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© Van Diepen Van der Kroef Advocaten

© Van Diepen Van der Kroef Advocaten

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Explanation of ground of appeal 9111. In legal consi<strong>der</strong>ation 5.15 the District Court intended to address the available caselaw onthe scope of Article 105 paragraph 1 of the UN Charter. The District Court actually failed toaddress the most important relevant case. In its discussion of the Advisory Opinion of the ICJreferred to several times above the District Court passed over the essence of that judgment.The explanation to this ground of appeal will clarify various points. The Association et al.will also deal with other relevant caselaw and the Report of the Dutch Advisory Commissionon Issues arising un<strong>der</strong> Public International Law (CAVV).112. As was said above, the Association et al. is surprised that the District Court failed to addressthe Man<strong>der</strong>lier Case cited above. That is the only case that concerns the immunity of theUN. The Man<strong>der</strong>lier Case is discussed extensively above and entails that the Court now hasjurisdiction to hear an action brought against the United Nations. Moreover, the facts in thepresent case, much more so than in the Man<strong>der</strong>lier Case, provide cause to assume thatjurisdiction.113. The District Court concluded un<strong>der</strong> legal consi<strong>der</strong>ation 5.15 that on the basis of the AdvisoryOpinion of the ICJ it should proceed with the utmost reticence. That is an erroneousconclusion to be drawn from the Advisory Opinion.Even if that conclusion were to be correct, it still holds that a review done with the utmostreticence is something entirely different from no review. The District Court thus erroneouslyfailed to conduct any review and assumed absolute immunity.114. Legal consi<strong>der</strong>ation 66 of the Advisory Opinion cited by the District Court does not addressthe essence of that judgment. In that legal consi<strong>der</strong>ation the ICJ referred to Section 29 ofthe Convention. It is not disputed that in the present case no legal remedy within themeaning of Section 29 was available. The ICJ in the Advisory Opinion did not address thequestion what is the law if – as in the present case – a mode of settlement within themeaning of Section 29 of the Convention is absent.<strong>©</strong> <strong>Van</strong> <strong>Diepen</strong> <strong>Van</strong> <strong>der</strong> <strong>Kroef</strong> <strong>Advocaten</strong> page 49 of 99

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