminary objection which the Court upheld. Furthermore, the
jurisdiction of the Court to consider claims relating to the Central Bank of Iran, known as
Bank Markazi, will be addressed along with the merits.
The Court had to face several interesting questions of international law in ruling on the
preliminary objections, two of which I would like to highlight today. First of all, in ruling on one of
the United States’ objections, it had to deal with the question of whether its jurisdiction extended to
potential violations of customary international law  in particular the law of sovereign
immunities  when the case had been brought on the basis of a compromissory clause in a treaty.
The Court answered this question in the negative, concluding that the dispute could not be
considered to relate to the “interpretation or application” of the Treaty of Amity, as required by the
compromissory clause, since none of the Treaty provisions invoked by Iran referred to immunities
or could be considered to incorporate them by reference. Therefore, the Court lacked jurisdiction to
consider questions of immunities.
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Secondly, in ruling on another of the United States’ objections, which asked the Court to
dismiss all claims of purported violations of the Treaty that were based on treatment accorded to
Bank Markazi, the Court determined that it would need to examine whether or not, as a matter of
treaty interpretation, a central bank was a “company” within the meaning of the treaty. This was
because the Treaty only accorded rights and protections to “companies” of a contracting party. The
Court considered that this was largely a question of fact, since it is the nature of the activity
actually carried out which determines the characterization of the entity that engaged in it.
Therefore, the Court found that, in order to answer the question, it would need to examine Bank
Markazi’s activities within the territory of the United States at the time of the contested measures.
Given that Iran principally argued that the nature of the activities engaged in was of no relevance to
the characterization of an entity as a “company” within the meaning of the Treaty, it had made little
attempt to elaborate on the commercial activities of Bank Markazi. Consequently, the Court
considered that it did not have all the facts before it to answer the question of whether or not Bank
Markazi could be considered a “company” within the meaning of the Treaty. It therefore decided
that the question did not possess an exclusively preliminary character and should thus be
considered at the merits stage.
*
I will now turn to an overview of the Advisory Opinion on the Legal Consequences of the
Separation of the Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius in 1965, which was given by the Court on
25 February 2019 in response to a request made by the General Assembly, as set out in
resolution 71/292 adopted on 22 June 2017. These proceedings were closely followed by many
United Nations Member States. A total of 31 States participated in the written proceedings and
22 States presented oral statements. The African Union also took part in both phases of the
proceedings.
I would recall that the General Assembly put two questions to the Court. In order to give its
opinion on the first question, namely, whether the process of decolonization of Mauritius was
lawfully completed having regard to international law, the Court had to first determine the content
of the law applicable to the process of decolonization.
In this regard, the Court recalled the UN Charter’s consecration of respect for the principle
of equal rights and self-determination of peoples as one of the purposes of the United Nations and
the fact that it included provisions that would enable non-self-governing territories ultimately to
govern themselves. This was therefore the context in which the Court had to determine, among
other issues, when the right of self-determination had become a rule of international law binding on
all States.
In this regard, the Court stated that resolution 1514 (XV) entitled “Declaration on the
Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples”, adopted in 1960, had a declaratory
character with regard to the right to self-determination as a customary norm, in view of its content
and the conditions of its adoption. The Court also noted that the nature and scope of the right to
self-determination of peoples were reiterated in the “Declaration on Principles of International Law
concerning Friendly Relations and Co-operation among States in accordance with the Charter of
the United Nations” (resolution 2625 (XXV) of 24 October 1970). By recognizing the right to selfdetermination
as one of the “basic principles of international law”, that Declaration confirmed its
normative character under customary international law.
The Court thus arrived at the conclusion that, in terms of the applicable law, the right to
self-determination was a customary rule of international law in the mid-1960s.
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The Court, after recalling that the right to self-determination of the peoples concerned was
defined in resolutions 1514 (XV) and 2625 (XXV) by reference to the entirety of a
non-self-governing territory, noted that both State practice and opinio juris at the relevant time
confirmed the customary law character of the right to territorial integrity of a non-self-governing
territory as a corollary of the right to self-determination. Consequently, the peoples of
non-self-governing territories were entitled to exercise their right to self-determination in relation
to their territory as a whole, and the integrity of that territory must be respected by the
administering Power. It follows that any detachment by the administering Power of part of a nonself-
governing territory, unless based on the freely expressed and genuine will of the people of the
territory concerned, was contrary to the right to self-determination.
In light of this, the Court found that, as a result of the Chagos Archipelago’s unlawful
detachment and its incorporation into a new colony, the process of decolonization of Mauritius was
not lawfully completed when Mauritius acceded to independence in 1968.
The Court then addressed the second question put to it by the General Assembly regarding
the consequences under international law arising from the continued administration of the
Chagos Archipelago by the United Kingdom. The Court stated that, in light of its earlier finding on
the non-completion of the decolonization process, the continued administration of the
Chagos Archipelago constituted an internationally wrongful act. Thus, the Court concluded that the
United Kingdom had an obligation to bring to an end its administration of the Chagos Archipelago
as rapidly as possible. The Court added that, since respect for the right to self-determination is an
obligation erga omnes, all States have a legal interest in protecting that right; in the same vein, all
Member States must co-operate with the United Nations to put into effect the modalities required to
ensure the completion of the decolonization process.
These proceedings highlighted the usefulness of advisory opinions for the organs and
agencies of the United Nations. Advisory proceedings provide legal clarity by enabling the Court to
determine the current status of specific principles and rules of international law. Indeed, following the
Court’s advisory opinion, the Assembly affirmed, in accordance with that opinion, that the
decolonization of Mauritius had not been lawfully completed, and proceeded to set out the
modalities and time frame for the withdrawal by the United Kingdom of its colonial administration,
thereby enabling Mauritius to complete the decolonization of its territory.
*
I now turn to the Judgment rendered by the Court on the merits in the Jadhav (India v.
Pakistan) case on 17 July 2019. This case was instituted by India following the arrest and detention
of an Indian national, Mr. Kulbhushan Sudhir Jadhav, who was accused by Pakistan of acts of
espionage. In April 2017, Mr. Jadhav was sentenced to death by a military court in Pakistan. India
argued that consular access was being denied to its national in violation of the 1963 Vienna
Convention on Consular Relations (which I will refer to simply as the “Vienna Convention”).
In its Judgment, the Court found that Pakistan had violated its obligations under Article 36 of
the Vienna Convention and that appropriate remedies were due in this case.
The Court had to address several issues regarding the interpretation and application of the
Vienna Convention in the specific circumstances of the case.
One of the issues that the Court had to examine was the question of whether the rights
relating to consular access, set out in Article 36 of the Vienna Convention, were in any manner to
be excluded in a situation where the individual concerned was suspected of carrying out acts of
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espionage. The Court noted in that regard that there is no provision in the Vienna Convention
containing a reference to cases of espionage; nor does the Article concerning consular access,
Article 36, exclude from its scope certain categories of persons, such as those suspected of
espionage. Therefore, the Court concluded that Article 36 of the Vienna Convention was applicable
in full to the case at hand.
