Five judges elected to UN’s International Court of Justice
November 13, 2020Five judges from Germany, Japan, Uganda, Slovakia and China were elected to the United Nations’ top court by the United Nations General Assembly and the Security Council on Thursday.
Georg Nolte from Germany, Yuji Iwasawa from Japan, Julia Sebutinde from Uganda, Peter Tomka from Slovakia, and Hanqin Xue from China won five seats on the 15-member International Court of Justice, based in The Hague, Netherlands.
In February 2021, the judges will begin their nine-year term on the ICJ, the court responsible for settling disputes between UN member states.
After two rounds of voting, candidates from Nigeria, Rwanda and Croatia lost their bids to join the top court.
While Iwasawa, Sebutinde, Tomka, and Xue were already members of the court, Germany’s Nolte was seeking his first term on the ICJ.
"As one of the most internationally renowned contemporary international law experts, he will bring to the court a wealth of experience and dedication to international law," said Christoph Heusgen, Germany's ambassador to the UN, congratulating Nolte.
"I am confident that his outstanding expertise, impartiality and integrity will be a major asset for the court."
The UNGA and Security Council elect five judges to the court every three years. The vote has been conducted by secret ballot since the first election in 1946, soon after the UN's principal judicial organ was established in 1945.
see/rc (AP, dpa)
Correction: The original version of this article had a picture of the International Criminal Court building. It has been corrected to show the building of the International Court of Justice.