H.E. Mr. AndrĂ©s TerĂĄn Parral is Ecuador’s Ambassador in The Hague

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In November 2019, H.E. Ambassador AndrĂ©s TerĂĄn Parral has presented his credential to H.M. the King of the Netherlands, Willem-Alexander, officially becoming Ecuador’s top representative in The Hague. This new post comes on the heels of a successful diplomatic career of over 35 years.

In late 2019, the diplomatic community of the Netherlands has welcomed a new member: H.E. Mr. AndrĂ©s TerĂĄn Parral, the new Ambassador of the Republic of Ecuador to the Kingdom of the Netherlands. The new Ecuadorian Ambassador, a law graduate from the Universidad Internacional del Ecuador, is an extremely experienced diplomat, with a career of over 35 years in a number of different posts.

Mr. TerĂĄn Parral started to work for Ecuador’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1981, thus beginning a career that led him to take increasingly high-level positions, alternating between Ecuador’s capital city and other countries throughout the world. 

During his first stints in Quito, Ambassador Terán Parral covered a vast array of different roles. Starting in in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, he worked as Third Secretary at the Department of Cultural Promotion (1983), Desk Officer for the US and Canada (1989-1991), Undersecretary of Bilateral Affairs (1990-91), as well as in the Office of the Vice Minister (1991-1992). In between these roles, he held positions at Ecuador’s embassies in Paraguay (1984-1989) and Spain (1992-1997).

In the late 1990s, Mr. Terán Parral also served as Head of the Office of Diplomatic Coordination for Ecuador’s Vice Presidency (1998) and Head of Protocol for the Presidency (2000), before moving again abroad, serving at Ecuador’s embassies in Belgium (2001-2004) and the United States (2004-2006).

In the mid-2000s, Ambassador Terán Parral took up a number of new positions, serving as Legal Advisor of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (2006), Under Secretary General of the Ecuadorian Central Bank’s Board of Directors (2007), and Chief of Staff of the Foreign Minister (2008), before moving to his country’s embassy in Uruguay (2009).

In November 2009, Mr. Terán Parral was then chosen by his government to attempt a rapprochement with the government of Colombia amidst a diplomatic crisis – an attempt that succeeded, as the two countries restored diplomatic ties the following year.

In March 2011, Mr. TerĂĄn Parral was finally promoted to highest diplomatic rank and named Ambassador to Canada, the country where he stayed until 2015, when he returned to Quito to serve as Director of International Affairs at the Office of the Prosecutor General. In 2016, he returned to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as Director for South America, before being appointed Vice Minister in June 2018. Finally, in September 2019, the Ecuadorian President Lenin Moreno asked Ambassador TerĂĄn Parral to represent his country in the Netherlands, where he is currently serving as Ambassador.

Ambassador TerĂĄn Parral was born in Lima (Peru) in 1960, and grew up across four different Latin American countries (Argentina, Brazil, El Salvador, and Ecuador). He speaks fluently four languages – English, French, and Portuguese, in addition to his Spanish mother tongue. Throughout his life, the Ambassador has received high-level decorations in Ecuador, Chile, Spain, and Brazil. Ambassador TerĂĄn Parral is married to Mrs. MarĂ­a Rosa EgĂŒez, a clinical psychologist, with whom he has three children.  

International migrant trafficking network dismantled

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the national authorities in Germany (Federal Police Department) and Romania (Directorate for Investigating Organised Crime and Terrorism and National Police) took part in a simultaneous action against an organised criminal group trafficking migrants from the Middle East.

The German Federal Police initially carried out the investigation with the Romanian national authorities and were later joined by UK and Hungarian investigators. National authorities from Germany, Romania, Hungary, the UK and Turkey further looked into the activities of 36 people accused of trafficking at least 580 migrants, earning more than EUR 2 million for their services.

Photo © Shutterstock

The traffickers and their victims travelled from Iran, Iraq and Syria, via Turkey and Greece, to Romania, where they were loaded into containers and transported on trucks via Hungary and the Czech Republic into Germany. This form of transport is potentially fatal for the migrants.

A joint investigation team (JIT), with financial and logistical support provided by Eurojust, was formed in November 2018 among Germany, Romania, the UK and Hungary, with the participation of Eurojust and Europol. The JIT was instrumental in the success of the investigation and the action day. Two coordination meetings were held at Eurojust to prepare for the action day. Europol supported the actions by analysing data.