Another interesting legal question that the Court had to address was whether a bilateral
agreement on consular access concluded between the two Parties in 2008 could be read as
excluding the applicability of the Vienna Convention. The Court considered that this was not the
case. More precisely, the Court noted that under the Vienna Convention, Parties were able to
conclude only bilateral agreements that confirm, supplement, extend or amplify the provisions of
that instrument. Having examined the 2008 Agreement, the Court came to the conclusion that it
could not be read as denying consular access in the case of an arrest, detention or sentence made on
political or security grounds, and that it did not displace obligations under Article 36 of the Vienna
Convention.
The Court was also called upon to interpret the meaning of the expression “without delay” in
the notification requirements of Article 36 of the Vienna Convention. The Court noted that in its
case law, the question of how to determine what was meant by the term “without delay” depended
on the given circumstances of a case. For example, in one instance, a delay of 40 hours was
considered to be a violation, whereas in another instance, the Court found no violation in respect of
a delay of five days. Taking into account the particular circumstances of the Jadhav case, the Court
noted that Pakistan’s making of the notification some three weeks after Mr. Jadhav’s arrest
constituted a breach of its obligation to inform India’s consular post “without delay”, as required by
the provisions of the Vienna Convention.
I now come to the crux of the Court’s ruling, where the Court considered the reparation and
remedies to be granted, after it had found that the rights to consular access had been violated. In
line with its earlier jurisprudence in other cases dealing with breaches of the Vienna Convention,
the Court found that the appropriate remedy was effective review and reconsideration of the
conviction and sentence of Mr. Jadhav. The Court moreover clarified what it considered to be the
requirements of effective review and reconsideration. It stressed that Pakistan must ensure that full
weight is given to the effect of the violation of the rights set forth in the Vienna Convention and
guarantee that the violation and the possible prejudice caused by the violation are fully examined.
While the Court left the choice of means to provide effective review and reconsideration to
Pakistan, it noted that effective review and reconsideration presupposes the existence of a
procedure that is suitable for this purpose and observed that it is normally the judicial process that
is suited to this task.
The Court is pleased to note that, following its ruling, it received a communication dated
1 August 2019 from Pakistan confirming its commitment to implementing the Judgment of 17 July
2019 in full. In particular, Pakistan stated that Mr. Jadhav had been immediately informed of his
rights under the Vienna Convention and that the consular post of the High Commission of India in
Islamabad had been invited to visit him on 2 August 2019.
* *
Mr. President,
As far as the substantive orders rendered by the Court in the period under review are
concerned, I have already covered during last year’s address the Order delivered on 3 October 2018
in the case concerning Alleged Violations of the 1955 Treaty of Amity, Economic Relations, and
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Consular Rights (Islamic Republic of Iran v. United States of America). My review will therefore
be limited to the Order of 14 June 2019 rejecting the Request for the indication of provisional
measures submitted by the United Arab Emirates in the case concerning Application of the
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Qatar v.
United Arab Emirates).
This second case was instituted on 11 June 2018 and concerned allegations on the part of
Qatar that the UAE had enacted and implemented a series of discriminatory measures directed at
Qataris based expressly on their national origin resulting in human rights violations. I recall that in
parallel with its Application, Qatar filed a request for the indication of provisional measures and
that, by an Order dated 23 July 2018, the Court indicated certain provisional measures directed at
the UAE and also indicated that both Parties must refrain from any action which might aggravate or
extend the dispute or make it more difficult to resolve. On 22 March 2019, the UAE, in turn,
requested the Court to indicate certain provisional measures aimed at preserving its procedural
rights.
In particular, the UAE asked the Court to order that Qatar immediately withdraw its
Communication submitted to the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, and that
Qatar immediately take steps to ensure that it did not impede the UAE in its attempts to assist
Qatari citizens, including by unblocking access to a website through which Qatari citizens could
apply for a permit to return to the UAE. The Court, however, considered that the requested
measures did not concern plausible rights of the UAE under the International Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination.
The UAE also asked the Court to indicate measures related to the non-aggravation of the
dispute. In accordance with the Court’s case law, such measures could only be indicated as an
addition to specific measures to protect rights of the Parties. Therefore, having found that the
conditions for the indication of specific provisional measures had not been met in this instance, the
Court could not indicate measures only with respect to the non-aggravation of the dispute.
Moreover, such measures had already been prescribed by the Court in its Order of 23 July 2018 and
remained binding on the Parties.
* *
Mr. President,
Excellencies,
Distinguished Delegates,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Since my address last year before the Assembly, Guatemala and Belize brought on 7 June
2019 by means of a Special Agreement a dispute before the Court concerning Guatemala’s
territorial, insular and maritime claim. One innovative aspect about this case is the democratic and
participative approach adopted by Guatemala and Belize in deciding to bring their dispute for
resolution to the Court. Indeed, in accordance with the Special Agreement, before seising the
Court, both countries first held national referendums in order to ascertain whether their respective
populations supported the idea of submitting the dispute to the Court for final settlement.
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Following a positive response in both referendums, the case was submitted to the Court by a
notification made by the two countries. The Court welcomes the possibility to, once again, provide
assistance to two neighbouring countries, in a dispute relating to the critical question of borders.
* *
This concludes my summary of the Court’s judicial activities over the last year. I would now
like to take the opportunity to touch on a few important non-judicial matters.
To begin, I wish to refer to the ongoing initiative of the Court to ensure that its Rules and
methods of work correspond to its changing requirements. In particular, in the past year, the Court
has decided to revise several Articles of its Rules of Court. These amendments were considered in
detail by the Court’s Rules Committee, and afterwards by its plenary. I am pleased to announce that
this process has so far led to the amendment of a first set of Articles, namely Articles 22, 23, 29, 76
and 79 of the Rules of Court. These new amendments were promulgated on 21 October 2019 and
took effect on that date. The amendment of other rules is under consideration by the Court. I would
like to take a few moments to briefly explain the amendments adopted.
First of all, the Court introduced amendments to Article 22, 23 and 29 of the Rules of Court.
Articles 22 and 23 concern the election of the Registrar and Deputy-Registrar, respectively, while
Article 29 sets out the process by which a Registrar or Deputy-Registrar may be removed from
office. As part of the Court’s ongoing modernization, Article 22 has been amended to eliminate the
requirement that a candidate for the post of Registrar be proposed by a Member of the Court. This
nomination procedure has been replaced by the publication of a vacancy announcement and the
solicitation of applications in order to ensure an open and transparent competition which would
allow for a larger pool of highly qualified candidates. The period of time before the end of an
incumbent’s term when such a vacancy announcement will be issued has been extended from
three to six months, so that the Court will have adequate time to recruit candidates of the highest
calibre from amongst all UN Member States. With regard to the process by which a Registrar or
Deputy-Registrar may be removed from office under Article 29 of the Rules, this provision has
been modified so as to bring greater clarity in terms of the procedural modalities to be followed.
