United Nations Security Council Resolution 1449 Explained
Number: | 1449 |
Organ: | SC |
Date: | 13 December |
Year: | 2002 |
Meeting: | 4,666 |
Code: | S/RES/1449 |
Document: | https://undocs.org/S/RES/1449(2002) |
For: | 15 |
Abstention: | 0 |
Against: | 0 |
Subject: | The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda |
Result: | Adopted |
United Nations Security Council resolution 1449, adopted unanimously on 13 December 2002, after recalling resolutions 955 (1994), 1165 (1998), 1329 (2000), 1411 (2002) and 1431 (2002), the Council forwarded a list of nominees for permanent judges at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) to the General Assembly for consideration.[1]
The list of nominees received by the Secretary-General Kofi Annan was as follows:[2]
- Mansoor Ahmad (Pakistan)
- Teimuraz Bakradze (Georgia)
- Kocou Arsène Capo-Chichi (Benin)
- Frederick Mwela Chomba (Zambia)
- Pavel Dolene (Slovenia)
- Serguei Aleckseievich Egorov (Russia)
- Robert Fremr (Czech Republic)
- Asoka de Zoysa Gunawardana (Sri Lanka)
- Mehmet Güney (Turkey)
- Michel Mahouve (Cameroon)
- Winston Churchill Matanzima Maqutu (Lesotho)
- Erik Møse (Norway)
- Arlette Ramaroson (Madagascar)
- Jai Ram Reddy (Fiji)
- William Hussoin Sekule (Tanzania)
- Emile Francis Short (Ghana)
- Francis M. Ssekandi (Uganda)
- Cheick Traoré (Mali)
- Xenofon Ulianovschi (Moldova)
- Andrésia Vaz (Senegal)
- Inés Mónica Weinberg de Roca (Argentina)
- Mohammed Ibrahim Werfalli (Libya)
- Lloyd George Williams (Saint Kitts and Nevis)
See also
External links
Notes and References
- News: Security Council forwards names of 23 judicial nominees for Rwanda tribunal to General Assembly. 13 December 2002. United Nations.
- Book: United Nations. Yearbook of the United Nations 2002. 2004. United Nations Publications. 978-92-1-100904-0. 1286. registration.