Hindustan Times (Delhi)

India in the hunt for crucial ICJ berth

- Yashwant Raj yashwant.raj@hindustant­imes.com

THE HAGUEBASED ICJ HAS 15 JUDGES. SIX CANDIDATES WERE IN THE FRAY FOR FIVE SEATS THIS MONTH, AND FOUR CANDIDATES WERE CHOSEN

LAST THURSDAY.

WASHINGTON: After a weekend of hectic diplomatic parleys, India is still in the hunt for votes needed to install Dalveer Bhandari in the Internatio­nal Court of Justice for a second nine-year term, ahead of a crucial decision on the fate of Kulbhushan Jadhav, jailed by Pakistan on allegation­s of being an Indian spy.

“The prediction of the elections is not an exact science,” said an Indian diplomat, hours before the UN General Assembly and the Security Council start a final round of voting to pick either Bhandari or Britain’s Christophe­r Greenwood.

To win, a candidate must secure an absolute majority in both the General Assembly and the Security Council, which will vote concurrent­ly but not independen­tly.

The General Assembly was easy for India, getting 115 votes in the final round last week, way past the cut-off mark of 97. But the Security Council, of which Britain is a permanent member, has been a tougher propositio­n. Greenwood won nine of the 15 votes, securing a majority.

If Bhandari fails to be elected, India would be at a disadvanta­ge when the Jadhav case comes up for hearing in December.

Britain too needs a win — a British judge has always been on the court since 1946.

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