All three Articles have also been amended so as to make them gender neutral.
Secondly, the Court has amended Article 76 of its Rules, which concerns the revocation or
modification of decisions concerning provisional measures. As Member States are no doubt aware,
the power of the Court to indicate binding provisional measures to either or both parties to a
pending dispute provides an important safeguard to parties in cases in which there is an urgent
threat of irreparable prejudice to their rights pending the Court’s judgment on the merits. The
amendment to Article 76 seeks to clarify that the Court can revoke or modify its Orders on
provisional measures both at the request of a party and on its own initiative. This is of course
subject to the Rules of Court.
Finally, the Court has amended Article 79 of the Rules of Court, which concerns preliminary
objections. This Article in fact allows for two procedures: one when preliminary objections are
raised by a party and another when preliminary questions of jurisdiction or admissibility are
identified by the Court. In order to better distinguish these two different scenarios, the Court
decided to restructure the sub-paragraphs of Article 79 and divide them into three parts. In this new
re-organization, Article 79 deals exclusively with preliminary questions identified by the Court,
Article 79bis addresses preliminary objections raised by the Parties, and Article 79ter concerns
general procedural issues applicable to both scenarios.
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Mr. President,
The Court recognizes that in order to carry out its judicial work in an efficient and orderly
manner, it must be able to rely on Rules and methods of work that are clear and, whenever
necessary, updated to give the proper guidance to a modern court. Thus, despite a heavy case load,
the Court remains committed to the review of its rules and methods of work, in particular in order
to be able to deal with such a heavy case load in an efficient manner.
This modernization effort also extends to improving the work environment in the Registry of
the Court and updating its Staff Rules and Regulations.
*
In this context, I am pleased to report that by an exchange of letters between the President of
the Court and the Secretary-General of the United Nations, completed on 16 January 2019, the
Court has now fully associated itself with the United Nations internal justice system. Given the
unique character of the Court and the administrative autonomy of its Registry vis-à-vis the
United Nations Secretariat, a certain amount of time was needed to determine exactly how this
would work and to put in place all the necessary practical arrangements. The Court is pleased that
Registry staff members will now have at their disposal all the services available through the
United Nations internal justice system. In particular, staff members will now be able to receive
support in their informal dispute resolution efforts from the United Nations Ombudsman and
Mediation Services, and seek advice from the Office of Staff Legal Assistance. If informal means
are unsuccessful, they will be able to resolve disputes formally through the management evaluation
process, the United Nations Dispute Tribunal and the United Nations Appeals Tribunal. The
decision to associate itself fully with the United Nations internal justice system was taken after
thorough consultation with the Registry staff and is part of a series of measures, which includes the
hiring of a part-time staff welfare officer, aimed at contributing to a more positive working
environment at the Peace Palace.
*
Mr. President,
I now turn to the matter of the Court’s budget, which, compared to the institution’s
considerable responsibilities under its mandate and its growing case load, remains extremely
modest, representing less than 1 per cent of the regular budget of the United Nations. The Court is
cognizant of the fact that the United Nations as a whole is currently facing financial constraints,
which has led to a cash flow crisis. In these difficult circumstances, the Court understands the
efforts made by the Organization’s other organs and programmes in seeking to reduce budgetary
expenses. However, it is important to strike the right balance between budgetary austerity and the
absolute need to ensure the integrity of the Court’s judicial functions and its ability to carry out its
statutory mission. The Court must be given the means to carry out its work in the service of
sovereign States and the international community, in accordance with the relevant provisions of the
Charter and the Court’s Statute. These statutory obligations mean that the Court has no control over
the volume of its work. It cannot foresee the number of contentious cases and advisory proceedings
that will make up its docket in a given year or the number of urgent incidental proceedings that it
will be called upon to deal with. Unlike other organs of the United Nations, it does not have
programmes which may be cut or expanded. It cannot turn away Governments that have submitted
disputes to it or put such disputes on hold for years due to budgetary cuts. There is therefore a real
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sense of disquiet that the budgetary restrictions in place may undermine the Court’s ability to meet
the challenges of its substantial workload. It is, of course, in the interests of the entire Organization
that the Court is able to fully achieve its guiding purposes of justice and the rule of law, in a
manner which moreover constitutes without a doubt an extremely cost-effective means of settling
disputes peacefully.
I wish to stress this point at a time when the number of cases on the Court’s docket remains
very high.
*
Mr. President,
Allow me to address one further matter, namely the Court’s Judicial Fellowship Programme,
which is an arrangement that allows interested universities to nominate their recent law graduates
to pursue their training in a professional context at the Court for a nine-month period each year.
The participating universities are responsible for providing the necessary financial resources to
their candidates during their fellowship at the Court. The Court has already made a number of
efforts to involve the widest possible range of universities in its Judicial Fellowship Programme.
Over the years, the programme has been expanded, broadening the geographical distribution of the
sponsoring institutions. Those institutions have in turn been encouraged to present candidates from
a range of nationalities and backgrounds. Nevertheless, the same financial conditions continue to
apply, meaning that only those universities with sufficient resources, which are most frequently
from developed countries, are able to participate in the programme and to nominate fellows.
It is therefore felt that improvements in the way in which the candidates are funded are
warranted to ensure as broad a range as possible of participating fellows from all parts of the world.
To give further impetus to the possibility of having a diverse group of participants in the
programme, the Court has approved the idea of establishing a Trust Fund for the Court’s Judicial
Fellowship Programme. The Court would like to seek the approval of the General Assembly for the
creation of such a trust fund, the terms of reference of which are being elaborated in collaboration
with the UN Secretariat, as are the practical aspects of its administration. A proposal to this effect
will be formally presented early next year to the Assembly, and we hope it will meet with your
approval.
Before I come to my closing remarks, I would like to provide a brief update on the
asbestos-related situation at the Peace Palace, a matter of concern which I raised during my address
to you last year. To recall the background, in 2016, following inspections of the premises, the
Peace Palace was found to be contaminated with asbestos. As a result, the Dutch authorities
decided that major works should be undertaken to completely decontaminate and, at the same time,
renovate the building. In order to do this, it is understood that the Peace Palace will have to close
and that the Registry of the Court, including the Court’s Library and Archives, will have to be
temporarily relocated to other premises for a few years. As the Peace Palace houses the Court’s
principal court room — the Great Hall of Justice — any new premises would also have to include a
suitable space for the purpose of holding hearings, as well as additional dedicated areas for use by
the judges, the parties and the press. In my speech last year, I drew the attention of the Assembly to
the fact that we had not yet received sufficient information from the Dutch authorities about their
plans for the renovation of the Peace Palace. I am pleased to inform you today that, on
14 October 2019, I received a reassuring letter from the Minister for Foreign Affairs of the
Netherlands, H.E. Mr. Stef Blok, in which he emphasized the importance that the Government of
the Netherlands attaches to the presence of the ICJ at the Peace Palace in The Hague. He informed
me that discussions between the Dutch Government and the Carnegie Foundation, the owner of the
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Peace Palace, are currently ongoing and until an agreement is reached between them, preparations
for the renovation of the Peace Palace will be put on hold. Consequently, the Minister suggested
that this intervening period may be used for discussions between the Court and his office with
regard to appropriate arrangements to ensure a smooth off-site relocation of the Registry and other
Court services. These discussions will hopefully start on my return to The Hague.