During the action day, 78 police officers from Germany and 65 police officers from Romania searched 13 houses in Germany and Romania. Four people were detained in Romania and one person was detained in Greece. The police seized 14 cell phones, 2 computers, bank account documentation and various pieces of identification.

In related actions, four drivers were sentenced in Germany to terms ranging from one year and eight months to five years and three months. Another driver is standing trial in Hungary. The main organiser was arrested on a German European Arrest Warrant in London earlier this year by German and UK police. His extradition is pending. At the same time, the Turkish Police arrested 14 suspects.

National authorities:

Germany: Office of the Public Prosecutor Weiden in der Oberpfalz

Romania: Directorate for Investigating Organised Crime and Terrorism – Central Structure; Romanian National Police

UK: Crown Prosecution Service; Home Office Immigration Enforcement

Hungary: District Office of Public Prosecution MosonmagyarĂČvĂ r

ICC judges authorise opening of an investigation into the situation in Bangladesh/Myanmar

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ICC judges authorise opening of an investigation into the situation in Bangladesh/Myanmar

On 14 November 2019, Pre-Trial Chamber III of the International Criminal Court (“ICC” or the “Court”) authorised the Prosecutor to proceed with an investigation for the alleged crimes within the ICC’s jurisdiction in the Situation in the People’s Republic of Bangladesh/Republic of the Union of Myanmar (“the situation in Bangladesh/Myanmar”). ICC Pre-Trial Chamber III is composed of Judge Olga Herrera Carbuccia, Presiding, Judge Robert Fremr, and Judge Geoffrey Henderson.

This authorisation follows the request submitted on 4 July 2019 by the Prosecutor to open an investigation into alleged crimes within the ICC’s jurisdiction committed against the Rohingya people from Myanmar. 

The Chamber also received the views on this request by or on behalf of hundreds of thousands of alleged victims. According to the ICC Registry, victims unanimously insist that they want an investigation by the Court and many of the consulted alleged victims ‘believe that only justice and accountability can ensure that the perceived circle of violence and abuse comes to an end’. The Chamber recognised all the individuals and organisations that assisted, guided and advised alleged victims throughout this process.

The Chamber concluded that the Court may exercise jurisdiction over crimes when part of the criminal conduct takes place on the territory of a State Party. While Myanmar is not a State Party, Bangladesh ratified the ICC Rome statute in 2010. Upon review of the available information, the Chamber accepted that there exists a reasonable basis to believe widespread and/or systematic acts of violence may have been committed that could qualify as the crimes against humanity of deportation across the Myanmar-Bangladesh border and persecution on grounds of ethnicity and/or religion against the Rohingya population. The Chamber found no need to assess whether other crimes within the Court’s jurisdiction may have been committed, even though such alleged crimes could be part of the Prosecutor’s future investigation. 

Noting the scale of the alleged crimes and the number of victims allegedly involved, the Chamber considered that the situation clearly reaches the gravity threshold. According to the supporting material, an estimated 600,000 to one million Rohingya were forcibly displaced from Myanmar to neighbouring Bangladesh as a result of the alleged coercive acts.  Noting the victims’ views, the Chamber agreed with the Prosecutor that there are no substantial reasons to believe that an investigation into the situation would not be in the interests of justice.

Consequently, Pre-Chamber III authorised the commencement of the investigation in relation to any crime, including any future crime, as long as: a) it is within the jurisdiction of the Court, b) it is allegedly committed at least in part on the territory of Bangladesh, or on the territory of any other State Party or State accepting the ICC jurisdiction, c)  it is sufficiently linked to the situation as described in the present decision, and d) it was allegedly committed on or after  the date of entry into force of the Rome Statute for Bangladesh or other relevant State Party.

Decision Pursuant to Article 15 of the Rome Statute on the Authorisation of an Investigation into the Situation in the People’s Republic of Bangladesh/Republic of the Union of Myanmar

Italian archaeological trafficking group dismantled

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Photo © Carabinieri, IT

An international police operation carried out today, supported by Eurojust and Europol, dismantled an international organised crime group involved in large-scale trafficking of Greek archaeological items looted from Calabria, Italy, resulting in 23 arrests and 103 searches and seizures, yielding approximately 10 000 archaeological goods.

