Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum: Since July 2015, Taco Dibbits is general director of the Rijksmuseum as successor to Wim Pijbens who now heads the recently opened Voorlinden Museum at Wassenaar (https://diplomatmagazine.eu/2016/09/14/museum-voorlinden-a-treat-indoors-and-out/). Taco Tibbits has been working and and off for the Rijksmuseum since 1995. Dibbits was deemed as instrumental in developing the architectural layout of the renewed Rijksmuseum.For further information:Rijksmuseum: https://www.rijksmuseum.nl
The Mayor of Berlin, -Michael Muller. Picture by Tip Berlin.de18 September 2016, Berlin: The governing Mayor of Berlin City (itself also a Bundesland), Michael Müller, won the Sunday elections. Ca. 2,5 millions electors out of a population of 3,4 million were called to elect the regional parliament as well as the twelve local councils (Bezirke). ‘In spite of voters’ losses the Social Democrats (SPD) came out as the victor swith about 22% percent of the ballots. Berlin as all other German Bundesländer keeps a representation in Brussels headed by Dr. Volker Löwe.For more information:Representation of Berlin before the EU (Director Dr. Volker Löwe): https://www.berlin.de/rbmskzl/europa/berlin-in-europa/berliner-buero/
ICC Trial Chamber V(B) refers non-cooperation of the Kenyan Government to the Assembly of States Parties to the Rome Statute
Today, 19 September 2016, Trial Chamber V(B) of the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued a decision finding that the Republic of Kenya had failed to comply with its obligations to cooperate with the ICC and referred the matter to the Assembly of States Parties to the Rome Statute (ASP) which, according to the Trial Chamber, “would be best placed to address the lack of cooperation, in order to provide an incentive for the Kenyan Government to cooperate with the Court”.
On 29 November 2013, the Prosecution had filed an application for a finding of non-cooperation against the Kenyan Government, alleging that the Government had failed to comply with a request to produce records relating to Mr Uhuru Kenyatta. On 3 December 2014, Trial Chamber V(B) rejected the application for referral of the matter to the ASP. The Prosecutor appealed this decision on 20 March 2015. On 19 August 2015, the ICC Appeals Chamber reversed this first decision and remanded it to the Trial Chamber.
After receiving further observations from the ICC Prosecution, the Legal representative of victims and the Government of Kenya, and in light of the guidance provided in the Appeals Chamber’s Judgment, Trial Chamber V(B) recalled that it found, on 3 December 2014, that the approach of the Kenyan Government fell short of the standard of good faith cooperation required under the Rome Statute and further noted today that this situation had persisted even following a period of active judicial supervision and that the cooperation proceedings had reached a deadlock.
The Trial Chamber also noted that despite the passage of a further 18 months and notwithstanding the Kenyan Government’s continuing statutory obligation to comply with any cooperation request from the Court, it appears that no further progress has been made in implementing the Prosecutor’s request. Trial Chamber V(B) concluded today that the Republic of Kenya has failed to comply with its statutory obligations to consult with the Court and to take all reasonable steps to execute a request for cooperation from the Court, including by not providing clear, relevant and timely responses or taking any meaningful steps to compel production of requested information. According to the Chamber, the non-cooperation has prevented the Court from exercising its functions and powers under the Statute.
30th September 2016 at 19:00 / PROTOCOLTODAY promotes soft diplomacy through social and cultural events for business people and diplomats from different countries. The event is hosted by ProtocolToday and sponsored by Carlton Square Hotel Haarlem.
Business men, business women and diplomats working in different national and international sectors can meet & greet in a comfortable environment.
Free for diplomats.
Business people fee €12,50
Welcome to Haarlem and enjoy this event!
Arwin Paulides, General Manager, Carlton Square.