* *
Mr. President,
Excellencies,
Distinguished Delegates,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Almost a century ago, the Statute of the Permanent Court of International Justice, the Court’s
predecessor, was approved by the Assembly of the League of Nations. Any doubts about the
establishment of a permanent court of international justice have since been dispelled and the fears
of those worried about the dangers of a “gouvernement des juges” have failed to materialize. Quite
the contrary, those voices have been silenced. States regard the Court as a guardian of the rule of
law at the international level. States have, on many occasions — including in this very hall
following the presentation to the General Assembly of the annual report of the Court by its
President — expressed their great appreciation for the work of the Court. It is most encouraging to
see that an ever-increasing number of States are placing their trust in the Court to find a lasting
judicial settlement to their disputes, on occasion amidst geopolitical realities characterized by
tension.
Even with the most seemingly intractable disputes, a ruling of the Court can signal the
starting-point for a new era in bilateral relations between disputing parties, and mark an end to
long-standing differences. It is equally encouraging to see the continued relevance of the Court’s
advisory procedure, which enables the Court to provide authoritative pronouncements on complex
legal issues arising in the context of the work of the main organs and institutions of the
United Nations.
Finally, Mr. President,
As an example of the growing trust placed in the work of the Court, I am delighted to report
to the Assembly that on 30 September 2019, the Registry of the Court received a depositary
notification concerning the declaration of the Republic of Latvia accepting the jurisdiction of the
Court as compulsory. At present, therefore, 74 States from all continents have recognized as
compulsory ipso facto and without special agreement, in relation to any other State accepting the
same obligation, the jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice. Much remains to be done
before the Court is empowered to settle all disputes between all States, and to anchor even further
the rule of law at the international level. The pace might be slow; but the trend towards a wider
acceptance of the compulsory jurisdiction of the Court in the international community is quite
clear.
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Mr. President,
Excellencies,
Distinguished Delegates,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I thank you for giving me the opportunity to address you today, and I wish this
seventy-fourth session of the General Assembly every success.
___________

Bilingual Content

SPEECH BY H.E. MR. ABDULQAWI A. YUSUF, PRESIDENT OF THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF
JUSTICE, ON THE OCCASION OF THE SEVENTY-FOURTH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
30 October 2019
Mr. President,
Excellencies,
Distinguished Delegates,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is an honour for me to address the General Assembly for the second time as it considers
the annual report of the International Court of Justice. The Court greatly appreciates the interest
shown in and support given to its work by this august Assembly.
At the outset, I would like to take this opportunity to congratulate
H.E. Mr. Tijjani Muhammad-Bande on his election as President of the Seventy-fourth Session of
this eminent Assembly and wish him every success in carrying out this distinguished role.
*
Since 1 August 2018  the starting-date of the period covered by the Court’s annual
report  the Court’s docket has remained full, with [16] contentious cases currently pending
before the Court despite the fact that a number of other cases have been disposed of during the past
year. As my presentation today will show, the cases before the Court involve States from all
regions of the world and touch on a wide range of issues, including questions of consular
protection, the formation of customary rules of international law in the area of decolonization, and
maritime and territorial disputes.
Over the course of the year, the Court has held hearings in five contentious cases and
one advisory procedure. It began with hearings in two pending cases involving claims by the
Islamic Republic of Iran against the United States of America concerning alleged breaches by the
Respondent of a 1955 bilateral Treaty of Amity. The first set of oral proceedings was on a request
for the indication of provisional measures submitted by Iran and the second was on preliminary
objections raised by the United States. The Court then held hearings on the merits in a case brought
by the Republic of India against the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, concerning alleged violations of
the consular rights of an Indian national. This was followed by hearings on the request for the
indication of provisional measures submitted by the United Arab Emirates in a case brought against
it by Qatar concerning allegations of racial discrimination. More recently, oral proceedings were
held on preliminary objections raised by the Russian Federation in a case brought against it by
Ukraine concerning allegations of terrorism financing and racial discrimination. In addition, the
Court heard the oral statements of participants in the advisory procedure concerning the status of
the Chagos Archipelago, which was held as a result of a request made by this Assembly.
In the period under review, the Court delivered three Judgments, one Advisory Opinion and
two orders on provisional measures. On 1 October 2018, it rendered its Judgment on the merits in
the case concerning Obligation to Negotiate Access to the Pacific Ocean (Bolivia v. Chile). On
13 February 2019, it delivered its Judgment on the preliminary objections in the case concerning
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Certain Iranian Assets (Islamic Republic of Iran v. United States of America). On 25 February
2019, the Court gave its Advisory Opinion on the Legal Consequences of the Separation of the
Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius in 1965. Finally, on 15 July 2019, it delivered its Judgment on
the merits in the Jadhav case (India v. Pakistan).
In addition to numerous procedural orders, the Court issued two Orders on requests for the
indication of provisional measures: the first one on 3 October 2018 related to the case concerning
Alleged Violations of the 1955 Treaty of Amity, Economic Relations, and Consular Rights (Islamic
Republic of Iran v. United States of America). The second was rendered on 14 June 2019 in the
case concerning Application of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Racial Discrimination (Qatar v. United Arab Emirates).
*
As is customary, I will now give a brief account of the substance of the decisions and the
opinion delivered by the Court in the period under review. I used the opportunity of last year’s
address to give an overview of the Court’s Judgment in the case between Bolivia and Chile
mentioned in my introduction, since the Court rendered that decision in the autumn of 2018. I will
thus focus today on the other decisions rendered by the Court in the period under review, beginning
with the Judgment of 13 February 2019 on the preliminary objections raised by the United States in
the case concerning Certain Iranian Assets.
*
This case was initiated by Iran on 14 June 2016 on the basis of a compromissory clause in
the 1955 bilateral Treaty of Amity, Economic Relations and Consular Rights. The case relates to
the legislative and executive acts adopted by the United States that had the practical effect of
subjecting the assets and interests of Iran and Iranian entities to enforcement proceedings in the
United States. Iran claimed in its Application, inter alia, that this was contrary to the immunities
enjoyed by Iran and Iranian entities as a matter of international law and as required by the
1955 Treaty.
The United States raised five preliminary objections. In its Judgment, the Court rejected
three of those objections, upheld one and found that one did not possess an exclusively preliminary
character, meaning that the Court would consider it when dealing with the merits of the case. Thus,
the case will proceed to the merits stage, although it will not include claims relating to sovereign
immunity, the subject of the preliminary objection which the Court upheld. Furthermore, the
jurisdiction of the Court to consider claims relating to the Central Bank of Iran, known as
Bank Markazi, will be addressed along with the merits.
