ICJ To Hear Russia's Objections To Ukraine’s Case Today

Russia and Ukraine will today (Monday) appear before the International Court of Justice, The Hague, to present their arguments in a case which centres around claims by Moscow, the Russia capital, that its invasion of Ukraine was done to prevent genocide.

Ukraine brought the case to the United Nations’ apex court just days after the Russian invasion on the 24th of February, last year.

By claiming that the invasion was necessary to stop an alleged act of genocide in eastern Ukraine, Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, claimed that Russia is violating international law.

Russian officials have continued to accuse Ukraine of committing genocide and wants the case to be thrown out as it  to the jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

Africa Today News, New York reports that the hearings, set to run until September 27, will not delve into the merits of the case and are instead focused on legal arguments about jurisdiction.Moscow says Ukraine is using the case as a roundabout way to get a ruling on the overall legality of its military action.

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Ukraine has already cleared one hurdle as the court decided in its favour in a preliminary decision in the case in March last year. Based on that, the court ordered Russia to cease military actions in Ukraine immediately.

In the hearings the court will also hear from 32 other states, all supporting Ukraine’s argument that the court has jurisdiction to move the case forward.

“It is looking fairly positive for the court to find it has jurisdiction,” Juliette McIntyre, a law lecturer at the University of South Australia and ICJ watcher, said.

While Russia has so far ignored the ICJ’s orders to stop its military actions and the court has no way of enforcing its decisions, experts say an eventual ruling in favour of Ukraine could be important for any future reparations claims.

“If the court finds there was no lawful justification under the Genocide Convention for Russia’s acts, the decision can set up a future claim for compensation,” McIntyre said.

The United Nations’ 1948 Genocide Convention defines genocide as crimes committed “with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such.”

Africa Today News, New York

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