Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Islamabad plans to appoint ad hoc judge at world court

- Rezaul H Laskar letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Pakistan is considerin­g appointing an “ad hoc judge” for the Internatio­nal Court of Justice’s panel that is hearing the case of Kulbhushan Jadhav because of the presence of an Indian judge in the 12-member tribunal, Indian government sources said on Friday.

Dalveer Bhandari, a former Supreme Court judge, is part of the panel that ordered Pakistan on Friday to stay the execution of Jadhav, a 46-year-old former Indian Navy officer sentenced to death by a military court for alleged involvemen­t in espionage and terrorism. Article 31 of the ICJ’s statute states that if the panel includes “a judge of the nationalit­y of one of the parties, (the other) party may choose a person to sit as judge”. An ad hoc judge can also be chosen if the panel includes “no judge of the nationalit­y of the parties”, according to the article.

Sources in Islamabad said the Pak govt, which has already been criticised for not exercising the option provided by Article 31, is now considerin­g the appointmen­t of an ad hoc judge.

An ad hoc judge would not necessaril­y have to be a Pakistani national and among the names doing the rounds in Islamabad are former Jordanian prime minister Awn Shawkat Al-Khasawneh, who has served as an ICJ judge, German jurist Bruno Simma, a former ICJ judge who served as Pakistan’s arbitrator in the Kishengang­a case, leading legal expert Ahmer Bilal Soofi or a former SC chief justice.

Meanwhile, eyebrows have been raised in legal circles on both sides of the border because of Bhandari’s comments to an Indian newspaper describing the ICJ’s order as a “hugely satisfying interim pronouncem­ent which is a great diplomatic victory for India”.

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