The Court had to face several interesting questions of international law in ruling on the
preliminary objections, two of which I would like to highlight today. First of all, in ruling on one of
the United States’ objections, it had to deal with the question of whether its jurisdiction extended to
potential violations of customary international law  in particular the law of sovereign
immunities  when the case had been brought on the basis of a compromissory clause in a treaty.
The Court answered this question in the negative, concluding that the dispute could not be
considered to relate to the “interpretation or application” of the Treaty of Amity, as required by the
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compromissory clause, since none of the Treaty provisions invoked by Iran referred to immunities
or could be considered to incorporate them by reference. Therefore, the Court lacked jurisdiction to
consider questions of immunities.
Secondly, in ruling on another of the United States’ objections, which asked the Court to
dismiss all claims of purported violations of the Treaty that were based on treatment accorded to
Bank Markazi, the Court determined that it would need to examine whether or not, as a matter of
treaty interpretation, a central bank was a “company” within the meaning of the treaty. This was
because the Treaty only accorded rights and protections to “companies” of a contracting party. The
Court considered that this was largely a question of fact, since it is the nature of the activity
actually carried out which determines the characterization of the entity that engaged in it.
Therefore, the Court found that, in order to answer the question, it would need to examine Bank
Markazi’s activities within the territory of the United States at the time of the contested measures.
Given that Iran principally argued that the nature of the activities engaged in was of no relevance to
the characterization of an entity as a “company” within the meaning of the Treaty, it had made little
attempt to elaborate on the commercial activities of Bank Markazi. Consequently, the Court
considered that it did not have all the facts before it to answer the question of whether or not Bank
Markazi could be considered a “company” within the meaning of the Treaty. It therefore decided
that the question did not possess an exclusively preliminary character and should thus be
considered at the merits stage.
*
I will now turn to an overview of the Advisory Opinion on the Legal Consequences of the
Separation of the Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius in 1965, which was given by the Court on
25 February 2019 in response to a request made by the General Assembly, as set out in
resolution 71/292 adopted on 22 June 2017. These proceedings were closely followed by many
United Nations Member States. A total of 31 States participated in the written proceedings and
22 States presented oral statements. The African Union also took part in both phases of the
proceedings.
I would recall that the General Assembly put two questions to the Court. In order to give its
opinion on the first question, namely, whether the process of decolonization of Mauritius was
lawfully completed having regard to international law, the Court had to first determine the content
of the law applicable to the process of decolonization.
In this regard, the Court recalled the UN Charter’s consecration of respect for the principle
of equal rights and self-determination of peoples as one of the purposes of the United Nations and
the fact that it included provisions that would enable non-self-governing territories ultimately to
govern themselves. This was therefore the context in which the Court had to determine, among
other issues, when the right of self-determination had become a rule of international law binding on
all States.
In this regard, the Court stated that resolution 1514 (XV) entitled “Declaration on the
Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples”, adopted in 1960, had a declaratory
character with regard to the right to self-determination as a customary norm, in view of its content
and the conditions of its adoption. The Court also noted that the nature and scope of the right to
self-determination of peoples were reiterated in the “Declaration on Principles of International Law
concerning Friendly Relations and Co-operation among States in accordance with the Charter of
the United Nations” (resolution 2625 (XXV) of 24 October 1970). By recognizing the right to
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self-determination as one of the “basic principles of international law”, that Declaration confirmed
its normative character under customary international law.
The Court thus arrived at the conclusion that, in terms of the applicable law, the right to
self-determination was a customary rule of international law in the mid-1960s.
The Court, after recalling that the right to self-determination of the peoples concerned was
defined in resolutions 1514 (XV) and 2625 (XXV) by reference to the entirety of a
non-self-governing territory, noted that both State practice and opinio juris at the relevant time
confirmed the customary law character of the right to territorial integrity of a non-self-governing
territory as a corollary of the right to self-determination. Consequently, the peoples of
non-self-governing territories were entitled to exercise their right to self-determination in relation
to their territory as a whole, and the integrity of that territory must be respected by the
administering Power. It follows that any detachment by the administering Power of part of a nonself-
governing territory, unless based on the freely expressed and genuine will of the people of the
territory concerned, was contrary to the right to self-determination.
In light of this, the Court found that, as a result of the Chagos Archipelago’s unlawful
detachment and its incorporation into a new colony, the process of decolonization of Mauritius was
not lawfully completed when Mauritius acceded to independence in 1968.
The Court then addressed the second question put to it by the General Assembly regarding
the consequences under international law arising from the continued administration of the
Chagos Archipelago by the United Kingdom. The Court stated that, in light of its earlier finding on
the non-completion of the decolonization process, the continued administration of the
Chagos Archipelago constituted an internationally wrongful act. Thus, the Court concluded that the
United Kingdom had an obligation to bring to an end its administration of the Chagos Archipelago
as rapidly as possible. The Court added that, since respect for the right to self-determination is an
obligation erga omnes, all States have a legal interest in protecting that right; in the same vein, all
Member States must co-operate with the United Nations to put into effect the modalities required to
ensure the completion of the decolonization process.
These proceedings highlighted the usefulness of advisory opinions for the organs and
agencies of the United Nations. Advisory proceedings provide legal clarity by enabling the Court to
determine the current status of specific principles and rules of international law. Indeed, following the
Court’s advisory opinion, the Assembly affirmed, in accordance with that opinion, that the
decolonization of Mauritius had not been lawfully completed, and proceeded to set out the
modalities and time frame for the withdrawal by the United Kingdom of its colonial administration,
thereby enabling Mauritius to complete the decolonization of its territory.
*
I now turn to the Judgment rendered by the Court on the merits in the Jadhav (India v.
Pakistan) case on 17 July 2019. This case was instituted by India following the arrest and detention
of an Indian national, Mr. Kulbhushan Sudhir Jadhav, who was accused by Pakistan of acts of
espionage. In April 2017, Mr. Jadhav was sentenced to death by a military court in Pakistan. India
argued that consular access was being denied to its national in violation of the 1963 Vienna
Convention on Consular Relations (which I will refer to simply as the “Vienna Convention”).
In its Judgment, the Court found that Pakistan had violated its obligations under Article 36 of
the Vienna Convention and that appropriate remedies were due in this case.
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The Court had to address several issues regarding the interpretation and application of the
Vienna Convention in the specific circumstances of the case.