The investigation, which began in 2017, revealed that illegal excavations were managed by a well-structured organised crime group (OCG) carrying out all phases of the trafficking. The OCG, led by two Calabrians living in the province of Crotone, included looters, fences, intermediaries and mules operating out of different Italian regions. The key facilitators from Italy, France, the UK, Germany and Serbia were operating from Djion, Munich, London and VrĆĄac, coordinating the supply chain. This looting, carried out over the course of several years, caused considerable damage to the Italian cultural heritage.

Eurojust supported the execution of the European Investigation Orders and arranged a coordination centre to follow the action in real time via dedicated and secure lines of communication. The coordination centre enabled the execution of measures, including arrests, searches and seizures, immediately and simultaneously in the five countries, and the timely exchange of information and coordination of all actors involved, including investigative judges, prosecutors and law enforcement authorities.

Europol supported the investigation by coordinating the information exchange, holding several operational meetings, preparing the action day and providing on-the-spot analytical support in Italy to cross-check operational information against Europol’s databases.

National authorities:

IT: Carabinieri

DE: Bavarian State Police (Bayerisches Landeskriminalamt (LKA))

FR: Office central de lutte contre le trafic de biens culturels (OCBC)

UK: Metropolitan Police, London

Serbia: Serbian Criminal Investigations Directorate

ICC President delivers annual Lantos Rule of Law Lecture in Washington, D.C.

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On 14 November 2019, the President the International Criminal Court (ICC) Judge Chile Eboe-Osuji, delivered the third annual Lantos Rule of Law Lecture at The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies of Johns Hopkins University, in Washington, D.C., United States.

During his lecture, titled “The US and the ICC”, the President recalled the message of the USA Chief Prosecutor at the Nuremberg proceedings after the World War II, Robert H Jackson, who underscored the “indispensability” of international law “to a world that plans to live in peace.”

President Chile Eboe Osuji stressed that “when international law operates to make our world a little better for common humanity in the long run, it would have worked to our national advantage, though it may not seem like it in the short run”.

“Justice plays its important part in helping to deter those conducts and events that drive mass migration or refugee flows. It does so by exerting the needed pressure against those conducts. And that is one more reason that compels sustaining and supporting the ICC – and not subverting it,” the President stated.

In his remarks, the ICC President expressed his disappointment at the threats made against the Court by the United States Government in the context of the situation in Afghanistan. â€œIt truly confounds the mind to think that such a development would be something that could, in the strangest of happenings, be associated with the Government of the United States – a country that the world has grown used to seeing as the most prominent lighthouse of the rule of law and respect for judicial independence”, he said.

The President however welcomed the fact that influential groups and individuals within the U.S. had condemned the threats against the ICC and called upon their government to cooperate with the Court. The President ended his lecture with a call upon the United States to join the Rome Statute of the ICC.

 “The US and the ICC”: Annual Lantos Rule of Law Lecture by ICC President Chile Eboe-Osuji

Video of the Annual Lantos Rule of Law Lecture     

Opening of Transverse Wave at me Collectors Room

Friday, 15 November 2019, me Collectors Room, Berlin, Germany: the opening of the ongoing exhibition ‘Transverse Wave’ that brings together Rashid Al KhalifaMary Bauermeister and Simon Stockhausen took place with numerous guests partaking from the national art scene, world of diplomacy, aristocracy and national celebrities. 

The title Transverse Wave is a poetic metaphor for the effects to which the exhibition aspires. A “transverse wave” consists of oscillations that occur perpendicular to the direction of energy transfer. Initiated from one side, after an interval it reaches the opposite side, creating a connection that can in turn be imagined in the reverse direction.

The principle of the wave and the connection inherent in it doesn’t just occur as light or sound waves; it also recurs in the creation of the material used for the stone reliefs, in the design principles of the artworks, and in the composition’s auditory features.

Featuring the work of Mary Bauermeister (b. 1934 in Germany) and Rashid Al Khalifa (b. 1952 in Bahrain), the me Collectors Room Berlin presents two artists who were not only socialized in different cultural realms; they also approach their artistic work from opposite ends of the spectrum. Whereas Bauermeister’s work is composed of found, mostly organic materials that nonetheless were previously involved in both natural and social processes, Al Khalifa uses synthetic materials derived from the industrial realm.

