Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Advantage India in tied contest for vacancy at ICJ

Dalveer Bhandari won 121 votes, merely 7 short of a ‘moral majority’ of 128

- Yashwant.raj@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON: The election for the fifth vacancy on the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) remained deadlocked for the second day on Monday after neither candidate managed to wrap up the requisite numbers of votes in three hours of polling.

But India’s Dalveer Bhandari ended the day in a much better place than his rival, Britain’s Christophe­r Greenwood.

Bhandari won 121 votes in the fifth and final round in the UN General Assembly, which was merely seven short of what is called a “moral majority” of 128. The number represents twothirds of the 193-member assembly, used as a yardstick before, according to UN watchers, to break a deadlocked vote. The logic, an Indian official explained, is that if a candidate was unable to secure the support of two-thirds of the body, he or she had lost the moral authority to stay in the race, and must withdraw. While the British could, or not, take that line, Indians seemed clear they were not quitting.

The winner must secure an absolute majority in the assembly, which is 97 or more votes, as well the Security Council, where the magic mark is eight. Bhandari won the general assembly in all five rounds, starting with 110 in the first. And Greenwood clung to the Security Council with an unchanging 9-5 lead.

Much is at stake in this election, and not just another term for the two candidates. India needs a victory in order to have Bhandari on the bench when the 15-member Internatio­nal Court of Justice hears in December its appeal in the case of Kulbhushan Jadhav, who has been accused by Pakistan of being an Indian spy and faces the death penalty.

For Britain, it’s a test of its ability to stem its shrinking global influence and power, hastened lately by its decision to leave the European Union, also known as Brexit. Its failure to end this contest early, and easily, has already aroused consternat­ion at home, where commentato­rs are speaking of humiliatio­n.

Britain has always had a representa­tive on the court, which is based in The Hague, since 1946, as have other permanent members of the UN Security Council under an unwritten arrangemen­t. The understand­ing is not dissimilar in nature to the one that has allowed the US and Europe to lead World Bank and Internatio­nal Monetary fund respective­ly.

From India’s perspectiv­e “that’s an important given that needs to be challenged”. One official said the battle was about “prestige” and once this “matter of prestige” was changed, others would follow. Such as the permanent membership of the Security Council. Indians were generally pleased with the way the contest turned out “despite all that has been thrown at us” by the rival and cohorts, especially other members of the permanent club that could be hard to pin in a secret ballot.

Bhandari began the Monday contest winning the general assembly 110-79, 113-76, 111-79, 118-72 and, finally, 121-68, clearly showing which way the general body, and the world, was going and decisively. But he dropped one vote in the Security Council from last week to lose 5-9, but kept the line there.

The election was adjourned to be resumed at a later date.

 ?? AFP FILE ?? n United Nations Security Council members cast their vote during a meeting on the election of five members of the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, at the UN headquarte­rs in New York.
AFP FILE n United Nations Security Council members cast their vote during a meeting on the election of five members of the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, at the UN headquarte­rs in New York.

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