One of the issues that the Court had to examine was the question of whether the rights
relating to consular access, set out in Article 36 of the Vienna Convention, were in any manner to
be excluded in a situation where the individual concerned was suspected of carrying out acts of
espionage. The Court noted in that regard that there is no provision in the Vienna Convention
containing a reference to cases of espionage; nor does the Article concerning consular access,
Article 36, exclude from its scope certain categories of persons, such as those suspected of
espionage. Therefore, the Court concluded that Article 36 of the Vienna Convention was applicable
in full to the case at hand.
Another interesting legal question that the Court had to address was whether a bilateral
agreement on consular access concluded between the two Parties in 2008 could be read as
excluding the applicability of the Vienna Convention. The Court considered that this was not the
case. More precisely, the Court noted that under the Vienna Convention, Parties were able to
conclude only bilateral agreements that confirm, supplement, extend or amplify the provisions of
that instrument. Having examined the 2008 Agreement, the Court came to the conclusion that it
could not be read as denying consular access in the case of an arrest, detention or sentence made on
political or security grounds, and that it did not displace obligations under Article 36 of the Vienna
Convention.
The Court was also called upon to interpret the meaning of the expression “without delay” in
the notification requirements of Article 36 of the Vienna Convention. The Court noted that in its
case law, the question of how to determine what was meant by the term “without delay” depended
on the given circumstances of a case. For example, in one instance, a delay of 40 hours was
considered to be a violation, whereas in another instance, the Court found no violation in respect of
a delay of five days. Taking into account the particular circumstances of the Jadhav case, the Court
noted that Pakistan’s making of the notification some three weeks after Mr. Jadhav’s arrest
constituted a breach of its obligation to inform India’s consular post “without delay”, as required by
the provisions of the Vienna Convention.
I now come to the crux of the Court’s ruling, where the Court considered the reparation and
remedies to be granted, after it had found that the rights to consular access had been violated. In
line with its earlier jurisprudence in other cases dealing with breaches of the Vienna Convention,
the Court found that the appropriate remedy was effective review and reconsideration of the
conviction and sentence of Mr. Jadhav. The Court moreover clarified what it considered to be the
requirements of effective review and reconsideration. It stressed that Pakistan must ensure that full
weight is given to the effect of the violation of the rights set forth in the Vienna Convention and
guarantee that the violation and the possible prejudice caused by the violation are fully examined.
While the Court left the choice of means to provide effective review and reconsideration to
Pakistan, it noted that effective review and reconsideration presupposes the existence of a
procedure that is suitable for this purpose and observed that it is normally the judicial process that
is suited to this task.
The Court is pleased to note that, following its ruling, it received a communication dated
1 August 2019 from Pakistan confirming its commitment to implementing the Judgment of 17 July
2019 in full. In particular, Pakistan stated that Mr. Jadhav had been immediately informed of his
rights under the Vienna Convention and that the consular post of the High Commission of India in
Islamabad had been invited to visit him on 2 August 2019.
* *
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Monsieur le président, avec votre permission, je continue maintenant mon allocution en français.
Pour ce qui est des principales ordonnances que la Cour a rendues au cours de la période
considérée, j’ai déjà eu l’occasion de traiter, lors de mon discours de l’année dernière, l’ordonnance
du 3 octobre 2018 rendue en l’affaire relative à des Violations alléguées du traité d’amitié, de
commerce et de droits consulaires de 1955 (République islamique d’Iran c. Etats-Unis
d’Amérique). Je me limiterai donc à l’ordonnance du 14 juin 2019 par laquelle la Cour a rejeté la
demande en indication de mesures conservatoires présentée par les Emirats arabes unis en l’affaire
relative à l’Application de la convention internationale sur l’élimination de toutes les formes de
discrimination raciale (Qatar c. Emirats arabes unis).
Dans cette seconde instance, introduite le 11 juin 2018, le Qatar allègue que les Emirats
arabes unis ont adopté et appliqué un ensemble de mesures discriminatoires ciblant les Qatariens au
motif exprès de leur origine nationale, lesquelles se sont soldées par des violations des droits de
l’homme. Je rappelle que le Qatar avait, en même temps que sa requête, déposé une demande en
indication de mesures conservatoires et que, par une ordonnance en date du 23 juillet 2018, la Cour
a indiqué certaines mesures conservatoires à l’adresse des Emirats arabes unis, enjoignant en outre
aux deux Parties de s’abstenir de tout acte qui risquerait d’aggraver ou d’étendre le différend dont
elle était saisie ou d’en rendre le règlement plus difficile. Le 22 mars 2019, les Emirats arabes unis
ont, à leur tour, demandé à la Cour d’indiquer certaines mesures conservatoires, notamment des
mesures visant à sauvegarder leurs droits procéduraux en l’affaire.
Les Emirats arabes unis priaient en particulier la Cour d’ordonner que le Qatar retire
immédiatement la communication qu’il avait soumise au Comité pour l’élimination de la
discrimination raciale, et qu’il prenne immédiatement des dispositions pour veiller à ne pas
entraver les efforts déployés par les Emirats arabes unis pour venir en aide aux Qatariens,
notamment en débloquant sur son territoire l’accès au site Internet leur permettant d’introduire une
demande tendant à retourner aux Emirats arabes unis. La Cour a toutefois estimé que les mesures
sollicitées ne se rapportaient pas à des droits plausibles des Emirats arabes unis au regard de la
convention internationale sur l’élimination de toutes les formes de discrimination raciale.
Les Emirats arabes unis priaient également la Cour d’indiquer des mesures ayant trait à la
non-aggravation du différend. Or, conformément à la jurisprudence de celle-ci, pareilles mesures
ne peuvent être indiquées qu’en complément de mesures spécifiques visant à protéger les droits des
Parties. Ayant conclu que les conditions requises aux fins de l’indication de mesures conservatoires
spécifiques n’étaient pas réunies en l’espèce, la Cour ne pouvait donc indiquer des mesures
concernant uniquement la non-aggravation du différend. En outre, de telles mesures avaient déjà
été prescrites dans l’ordonnance qu’elle avait rendue le 23 juillet 2018, et demeuraient
contraignantes pour les Parties.
* *
Monsieur le président,
Excellences,
Mesdames et Messieurs les délégués,
Mesdames et Messieurs,
Depuis mon allocution de l’année passée devant votre auguste Assemblée, une toute
nouvelle instance, qui a trait à un différend entre le Guatemala et le Belize concernant la
revendication territoriale, insulaire et maritime du Guatemala, a été introduite devant la Cour le
7 juin 2019 par voie de compromis. Le caractère inédit de cette affaire tient à la démarche
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démocratique et participative adoptée par les deux Etats dans le cadre de leur décision de saisir la
Cour. Conformément au compromis, ceux-ci ont en effet, préalablement à cette saisine, organisé
chacun un référendum afin de s’assurer que leurs populations respectives approuvaient l’idée de
confier à la Cour le règlement définitif du différend. Les deux référendums ayant abouti à un
résultat favorable, la Cour a été saisie de l’affaire par l’effet de notifications officielles adressées
par les deux Etats. Celle-ci se félicite de ce que possibilité lui soit, une fois encore, donnée d’aider
deux Etats voisins à régler un différend relatif à des questions sensibles touchant aux frontières.
