The Asian Age

India’s ICJ win significan­t

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The old order is changing. It may have taken Britain a while to accept the reality, but it finally did so, withdrawin­g its candidatur­e for a sitting judge of the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, allowing India’s Dalveer Singh Bhandari to retain his place. This is the first time in 71 years that a British judge will not be on the bench. This victory is as much India’s as of the larger global community, with the General Assembly establishi­ng its supremacy over the Security Council’s charmed circle, whose five permanent members — the US, Britain, France, Russia and China — enjoy veto powers. India garnering the support of nearly twothirds of the General Assembly highlighte­d the emerging world order, that has reason to resent the old order, with extraordin­ary powers vested in a few countries at the expense of the many.

Monday’s UN victory didn’t come easy. Britain had even toyed with the idea of a rarely- used mechanism of a joint meeting of the Security Council and General Assembly to break the continuing deadlock in the election, where a candidate needs a majority in both the UNGA and UNSC to win a place in ICJ. India’s wide diplomatic outreach and its salient position in the Group of 77, comprising mostly developing nations, saw it emerge victorious with Britain throwing in the towel, reasoning that its friendly ties with India were best not damaged in this particular fight between a clear majority and a privileged minority. The outcome doesn’t necessaril­y promise a fairer UN, where the Big Five still have the veto edge, but it does shed light on a world that is transformi­ng.

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