President Joachim Gauck, Germany, Grand-Duke of Luxembourg, King of the Belgians, Hereditary Prince of Liechtenstein, Swiss President, Johann Schneider Ammann. Picture by Royal Palace Brussels.By Baron Henri Estramant.Eupen, Ostbelgien, Kingdom of Belgium, 7-8 September 2016: HM The King of the Belgians hosted the heads of state of German-speaking countries, their representatives and spouses for an informal summit held in Brussels and Eupen, capital of the Belgium’s German-speaking eastern region. The Belgian monarch was accompanied throughout the functions by HM The Queen of the Belgians. It was the first time for the Kingdom of Belgium, wherein the originally German dynasty of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (today the House of Belgium, an offshoot of the House of Wettin) reigns, to host the summit. The summit gathers annually the heads of state or their representatives from Europe’s German-speaking countries, that is, the countries wherein German can be used as an administrative language and also at courts of law. In some other European countries such as Denmark or Romania, German enjoys a status of a language for a minority group yet cannot be used within the administration or as a language at courts of law. Official welcome at the Chateau de Laeken by host King Philippus-of the Belgians. Picture by Royal Palace Brussels.The summit was attended by the German Federal President Joachim Gauck and partner Daniela Schadt, HRH The Grand Duke of Luxembourg, the Swiss Federal President Johann Schneider-Ammann and spouse Katharina Ammann as well as HSH The HereditaryPrince Alois von und zu Liechtenstein, Count of Rietberg and Deputy of the Sovereign Prince (Regent) and his wife HRH Princess Sophie von und zu Liechtenstein, Duchess in Bavaria. The latter belongs to the same line of the Bavarian Royal House as the late Queen Elisabeth of the Belgians (née Duchess in Bavaria), wife of King Albert I and great-grandmother to King Philippus of the Belgians. At the informal meeting the focus topics this years were start-ups by young professionals and the hectic political situation in the EU and the Middle East. The delegations were treated on their arrival day to a dinner at the Château de Laeken, and continued the next day the political agenda at Heidberg Convent in Eupen. There the delegations were greeted by the Minister-President of the German-Speaking Community, Oliver Paasch and his strongman in Brussels, Alexander Homann. Working meeting at Heidberg Convent Ostbelgien. Picture by Royal Palace Brussels.German-speaking summits began in 2004 at Sankt Gallen, Switzerland, with the attendance of the then heads of state of the hosting country, Liechtenstein, Austria and Germany. This year Austria is not partaking because the country is yet to elect a new head of state. Since 2014 Belgium and Luxembourg are members of the group.For more information:The Belgian Monarchy: https://www.monarchie.be/language_selection?destination=<front>German Embassy to Belgium (HE Ambassador Rüdiger Lüdeking): http://www.bruessel.diplo.deSwiss Embassy to Belgium (HE Ambassador Christian Meuwly): https://www.eda.admin.ch/bruxellesEmbassy of Liechtenstein to Belgium (HE Ambassador Sabine Monauni): http://www.regierung.li/ministries/ministry-for-foreign-affairs-education-and-culture/diplomatic-representations/brussels-b/staff-contacts/Embassy of Luxembourg to Belgium (Chargé d’affaires, Minister Counsellor and Consul Jean-Claude Meyer): http://bruxelles.mae.lu/frEmbassy of Austria to Belgium (HE Ambassador Jürgen Meindl): https://www.bmeia.gv.at/oeb-bruessel/Government of Eastern Belgium (Minister-President Oliver Paasch): http://www.dgregierung.be/desktopdefault.aspx/tabid-2963/Representation of the German-Speaking Community before the Belgian Federal Government (Director Alexander Homann): http://www.dglive.be/desktopdefault.aspx/tabid-1989/3283_read-30045/
By Mohammad Javad Zarif, Foreign Minister of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Sept 13, Tehran — Public relations firms with no qualms about taking tainted petrodollars are experiencing a bonanza. Their latest project has been to persuade us that the Nusra Front, Al Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria, is no more. As a Nusra spokesman told CNN, the rebranded rebel group, supposedly separated from its parent terrorist organization, has become “moderate.”