* *
Ainsi s’achève ma brève présentation de l’activité judiciaire qui a été celle de la Cour durant
l’année écoulée. J’aimerais à présent saisir l’occasion de ma présence devant vous pour aborder un
certain nombre de questions d’un autre ordre.
Je souhaite tout d’abord m’arrêter sur les efforts continus par lesquels la Cour s’assure de
l’adéquation de son Règlement et de ses méthodes de travail à ses besoins évolutifs. Durant l’année
écoulée, elle a ainsi décidé de réviser plusieurs articles de son Règlement. Ces amendements ont
fait l’objet d’un examen approfondi par le comité du Règlement, puis par la Cour plénière. J’ai le
plaisir d’annoncer que ce processus a, pour l’heure, conduit à la modification d’une première série
de dispositions, à savoir les articles 22, 23, 29, 76 et 79 du Règlement de la Cour. Ces
amendements ont été promulgués le 21 octobre 2019 et ont pris effet à compter de cette date. La
Cour examine actuellement les modifications à apporter à d’autres dispositions, mais j’aimerais
prendre un instant pour vous présenter brièvement celles qui ont d’ores et déjà été adoptées.
La Cour s’est tout d’abord penchée sur les articles 22, 23 et 29 de son Règlement. Les deux
premiers concernent l’élection du greffier et du greffier adjoint, respectivement, l’article 29 traitant
de la procédure par laquelle ces derniers peuvent être relevés de leurs fonctions. Dans le cadre des
efforts constants de modernisation de la Cour, l’article 22 a été amendé de telle sorte que soit
supprimée l’exigence qu’un candidat au poste de greffier soit proposé par un membre de la Cour.
Cette procédure de nomination a été remplacée par la publication d’un avis de vacance de poste
invitant les personnes intéressées à faire acte de candidature, afin de garantir des conditions de
concurrence ouverte et transparente permettant à un plus grand nombre de candidats hautement
qualifiés de postuler. Le délai de publication de l’avis de vacance a été porté de trois à six mois
avant l’expiration du mandat du greffier, afin de donner à la Cour suffisamment de temps pour
recruter des candidats de haut niveau issus de tous les Etats Membres de l’ONU. S’agissant des
conditions dans lesquelles le greffier ou le greffier adjoint peuvent être relevés de leurs fonctions
en application de l’article 29 du Règlement de la Cour, cette disposition a été modifiée afin de
préciser les modalités procédurales à appliquer. Ces trois articles ont en outre été rendus neutres du
point de vue du genre.
La Cour a par ailleurs amendé l’article 76 de son Règlement, qui concerne les circonstances
dans lesquelles elle peut rapporter ou modifier ses décisions concernant des mesures
conservatoires. Les Etats Membres ne sont pas sans savoir que son pouvoir d’indiquer des mesures
conservatoires obligatoires à l’adresse de l’une ou des deux parties à une instance en cours offre
aux Etats une garantie importante lorsqu’il existe un risque imminent qu’un préjudice irréparable
soit causé à leurs droits avant que la Cour ne rende son arrêt au fond. L’amendement apporté à
l’article 76 vise à préciser que la Cour peut rapporter ou modifier ses ordonnances en indication de
mesures conservatoires tant à la demande d’une partie que de sa propre initiative. Cela s’applique
évidemment sous réserve des autres dispositions de son Règlement.
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Enfin, la Cour a modifié l’article 79 de son Règlement, relatif aux exceptions préliminaires.
Cet article prévoit en réalité deux procédures distinctes : la première concerne le cas où des
exceptions préliminaires sont présentées par une partie, et la seconde, celui où des questions
préliminaires de compétence ou de recevabilité sont soulevées par la Cour elle-même. Afin de
mieux distinguer ces deux situations, celle-ci a décidé de réorganiser les paragraphes de l’article 79
en redécoupant celui-ci en trois articles distincts. Selon ce redécoupage, l’article 79 concerne
exclusivement les questions préliminaires soulevées par la Cour, l’article 79bis traitant des
exceptions préliminaires présentées par les parties et l’article 79ter, de questions de procédure
générales applicables dans les deux cas de figure.
Monsieur le président,
La Cour estime que, pour être en mesure d’accomplir ses travaux judiciaires dans de bonnes
conditions et de manière efficace, elle doit pouvoir se fonder sur des règles et des méthodes de
travail qui soient claires et puissent, chaque fois que nécessaire, faire l’objet des modifications
requises pour lui fournir le cadre qui doit être celui d’une institution judiciaire moderne. En dépit
du nombre élevé d’affaires inscrites à son rôle, elle demeure donc soucieuse de poursuivre le
réexamen des dispositions régissant son fonctionnement ainsi que de ses méthodes de travail,
notamment pour parvenir à s’acquitter avec efficacité de cette importante charge de travail.
Cet effort de modernisation inclut également un processus d’amélioration de
l’environnement de travail du Greffe de la Cour et de mise à jour des dispositions du statut du
personnel de celui-ci.
*
Dans ce contexte, j’ai le plaisir de vous informer que, par l’effet d’un échange de lettres
parachevé le 16 janvier 2019 entre le président de la Cour et le Secrétaire général de l’Organisation
des Nations Unies, la Cour s’est désormais pleinement associée au système de justice interne de
l’ONU. Compte tenu de sa spécificité et de l’autonomie administrative de son Greffe vis-à-vis du
Secrétariat de l’Organisation, il a fallu un certain temps pour établir les modalités précises du
nouveau système et prendre toutes les dispositions pratiques nécessaires à cet égard. La Cour se
félicite de ce que les fonctionnaires du Greffe aient désormais accès à l’ensemble des services
proposés dans le cadre du système de justice interne de l’ONU. Ils pourront en particulier
bénéficier de l’appui du bureau des services d’ombudsman et de médiation des Nations Unies pour
tenter de parvenir à un règlement amiable des différends, et solliciter les conseils du bureau d’aide
juridique au personnel. En cas d’échec de la voie amiable, ils pourront s’en remettre à un règlement
formel en recourant à la procédure du contrôle hiérarchique, ainsi qu’au tribunal du contentieux
administratif et au tribunal d’appel des Nations Unies. La décision de s’associer pleinement au
système de justice interne des Nations Unies a été prise à l’issue d’une large consultation du
personnel du Greffe et s’inscrit dans un ensemble de mesures  parmi lesquelles le recrutement
d’un fonctionnaire chargé du bien-être du personnel à temps partiel  destinées à favoriser
l’établissement d’un environnement de travail plus positif au Palais de la Paix.
