|
YeMEN RATIFIES
ICC
March 30, 2007 – After years of targeted advocacy by civil society groups
inside and outside of the country, the Parliament of Yemen ratified the Rome
Statute of the ICC, paving the way for this Arab country to be the newest
member of the Court.
Amal Basha, Middle East and North Africa Coordinator for the Coalition for
the ICC (CICC), praised the ratification and said, “ratification of the ICC
Statute is a victory for Yemen, and it wouldn’t have been achieved without
the efforts of the brave MPs [members of parliament], civil society
organizations, politicians, and journalists,” in an interview with the Yemen
Observer. She added that “above all, the support of the political leadership
and the government was behind the success of the two-year efforts we have
been exerting.”
Yemen signed the Rome Statute on Dec. 28th, 2000, and after the treaty’s
referral to Parliament in 2004, the process of ratification encountered a
variety of challenges and difficulties that make last Friday’s decision a
true success. The ratification makes Yemen the 105th member state of the ICC,
and the fourth Arab country to join the Court. The other three Arab
countries include Djibouti, Comoros, and Jordan.
Yemen is located in the Arabian Peninsula, and borders Saudi Arabia and
Oman.
+ TAKE ACTION |
No Peace without Justice: U.S. Must
Cooperate with the ICC on Darfur
+Read Briefing Paper (new!)
ICC Assembly of States Parties (ASP) Meets for 5th Session in the
Hague,
Nov 23 - Dec 1, 2006.
+ Read More
NEW! Chad Joins the ICC: Analysis and
Implications for the Darfur Crisis
+ Read Briefing Paper
|