Thus is fanaticism from the Dark Ages sold as a bright vision for the 21st Century. The problem for the Public Relations firms’ wealthy, often Saudi, clients, who have lavishly funded Nusra, is that the evidence of their ruinous policies can’t be photo shopped out of existence. If anyone had any doubt, the recent video images of other “moderates” beheading a 12-year-old boy were a horrifying reality check.
Since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, militant Wahhabism has undergone a series of face-lifts, but underneath, the ideology remains the same — whether it’s the Taliban, the various incarnations of Al Qaeda or the so-called Islamic State, which is neither Islamic nor a state. But the millions of people faced with the Nusra Front’s tyranny are not buying the fiction of this disaffiliation. Past experience of such attempts at whitewashing points to the real aim: to enable the covert flow of petrodollars to extremist groups in Syria to become overt, and even to lure Western governments into supporting these “moderates.” The fact that Nusra still dominates the rebel alliance in Aleppo flouts the public relations message.
Saudi Arabia’s effort to persuade its Western patrons to back its short-sighted tactics is based on the false premise that plunging the Arab world into further chaos will somehow damage Iran. The fanciful notions that regional instability will help to “contain” Iran, and that supposed rivalries between Sunni and Shiite Muslims are fueling conflicts, are contradicted by the reality that the worst bloodshed in the region is caused by Wahhabists fighting fellow Arabs and murdering fellow Sunnis.
Mohammad Javad Zarif, Foreign Minister of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
While these extremists, with the backing of their wealthy sponsors, have targeted Christians, Jews, Yazidis, Shiites and other “heretics,” it is their fellow Sunni Arabs who have been most beleaguered by this exported doctrine of hate. Indeed, it is not the supposed ancient sectarian conflict between Sunnis and Shiites but the contest between Wahhabism and mainstream Islam that will have the most profound consequences for the region and beyond.
While the 2003 American-led invasion of Iraq set in motion the fighting we see today, the key driver of violence has been this extremist ideology promoted by Saudi Arabia — even if it was invisible to Western eyes until the tragedy of 9/11.
The princes in Riyadh, the Saudi capital, have been desperate to revive the regional status quo of the days of Saddam Hussein’s rule in Iraq, when a surrogate repressive despot, eliciting wealth and material support from fellow Arabs and a gullible West, countered the so-called Iranian threat. There is only one problem: Mr. Hussein is long dead, and the clock cannot be turned back.
The sooner Saudi Arabia’s rulers come to terms with this, the better for all. The new realities in our region can accommodate even Riyadh, should the Saudis choose to change their ways.
What would change mean? Over the past three decades, Riyadh has spent tens of billions of dollars exporting Wahhabism through thousands of mosques and madrasas across the world. From Asia to Africa, from Europe to the Americas, this theological perversion has wrought havoc. As one former extremist in Kosovo told The Times, “The Saudis completely changed Islam here with their money.”
Though it has attracted only a minute proportion of Muslims, Wahhabism has been devastating in its impact. Virtually every terrorist group abusing the name of Islam — from Al Qaeda and its offshoots in Syria to Boko Haram in Nigeria — has been inspired by this death cult.
So far, the Saudis have succeeded in inducing their allies to go along with their folly, whether in Syria or Yemen, by playing the “Iran card.” That will surely change, as the realization grows that Riyadh’s persistent sponsorship of extremism repudiates its claim to be a force for stability.
The world cannot afford to sit by and witness Wahhabists targeting not only Christians, Jews and Shiites but also Sunnis. With a large section of the Middle East in turmoil, there is a grave danger that the few remaining pockets of stability will be undermined by this clash of Wahhabism and mainstream Sunni Islam.
There needs to be coordinated action at the United Nations to cut off the funding for ideologies of hate and extremism, and a willingness from the international community to investigate the channels that supply the cash and the arms. In 2013, Iran’s president, Hassan Rouhani, proposed an initiative called World Against Violent Extremism, or WAVE. The United Nations should build on that framework to foster greater dialogue between religions and sects to counter this dangerous medieval fanaticism.
