Eduardo Valencia Ospina | |
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Born | 19 September 1939 |
Nationality | Colombian |
Occupation(s) | Lawyer and former international civil servant. |
Known for | Second-longest serving registrar in the history of the ICJ, Assistant-Secretary-General of the United Nations, senior advisor to the Colombian President, counsel and lawyer for different parties before the ICJ, Senior Legal Officer for the UN, Chairman of the International Law Commission, etc. |
Eduardo Valencia Ospina (born 19 September, 1939) is a Colombian lawyer and former international civil servant.[1] Valencia Ospina holds an LL.M. from Harvard Law School (1963), where he specialized in international law and was also a Special Graduate Studies student from 1963 to 1964.[2] He also holds a PhD in Juridical Sciences and a PhD in Economic Sciences from the Pontificia Universidad Javeriana in Bogotá, Colombia.[3]
A member of a wealthy Cali family, Valencia Ospina worked at the United Nations for 36 years before retiring in the year 2000 with the rank of assistant-secretary-general.[4][5] He was Senior Legal Officer at the Office of Legal Affairs, and, most notably, was the Registrar (secretary-general) of the International Court of Justice from 1987 to 2000. He was the second-longest serving registrar of the ICJ.[6] [7][8][9] In November 2016, Valencia Ospina was elected to serve for a third term as a member of the International Law Commission.[10] At the ILC, Valencia Ospina served as First Vice-Chair during its 69th session in 2017[11] and as Chair during its 70th session in 2018.[12] In 2007, he was appointed Special Rapporteur for the report on the "Protection of persons in the event of disasters".[13] The Commission adopted the resulting "Draft articles on the protection of persons in the event of disasters" in 2016.[14] The draft articles were subsequently submitted to the United Nations General Assembly and put on its agenda.[15]
Valencia Ospina is a former president of the Latin American Society of International Law.[16][17] He also served on the board of several international law journals, including the Journal of International Dispute Settlement. Most notably, he was the Editor In Chief of The Law and Practice of International Courts and Tribunals.[18] Ospina is also an international arbitrator and counsel in cases before the ICJ. Primarily, he is a counsel for Colombia in the maritime border dispute case with Nicaragua, which began in 2001.[19] In October 2022, Ospina was designated by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Colombia as the lead counsel.