Britain loses seat on International Court of Justice

In a hard-fought race for a seat, India's candidate judge Dalveer Bhandari took the position from Britain's Christopher Greenwood at the International Court of Justice.

Members from the United Nations Security Council cast their vote in a meeting on the election of five members of the International Court of Justice, at the UN headquarters in New York on November 13.
AFP

Members from the United Nations Security Council cast their vote in a meeting on the election of five members of the International Court of Justice, at the UN headquarters in New York on November 13.

Britain on Monday pulled its candidate from a hard-fought race for a seat on the International Court of Justice (ICJ), allowing a judge from India to take the position.

It will be the first time since the ICJ was established in 1945 that there will be no British judge. 

The election had turned into a stalemate between Britain's candidate Christopher Greenwood, who enjoyed support in the UN Security Council, and India's judge Dalveer Bhandari, who won the vote in the General Assembly.

"The UK has concluded that it is wrong to continue to take up the valuable time of the Security Council and the UN General Assembly with further rounds of elections," Matthew Rycroft, the British Ambassador, has stated on Monday.

"We are naturally disappointed, but it was a competitive field with six strong candidates," he added. 

Greenwood had served one nine-year term at the ICJ based in The Hague, Netherlands and was seeking to serve a second.

Some diplomats attributed Britain's failure to rally support for its candidate at the General Assembly to a loss of influence, following Britain's decision to leave the European Union.

In June, the General Assembly voted to refer the legal status of the British-ruled Chagos Islands to the ICJ.

The other elected judges were Nawaf Salam of Lebanon, Ronny Abraham of France, Abdulqawi Ahmed Yusuf of Somalia and Antonio Augusto Cancado Trindade of Brazil.

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