Because of their consistent, gridded structures and the selected substances, his objects suggest a Minimalist aesthetic with an austere seriality. Bauermeister’s works likewise exhibit constructive processes, but they attempt to organize naturally grown materials; or, as in the case of the “Light Sheets,” chance was the decisive element in creating these structures.

For further information:
https://www.me-berlin.com/transverse-wave-16-11-2019-31-01-2020/lang/en/

https://photos.google.com/share/AF1QipNacEsfgNQEu8zsmi8068RQqEF1iNe1b84azjcULsS4PQlFAUIR9xUk_vp1GfA-fQ?key=WXFudW4tSnZKMTdEaXotOE1wWmkyeVNnQlhacUZR…

Security dialogue vis-Ă -vis Bavaria from US side

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Dr. Florian Herrmann, DCM US Embassy Robin Quinville, GC Meghan Gregonis, Brig. Gen. Christopher Norrie – Picture by Bayerische Staatskanzlei.

Monday, 18 November 2019, Munich, Bavarian State Chancellery, Germany: State Minister Dr. Florian Herrmann, Head of the State Chancellery and Minister of State for Federal and European Affairs and Media, welcomed the US Deputy Chief of Mission Robin Quinville, US General Consul Meghan Gregonis and the Commander of the 7th US Army Training Command Brigadier General Christopher R. Norrie to the state’s seat of government for a strategic defence dialogue with the USA. 

The transatlantic partnership between Bavaria and the USA thrives on intensive exchange and a trusting cooperation. According to the State Minister “we experiencing challenging times worldwide with new power relations.

The latter makes partners such as the United States, with whom we share our unshakeable values and positions, all the more important”. 

For further information:
https://www.bayern.de/service/fotoreihen/?frid=in121576&fbclid=IwAR159IvlX0ZtsFV471Y8rikJ_IZB-BB69E4JSKekZFUCCGqGBScQGt6Y7jc

US General Consulate in Munich: https://de.usembassy.gov/our-relationship/cg-munich/

RĂ©action du Procureur de la CPI, Fatou Bensouda, Ă  la dĂ©cision d’autoriser l’ouverture d’une enquĂȘte sur la situation au Bangladesh/Myanmar

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Je salue la dĂ©cision prise hier par les juges de la CPI de faire droit Ă  ma demande d’ouvrir une enquĂȘte sur la situation en RĂ©publique populaire du Bangladesh/RĂ©publique de l’Union du Myanmar.  

Les juges de la CPI ont acceptĂ© mon analyse selon laquelle il existe une base raisonnable permettant de croire que des moyens coercitifs qui pourraient ĂȘtre qualifiĂ©s de crimes contre l’humanitĂ© de dĂ©portation et de persĂ©cution pour des motifs d’ordre ethnique et/ou religieux auraient Ă©tĂ© employĂ©s contre la population Rohingya.

La dĂ©cision prise hier autorise l’ouverture d’une enquĂȘte officielle sur des crimes relevant de la compĂ©tence de la Cour, qui auraient Ă©tĂ© commis Ă  compter du 1er juin 2020, en partie du moins sur le territoire du Bangladesh, ou sur le territoire d’autres États parties, tel qu’indiquĂ© dans la dĂ©cision. 

Il s’agit d’une avancĂ©e importante qui envoie un signal positif aux victimes d’atrocitĂ©s au Myanmar et ailleurs.

En qualitĂ© d’organe chargĂ© des poursuites, et grĂące Ă  notre travail, nous espĂ©rons pouvoir rendre justice aux victimes, dĂšs lors que les conditions liĂ©es Ă  notre compĂ©tence sont remplies. 

L’objet de mon enquĂȘte sera de faire Ă©clater la vĂ©ritĂ©. Mon bureau Ɠuvrera dĂ©sormais Ă  la rĂ©ussite de son enquĂȘte indĂ©pendante et impartiale. 

Pour ce faire, nous comptons sur l’appui et la coopĂ©ration sans rĂ©serve des États parties, de la sociĂ©tĂ© civile et de nos autres partenaires dans notre quĂȘte commune en faveur de la justice pĂ©nale internationale. 