*
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Mr. President,
I now turn to the matter of the Court’s budget, which, compared to the institution’s
considerable responsibilities under its mandate and its growing case load, remains extremely
modest, representing less than 1 per cent of the regular budget of the United Nations. The Court is
cognizant of the fact that the United Nations as a whole is currently facing financial constraints,
which has led to a cash flow crisis. In these difficult circumstances, the Court understands the
efforts made by the Organization’s other organs and programmes in seeking to reduce budgetary
expenses. However, it is important to strike the right balance between budgetary austerity and the
absolute need to ensure the integrity of the Court’s judicial functions and its ability to carry out its
statutory mission. The Court must be given the means to carry out its work in the service of
sovereign States and the international community, in accordance with the relevant provisions of the
Charter and the Court’s Statute. These statutory obligations mean that the Court has no control over
the volume of its work. It cannot foresee the number of contentious cases and advisory proceedings
that will make up its docket in a given year or the number of urgent incidental proceedings that it
will be called upon to deal with. Unlike other organs of the United Nations, it does not have
programmes which may be cut or expanded. It cannot turn away Governments that have submitted
disputes to it or put such disputes on hold for years due to budgetary cuts. There is therefore a real
sense of disquiet that the budgetary restrictions in place may undermine the Court’s ability to meet
the challenges of its substantial workload. It is, of course, in the interests of the entire Organization
that the Court is able to fully achieve its guiding purposes of justice and the rule of law, in a
manner which moreover constitutes without a doubt an extremely cost-effective means of settling
disputes peacefully.
I wish to stress this point at a time when the number of cases on the Court’s docket remains
very high.
*
Mr. President,
Allow me to address one further matter, namely the Court’s Judicial Fellowship Programme,
which is an arrangement that allows interested universities to nominate their recent law graduates
to pursue their training in a professional context at the Court for a nine-month period each year.
The participating universities are responsible for providing the necessary financial resources to
their candidates during their fellowship at the Court. The Court has already made a number of
efforts to involve the widest possible range of universities in its Judicial Fellowship Programme.
Over the years, the programme has been expanded, broadening the geographical distribution of the
sponsoring institutions. Those institutions have in turn been encouraged to present candidates from
a range of nationalities and backgrounds. Nevertheless, the same financial conditions continue to
apply, meaning that only those universities with sufficient resources, which are most frequently
from developed countries, are able to participate in the programme and to nominate fellows.
It is therefore felt that improvements in the way in which the candidates are funded are
warranted to ensure as broad a range as possible of participating fellows from all parts of the world.
To give further impetus to the possibility of having a diverse group of participants in the
programme, the Court has approved the idea of establishing a Trust Fund for the Court’s Judicial
Fellowship Programme. The Court would like to seek the approval of the General Assembly for the
creation of such a trust fund, the terms of reference of which are being elaborated in collaboration
with the UN Secretariat, as are the practical aspects of its administration. A proposal to this effect
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will be formally presented early next year to the Assembly, and we hope it will meet with your
approval.
Before I come to my closing remarks, I would like to provide a brief update on the
asbestos-related situation at the Peace Palace, a matter of concern which I raised during my address
to you last year. To recall the background, in 2016, following inspections of the premises, the
Peace Palace was found to be contaminated with asbestos. As a result, the Dutch authorities
decided that major works should be undertaken to completely decontaminate and, at the same time,
renovate the building. In order to do this, it is understood that the Peace Palace will have to close
and that the Registry of the Court, including the Court’s Library and Archives, will have to be
temporarily relocated to other premises for a few years. As the Peace Palace houses the Court’s
principal court room — the Great Hall of Justice — any new premises would also have to include a
suitable space for the purpose of holding hearings, as well as additional dedicated areas for use by
the judges, the parties and the press. In my speech last year, I drew the attention of the Assembly to
the fact that we had not yet received sufficient information from the Dutch authorities about their
plans for the renovation of the Peace Palace. I am pleased to inform you today that, on
14 October 2019, I received a reassuring letter from the Minister for Foreign Affairs of the
Netherlands, H.E. Mr. Stef Blok, in which he emphasized the importance that the Government of
the Netherlands attaches to the presence of the ICJ at the Peace Palace in The Hague. He informed
me that discussions between the Dutch Government and the Carnegie Foundation, the owner of the
Peace Palace, are currently ongoing and until an agreement is reached between them, preparations
for the renovation of the Peace Palace will be put on hold. Consequently, the Minister suggested
that this intervening period may be used for discussions between the Court and his office with
regard to appropriate arrangements to ensure a smooth off-site relocation of the Registry and other
Court services. These discussions will hopefully start on my return to The Hague.
* *
Mr. President,
Excellencies,
Distinguished Delegates,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Almost a century ago, the Statute of the Permanent Court of International Justice, the Court’s
predecessor, was approved by the Assembly of the League of Nations. Any doubts about the
establishment of a permanent court of international justice have since been dispelled and the fears
of those worried about the dangers of a “gouvernement des juges” have failed to materialize. Quite
the contrary, those voices have been silenced. States regard the Court as a guardian of the rule of
law at the international level. States have, on many occasions — including in this very hall
following the presentation to the General Assembly of the annual report of the Court by its
President — expressed their great appreciation for the work of the Court. It is most encouraging to
see that an ever-increasing number of States are placing their trust in the Court to find a lasting
judicial settlement to their disputes, on occasion amidst geopolitical realities characterized by
tension.
Even with the most seemingly intractable disputes, a ruling of the Court can signal the
starting-point for a new era in bilateral relations between disputing parties, and mark an end to
long-standing differences. It is equally encouraging to see the continued relevance of the Court’s
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advisory procedure, which enables the Court to provide authoritative pronouncements on complex
legal issues arising in the context of the work of the main organs and institutions of the
United Nations.
Finally, Mr. President,
As an example of the growing trust placed in the work of the Court, I am delighted to report
to the Assembly that on 30 September 2019, the Registry of the Court received a depositary
notification concerning the declaration of the Republic of Latvia accepting the jurisdiction of the
Court as compulsory. At present, therefore, 74 States from all continents have recognized as
compulsory ipso facto and without special agreement, in relation to any other State accepting the
same obligation, the jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice. Much remains to be done
before the Court is empowered to settle all disputes between all States, and to anchor even further
the rule of law at the international level. The pace might be slow; but the trend towards a wider
acceptance of the compulsory jurisdiction of the Court in the international community is quite
clear.
Mr. President,
Excellencies,
Distinguished Delegates,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I thank you for giving me the opportunity to address you today, and I wish this
seventy-fourth session of the General Assembly every success.
___________

Document file FR
Document Long Title

Speech by H.E. Mr. Abdulqawi A. Yusuf, President of the International Court of Justice, on the occasion of the Seventy-Fourth Session of the United Nations General Assembly

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