August 2007

Here is an interesting profile in the Los Angeles Times of Ahmad Harun, one of the top two Sudan government officials indicted by the ICC for committing war crimes in Darfur. In a possibly sick twist, Harun is currently serving as Sudan's minister for humanitarian affairs. In any event, he seems free for now. I wonder if...

I expect very little from the media in terms of legal accuracy, particularly concerning the ICC. But this article — reproduced in one form or another in dozens of newspapers — is still a doozy:The International Criminal Court may try former Namibian president Sam Nujoma and three others in connection with the disappearance of hundreds of people. A local newspaper...

"Justice delayed," William Gladstone once said," is justice denied." True enough, but there is a competing adage: "better late than never." The latter clearly applies to the tragic story of an Australian aborigine who was awarded more than $400,000 last week for being stolen from his family as a child:"The best thing is knowing they never forgot me,...

Another little news item that I forgot to post about this week: A court of appeals in Paris on Wednesday released two Rwandans from custody despite acknowledging both were the subject of arrest warrants issued by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR). Not surprisingly, the Rwandan government (already barely on speaking terms with the French government) is not...

Professor Flaherty’s recent post is a great one in getting at the essence of my view and our disagreement, and a fitting way to wrap up the discussion. I do believe in a coherent Constitution. Not a perfect Constitution, for the text surely has redundancies, gaps and contradictions on particular matters, as well as substantive flaws. But I think...

Russia has been busily working to take possession of half of the Arctic Sea (or at least the seabeds under half of the Arctic Sea). In a dramatic mission covered heavily by Russian television, the Russian government has planted a titanium Russian flag on the seabed underneath the Arctic Sea. (I'm still looking for photos of the flag on...

Jack Goldsmith had this op-ed in yesterday's FT, in which he argues a convergence on anti-terror thinking among Americans and Europeans. The Europeans, on the one hand, appear now to understand that ordinary criminal processes won't do the trick, where the US is coming to understand that anti-terror practices will be subject to law. Here's the money graf:These...