Author: Julian Ku

Uganda's President recently suggested that rebel Lord's Resistance Army leaders should opt for alternative Ugandan justice as a way of avoiding their arrest warrants by the International Criminal Court. Peace talks to end the ongoing civil war in northern Uganda have been affected by the ICC warrants for the four LRA leaders. According to Reuters, one alternative ritual would...

Here's something you don't see very often. U.S. federal prosecutors in Sacramento have charged 7 individuals with conspiring to overthrow the Laos government. Not just weapons violations, etc, but, with violating 18 U.S.C. 960, the Neutrality Act. According to the complaint, the defendants are being charged with "providing and preparing a means for furnishing the money of and taking part in...

Speaking of "unpeaceful" nations, the U.S. Navy has apparently bombarded a remote, mountainous village in Somalia where Islamic militants had set up a base. As an international legal matter, I believe the U.S. intervention is unproblematic because it was made in cooperation with Somali authorities (this assumes that the "Somali authorities" in question are actually in charge). But maybe I'm wrong...

The discovery of underseas treasure a few weeks ago would have made a great movie, or at least a Discovery Channel documentary. But, inevitably, the story has moved into the real world and that means: litigation. The government of Spain filed a lawsuit yesterday in U.S. federal court in Florida seeking to assert its ownership rights over the...

The U.N. Security Council has narrowly approved the creation of an international criminal tribunal to investigate the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. According to the BBC, Lebanon has until June 10 to ratify the tribunal. If there is no ratification by Lebanon, the the tribunal will be created. I have to say I haven't been following...

Yesterday, the International Court of Justice issued a preliminary judgment analyzing some interesting issues about the ability of a state to exercise diplomatic protection on behalf of a hybrid partnership/corporation registered under the laws of another state. The case surrounds Zaire's (the predecessor state to the DRC's) 1995 expulsion of Mr. Ahmadou Sadio Diallo, a Guinea citizen who had...

The U.S. Trade Representative's Office has released some further details on its agreement with Congress to incorporate international labor standards into future U.S. free-trade agreements. Here are a couple important new institutional innovations. (1) Violations of international and local labor standards will apparently be subject to the same international dispute resolution mechanisms as the rest of the trade agreement. This...

President Bush and Democratic leaders in the U.S. Congress have reached an agreement on a bipartisan trade policy to be applied to all future U.S. free-trade agreements. According to one account, the new policy commits U.S. trade partners to adopting and enforcing laws that abide by basic international labor standards as outlined in a 1998 International Labor Organization declaration....

Apparently, U.S. presidential candidate Sen. John McCain is reading Anne Marie Slaughter (but then again, who is not)? Yesterday, McCain delivered an address outlining his vision of a "League of Democracies" that could act outside the U.N. system. We should go further and start bringing democratic peoples and nations from around the world into one common organization, a worldwide League...

Maybe Duncan or others can help me out here, but how exactly can Russia legally "suspend" its participation in the Treaty on Conventional Forces in Europe, as the Washington Post reports today? Russia is unhappy about the planned deployment of a limited NATO missile defense system in Europe. Under the treaty's Article XIX, the Treaty is of "unlimited duration". Russia...

According to this report, the Bosnian government is considering an application to the ICJ "for revision of a judgment," under Article 61 of the ICJ Statute. This action is being considered because of the continued furor over missing or redacted Serbian government documents that may have established Serbia's liability for genocide. (see my posts below for more background) An...