The attacks in Nice, Paris and Brussels should convince the West that the toxic threat of Wahhabism cannot be ignored. After a year of almost weekly tragic news, the international community needs to do more than express outrage, sorrow and condolences; concrete action against extremism is needed.
Though much of the violence committed in the name of Islam can be traced to Wahhabism, I by no means suggest that Saudi Arabia cannot be part of the solution. Quite the reverse: We invite Saudi rulers to put aside the rhetoric of blame and fear, and join hands with the rest of the community of nations to eliminate the scourge of terrorism and violence that threatens us all.
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The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Iran’s letter was also published in the New York Times Magazine on Sept 14, in the Opinion Pages.
The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) will be opening its doors to the general public and media on Sunday, 25 September 2016 between 11.00 and 17.00, as part of the International Open Day organised by The Hague Municipality.Visitors can explore various points of interest within OPCW Headquarters and take part in once-in-a-lifetime activities, such as handling chemical weapons detection equipment, trying on inspection gear and being photographed with the 2013 Nobel Peace Prize awarded to the OPCW for its extensive efforts in eliminating chemical weapons. The Organisation’s experts will also share with visitors the relevance of addressing chemical weapons, explain the different types of chemical weapons and their effects, as well as what the OPCW is doing to permanently eliminate chemical weapons.Other highlights of the day include, for the first time, a mini-film festival that will feature short documentaries from the OPCW’s FIRES series – about individuals whose lives have been impacted by chemical weapons.
Kosovo Specialist Chambers established in The Hague – building capacity for judicial activities
At the first press conference of the Kosovo Specialist Chambers held today in The Hague, Dr Fidelma Donlon, Registrar of the Specialist Chambers, has described the structure of the new institution, the substantial progress made in the establishment of the Specialist Chambers as well as future milestones. She presented the website of the Specialist Chambers and Specialist Prosecutor’s Office (www.scp-ks.org) and outlined the principles of the communication and outreach policy of the Chambers.
Dr Donlon explained that, with her appointment of Registrar of the Registry of the Specialist Chambers in April 2016, the institution of the Specialist Chambers formally came into existence.
“It is an honour and privilege to serve as Registrar of the Kosovo Specialist Chambers. A well functioning Registry is one of the crucial components of an efficient court. I am dedicated to fulfilling the Chamber’s mandate and facilitating secure, independent, impartial, fair and efficient criminal proceedings before the Chambers,” she stated.
Dr Donlon acknowledged all who supported the establishment of the Specialist Chambers during the preparatory phase– in particular the Kosovo authorities, the European Union, the EULEX, Third Contributing States and the Host State, the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
The Registry of the Specialist Chambers is responsible for the administration and servicing of the Specialist Chambers and all necessary and affiliated functions. It is by its nature independent and neutral, providing services to all organs and participants in the proceedings. It includes, among others, a Witness Protection and Support Office, a Defense Office, a Victims’ Participation Office, a Court Management Office, a Detention Unit, an Ombudsperson’s Office and other various administrative and judicial support units.
“The Law creates the framework for a robust witness protection measures, with full respect for the rights of the defence. We intend to implement the highest standards of protection for individuals who may be at risk on account of their participation in the judicial process. This is something we take very seriously,” affirmed Dr Donlon.
The Registry is also a key actor in safeguarding the rights of any suspect or accused. Its Defence Office will administer a list of counsel eligible to practice before the Specialist Chambers as well as a system for representation of indigent accused. The rights of the accused provided for are consistent with the standards set by the European Court of Human Rights.
The Specialist Chambers provide for the participation in judicial proceedings of victims who have suffered harm as a direct result of a crime within their jurisdiction. Its Victims’ Participation Office will commence managing the application process for victims to participate in the proceedings and providing advice to such victims.
The selection process for positions of President of the Specialist Chambers and for a Roster of International Judges has just started and is undertaken by an independent selection panel according to the provisions of the Law adopted by the Kosovo Assembly. After the appointments of the President of the Chambers and judges, the work will commence on the adoption of a crucial legal document – the Rules of Procedure and Evidence, necessary to conduct judicial proceedings.
