Top UN court rejects emergency steps after Mexico embassy raid

Top UN court rejects emergency steps after Mexico embassy raid

THE HAGUE
Top UN court rejects emergency steps after Mexico embassy raid

The U.N.'s top court Thursday rejected a request by Mexico for emergency measures over a raid on its embassy in Quito last month, ruling that Ecuador had given sufficient assurances that the diplomatic mission will be protected.

Ecuadoran security forces stormed the Mexican embassy in Quito in early April to snatch former vice president Jorge Glas, who is wanted on corruption charges and had been granted asylum by Mexico.

Mexico dragged Ecuador before the International Court of Justice in The Hague, asking judges to declare Quito in breach of international law.

It also sought "provisional measures" including that judges rule that Quito "take appropriate and immediate steps to provide full security of diplomatic premises... and archives, preventing further intrusion against them".

Mexico also asked judges to order Ecuador to "refrain from any act or conduct likely to aggravate or widen the dispute of which the Court is seized".

  'No threats' 

But the ICJ judges said Ecuador had already given assurances it was "providing full protection to the premises of the Mexican mission and diplomatic residences."

Quito had told the court there were "no threats to the relevant properties or archives and Mexico is free to remove such property and archives whenever it wishes."

"The Court considers that the assurances given by... Ecuador encompass the concerns expressed by Mexico" in its request, ICJ presiding judge Nawaf Salam said.

"The Court considers that there is at present no urgency," judge Salam said, turning down Mexico's application for emergency measures.

Judges will next ruminate over the case proper, in which Mexico accuses Ecuador of "breaking international law" — but that could still take months or even years.

Quito's rare incursion on diplomatic territory sparked an international outcry, and led Mexico to break ties with Ecuador and withdraw its diplomats.

Mexico's representative Alejandro Celorio Alcantara told judges last month that Ecuador's raid "crossed a line", setting a dangerous precedent when it came to international relations.

"There are lines in international law which should not be crossed," Celorio said.

Mexico is asking the ICJ to suspend Ecuador from the U.N. until it issues a public apology — and for the court to declare itself the "appropriate judicial body" to determine Quito's responsibility in order to start a process to expel it from the world body.

Mexico based its application on the principles of the U.N. Charter, the 1948 Pact of Bogota — which obliges signatories to solve disputes through peaceful means — and the 1961 Vienna Convention which guarantees protection for diplomatic staff.

  'Serious offences' 

Ecuador's diplomats hit back during the hearings, saying the embassy raid was "exceptional" and aimed "solely" to bring Glas — which Quito said was a wanted fugitive — to justice.

"Mexico for months misused its diplomatic premises in Quito to shelter a common criminal who had been duly convicted by the highest Ecuadoran courts of very serious corruption-related offences," said Andres Teran Parral, Ecuador's ambassador to the Netherlands.

Ecuador last month filed its own case against Mexico, making a similar argument that it "blatantly abused" its diplomatic mission to harbour Glas.

Glas, who was vice president from 2013 to 2017, faces graft charges stemming from his time in office.

He was detained at the embassy on a warrant issued in January on embezzlement charges relating to funds from public works contracts, issued after a devastating earthquake hit Ecuador in 2016.

Glas was also convicted in a separate fraud case in 2017.

The raid came hours after Mexico granted Glas's request for political asylum.

Several Latin American states, Spain, the European Union, the United States, and the U.N. chief have condemned the embassy intrusion.

Meanwhile, Glas remains behind bars at the southwestern Guayaquil prison, with his lawyers fighting to prevent the extraction of data from two cellphones and an iPad, seized when he was arrested.