Le Bureau du Procureur de la CPI mĂšne des examens prĂ©liminaires, des enquĂȘtes et des poursuites Ă  propos du crime de gĂ©nocide, des crimes contre l’humanitĂ©, des crimes de guerre et du crime d’agression, en toute impartialitĂ© et en toute indĂ©pendance. Depuis 2003, le Bureau enquĂȘte sur plusieurs situations relevant de la compĂ©tence de la CPI : en Ouganda, en RĂ©publique dĂ©mocratique du Congo, au Darfour (Soudan), en RĂ©publique centrafricaine (deux situations distinctes), au Kenya, en Libye, en CĂŽte d’Ivoire, au Mali, en GĂ©orgie, au Burundi et en RĂ©publique populaire du Bangladesh/RĂ©publique de l’Union du Myanmar. Le Bureau conduit Ă©galement des examens prĂ©liminaires Ă  propos des situations en Colombie, en GuinĂ©e, en Iraq/Royaume-Uni, au NigĂ©ria, en Palestine, aux Philippines, en Ukraine et au Venezuela.

Pour en savoir plus sur les « examens prĂ©liminaires Â» et les « situations et affaires Â» portĂ©es devant la Cour, veuillez cliquer ici et ici.

Source : Bureau du Procureur | Contact : OTPNewsDesk@icc-cpi.int

OPCW Director-General Briefs Permanent Representatives Based Outside of The Hague

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THE HAGUE, Netherlands — 15 November 2019 — The Director-General of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), H.E. Mr Fernando Arias, briefed yesterday Permanent Representations to the OPCW based outside of The Hague.

During the Director-General’s briefing to 28 delegates from 24 Permanent Representations, he discussed issues pertaining to the upcoming Twenty-Fourth Session of the Conference of the States Parties (CSP-24). The Director-General expressed his appreciation to the Member States for “their on-going commitment and strong support for the Chemical Weapons Convention and the work of the Technical Secretariat”.

The Chairperson of the Executive Council, H.E. Ambassador Andrea Perugini, also provided a briefing on the activities of OPCW’s Executive Council.

Additional briefings were provided by OPCW Deputy Director-General, H.E. Ambassador Odette Melono, on the fifth phase of OPCW’s Africa Programme and by OPCW’s Director of International Cooperation and Assistance (ICA), Ms. Kayoko Gotoh, on assistance and protection programmes.

Participants shared their views and concerns during the question and answer session at the end of the presentations.  

Human trafficking ring targeted in the UK and Romania

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In a synchronised joint action by law enforcement officers from the UK and Romania, 17 suspects were taken into custody in the UK and one suspect was taken into custody in Romania. The suspects from the UK are alleged to have participated in modern slavery, controlling prostitution, and committing drug and firearm offences. The Romanian suspect is alleged to have participated in trafficking in persons, ongoing pimping and money laundering. Sixteen searches were carried out in the UK and four in Romania, yielding cash, luxury cars and cocaine. A total of 29 potential victims, aged between 20 and 40 years, were recovered in London and brought to safety.

Two of the leaders of the group, detained in London, were also under investigation, on the basis of European Arrest Warrants issued by the Romanian authorities, for attempted murder.

Authorities suspect that an organised criminal group (OCG) was formed in Romania in 2013 for the express purpose of committing the crimes of human trafficking, ongoing pimping and money laundering. The OCG recruited more than 60 vulnerable young women in Romania, promising them significant amounts of money and legitimate work, and then trafficked them to the UK for the purpose of sexually exploiting them in London. The victims lived and worked, under threat of violence and blackmail, in houses provided by the OCG. The victims were promised a share of their earnings, but in reality received very little, and thus were kept completely dependent on the OCG.

Eurojust held one coordination meeting to facilitate the setting up of the joint investigation team (JIT). Eurojust also provided financial and logistic support for the JIT among the UK, Romania, Eurojust and Europol. Europol also held an operational meeting.

National authorities:

UK: Metropolitan Police Central Specialist Crime – Vulnerability Investigations Team; Crown Prosecution Service

RO: Directorate for Investigating Organised Crime and Terrorism (DIICOT) – Iasi Territorial Service; Organised Crime-fighting Brigade; Romanian National Police; Special Operations Directorate; B.C.C.O. Constanța and B.C.C.O Bacău