Honorific-Prefix: | Judge |
René Blattmann | |
Office: | Trial Division Judge of the International Criminal Court |
Term Start: | 11 March 2003 |
Term End: | 2012 |
Birth Date: | 28 January 1948[1] |
Birth Place: | La Paz, Bolivia |
Nationality: | Bolivian-Swiss |
Alma Mater: | The Southwestern Legal Foundation – International Comparative Law Center (1980) Bolivian University, La Paz (1973) Association Internationale de Droit Comparé (1972) University of Basle (1972) |
Occupation: | Judge, attorney-at-law,[2] politician |
René Oswaldo Blattmann Bauer (born January 28, 1948) is a Bolivian judge, lawyer and politician who is a judge of the International Criminal Court.[3] Prior to his appointment to the ICC Blattmann served as Bolivia's minister for justice and human rights.[4]
Blattmann was born to a father of Swiss descent and studied law at the University of Basel between 1967 and 1971.[5] After graduation, he taught at several universities in Bolivia and abroad.
In 1993 Blattmann entered politics with the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR), serving as the Minister of Justice. He introduced several reforms with regard to human rights. In the presidential elections of 2002, he was the presidential candidate for the Movimiento Ciudadano para el Cambio (MCC). He campaigned for introducing the mechanism of the referendum inspired by the Swiss democracy in Bolivian politics, but was not elected.
Judge Blattmann was elected to the ICC from the Latin American and Caribbean group of states and is a member of List B, the list of judges whose experience is in the field of human rights law and international law. He was elected for a six-year term in 2003, and although that term expired in 2009 he remained in office[6] for the duration of the trial of Thomas Lubanga. He was assigned to the court's trial division and sits as a member of Trial Chamber I. In 2012 Blattmans term ended.
René is the grandson of Karl Blattmann, a Swiss immigrant to Cachuela Esperanza, Bolivia. He is married to Marianne Schassner and has three children. He does not have a Swiss passport.
1995 Emblema de Oro from the Bolivian police[7]
1998 Honorary doctorate from the University of Basel[8]
2001 Carl Bertelsmann Prize for the transformation towards democracy during his term as a Minister of Justice.[9] Together with Ana Maria Romero.