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UN Court To Start Hearings Next Year In French Dispute On Witnesses

Issue 302
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“Somaliland Does not Need Our Permission To Capture Las Anod,” Ethiopian Ambassador

Government Shuts Down ‘Shuronet’ Hargeysa Head Office

President Rayale Receives Norwegian Delegation

Minister of Civil Aviation: Jet Planes Will Be Able to Land at Hargeysa Airport Next Year

Somalia Premier Quits as Colleagues Cheer

Fresh Gun Battles Break Out in Somali Capital

Lack of AU troops hindering Ethiopian withdrawal from Somalia - Condoleezza Rice

Somalia's President Names New Premier

Wahhabism: a history

''Somaliland Moves To Close Its Borders And Is Caught In A Web Of Conflict''

Somaliland Police Force celebrates its 14th anniversary

Regional Affairs

President Rayale meets a delegation from Norway

UN Court To Start Hearings Next Year In French Dispute On Witnesses

Editorial
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International News

Wahhabism: A Deadly Scripture

Sharon Beshenivksy Suspect Is Captured In Somalia And Flown To Britain

Condoleezza Rice Misleading Congress

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

The End Of Warlord Government In Somalia

Against the Saudization of Somaliland

The True Face of “Dr” Muhammad Shamsadin Megalomatis – Part Three

How the Saudis used oil money to export a hardline ideology that fuels Islamist terror

Just In Time For Halloween: The World's Scariest Animals

Food for thought

Opinions

LONDON CALLING

Rating The UDUB Record

Somali-Week Festival

Somaliland: Our Nation’s Hidden Treasure

UDUB And KULMIYE: Bilking Their Creditor (SL Public)

What Is The Good Governance?

Time For Kenya & Ethiopia To Recognize Somaliland Independence

Constitutionalism First For Shuro-Net Members


The Hague, November 2, 2007 – The International Court of Justice (ICJ) announced today that it will begin public hearings next January in a case between France and Djibouti over whether high-level figures in the African country, including its Head of State, can be summoned as witnesses as part of a French judicial investigation.

In a statement issued from its headquarters in The Hague, the principal judicial organ of the United Nations said the hearings will start on 21 January and a detailed schedule will be published later.

The dispute relates to an investigation by French judicial authorities into the circumstances surrounding the death of Bernard Borrel, a French judge, in Djibouti in 1995.

The ICJ agreed to hear the case in August last year after France formally consented to the Court's jurisdiction following an application filed by Djibouti in January that year, and the two sides have since filed written pleadings on the matter to ICJ.

Djibouti's application stated that France had violated its international obligations under two bilateral treaties - the Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation (signed in 1977) and the Convention on Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters (1986) - by not handing over information relating to its judicial investigation into Mr. Borrel's death.

The Horn of Africa nation also stated that France had breached its obligations by seeking to call as witnesses to the inquiry "certain internationally protected nationals of Djibouti, including the Head of State."

Source: UN News Service

 


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