The other vital process is related to the recruitment of the staff of the Specialist Chambers and Specialist Prosecutor’s Office, open to citizens of EU Member States and Third Contributing States. In the two Calls for Contribution that took place recently, almost 100 positions were open for applications, and a comprehensive recruitment process is underway.
Pending the ratification of the Host State Agreement by the Kingdom of the Netherlands before any judicial activities can start, an Interim Host State Agreement presently provides legal ground for a number of operational and administrative steps that are necessary at this stage.
Finally, Dr Donlon emphasized her commitment to transparent communication with the media and the public. “Today’s inauguration of the Specialist Chambers and Specialist Prosecutor’s Office tri-lingual web page marks the beginning of our direct communication with media and public”, she concluded.
H.E. Jose de Bouza Serrano, Ambassador of Portugal.Msgr. Aldo Cavalli Apostolic Nuncio once again opened the doors of the Apostolic Nuntiature, following the Holy Mass, in honor of both incoming and outgoing diplomats in the Catholic community who have been posted to The Hague. The “Welcome-Farewell” gathering was held in honor of three diplomats and was organized by members from the community.
Despite the torrential rain which fell in the morning, the lovely chapel, on the grounds of the nunciature, was filled to capacity. The international community attending the Mass spilled out in the hall and down the stairs, nearly to the entrance in a clear sign that the summer holidays were coming to a close.
His Excellency, in a warm display of Italian hospitality, invited the community into the Nuntiature to a “La Tavola Italiana” in his magnificent residence. By early afternoon, the skies had cleared and his guests of honor and many others lingered around the grand table while enjoying the buffet and engaging in lively discussions with one another until mid afternoon. Among those present were the Ambassador of Colombia, H.E. Juan Josè Quintana and spouse, Maria Rosario Navia who came to bid farewell to Mauricio, from Europol and spouse, Diana, who will soon be departing to Columbia .
The Sunday fare included platters of piping hot Latin American “empanadas”, prepared by the “nuns of the Nuntiature.” Claudia, of Claudia’s Catering, organized the farewell with permission from the Nuncio. Monserrat, the organist for the choir prepared a colorful presentation of fruit kabobs, Edith Bergansius, from the Hispanic Society of The Hague, Patricia Hollamby, and other members of the community contributed to the dessert table, which included, to everyone’s delight, a classic “three layer chocolate mousse cake.” All was arranged with simplicity among the feligreses of the church who gathered together privately for the occasion.
H.E. Jose de Bouza Serrano, Ambassador of Portugal, who’s devoted much time, energy and love to the ever growing community, will soon be departing. He especially contributed much time to the chorus and everyone, who regularly came together for the weekly celebration, greatly appreciate him for his service to the community. First Secretary Yovko Genov Pishtiyski from the Apostolic Nunciature will soon be serving the Holy See in the Far East. Both men will certainly be missed by the Catholic community in this city, whom have come to know them through the years.
In response to Msgr. Cavalli’s warm and welcoming spirit, the local community continues to attract more and more people with each passing week.
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Mr David Schwendiman. Picture by US Department.On 01 September 2016, David Schwendiman, Lead Prosecutor of the EU Special Investigative Task Force (SITF), was appointed Specialist Prosecutor (Chief Prosecutor) of the newly established Kosovo Specialist Prosecutor’s Office (SPO). Mr. Schwendiman was appointed pursuant to Article 35 of the Kosovo Law on Specialist Chambers and Specialist Prosecutor’s Office passed in August 2015. His appointment marks the formal transition of the SITF into the SPO. Upon being advised of the appointment, Mr. Schwendiman noted that it is a welcome and further step on the path to getting the institutions provided for in the Kosovo law up and running at the highest international standard. “The transition from the SITF to the SPO is seamless,” he said. “The Specialist Prosecutor and the SPO will continue to carry on the investigation started by the SITF and we will continue our preparations for the next phase of our work.”“I look forward to meeting people in the region and meeting with the media when it is appropriate in the coming weeks and months.”