World’s top court paves way for climate reparations

World’s top court paves way for climate reparations
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Vanuatu's Climate Change Minister Ralph Regenvanu (3rd L) speaks to the media in The Hague on July 23, 2025, after an ICJ session tasked with issuing the first Advisory Opinion on states' legal obligations to address climate change. (AFP)
World’s top court paves way for climate reparations
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Vishal Prasad (2nd R), director of the Pacific Islands Students Fighting Climate Change youth-led organization, speaks to the media in The Hague on July 23, 2025, after an ICJ session tasked with issuing the first Advisory Opinion on states' legal obligations to address climate change. (AFP)
World’s top court paves way for climate reparations
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Hajer Gueldich (L), chairperson of the African Union Commission on International Law, and Vanuatu's Climate Change Minister Ralph Regenvanu react ahead of the ICJ session tasked with issuing the first Advisory Opinion (AO) on States' legal obligations to address climate change, in The Hague on July 23, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 24 July 2025

World’s top court paves way for climate reparations

World’s top court paves way for climate reparations
  • Countries breaching their climate obligations were committing a “wrongful act,” the court said in its advisory opinion
  • Campaigners hailed a milestone moment in the fight for accountability from big polluters most responsible for global warming

THE HAGUE: The world’s highest court Wednesday declared that states are obliged under international law to tackle climate change and warned that failing to do so could open the door to reparations.
In a historic statement, the International Court of Justice said climate change was an “urgent and existential threat” and countries had a legal duty to prevent harm from their planet-warming pollution.
Countries breaching their climate obligations were committing a “wrongful act,” the court said in its advisory opinion, which is not legally binding but carries political and legal weight.
“The legal consequences resulting from the commission of an internationally wrongful act may include... full reparations to injured states in the form of restitution, compensation and satisfaction,” said ICJ President Yuji Iwasawa on behalf of the 15-judge panel.
This would be on a case-by-case basis where a “sufficient direct and certain causal nexus” had been shown “between the wrongful act and the injury,” the court added.
Campaigners and countries on the climate frontlines hailed a milestone moment in the fight for accountability from big polluters most responsible for global warming.
“This is a victory for our planet, for climate justice and for the power of young people to make a difference,” said UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.
Ralph Regenvanu, the climate change minister for Vanuatu, the Pacific island nation that spearheaded the case at The Hague, was jubilant.
Speaking to AFP outside the court, Regenvanu said it was “a very strong opinion at the end” and better than hoped.
“We can use these arguments when we talk with our partners, some of the high-emitting states. We can say you have a legal obligation to help us,” he said.
“This helps us in our arguments. It’s going to give us a lot more leverage... in all negotiations.”

This was the biggest case in ICJ history, and seen as the most consequential in a recent string of landmark climate moves.
The United Nations had tasked the 15 judges at the ICJ, a UN court in The Hague that adjudicates disputes between nations, to answer two fundamental questions.
First: what must states do under international law to protect the environment from greenhouse gas emissions for the future?
Second: what are the consequences for states whose emissions have caused environmental harm, especially to vulnerable low-lying island states?
In a detailed summary of the opinion, Iwasawa said the climate “must be protected for present and future generations.”
The adverse effect of a warming planet “may significantly impair the enjoyment of certain human rights, including the right to life,” he added.
Legal and climate experts said the opinion, while not legally binding, could have far-reaching consequences for national courts, legislation and public debate.
“The court’s clear and detailed articulation of state obligations will be a catalyst for accelerated climate action and unprecedented accountability,” David Boyd, a former UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and the Environment, told AFP.
Johan Rockstrom, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, said the ruling bound all nations by international law to prevent harm from emissions of planet-warming greenhouse gases.
The court was “pointing the direction for the entire world and making clear that every nation is legally obliged to solve the climate crisis,” he told AFP.

‘Perfect ending’
Courts have become a key battleground for climate action as frustration has grown over sluggish progress toward curbing planet-warming pollution from fossil fuels.
The Paris Agreement, struck through the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), has rallied a global response to the crisis, but not at the speed necessary to protect the world from dangerous overheating.
The journey to The Hague began six years ago with students from the climate-imperilled Pacific region fed up with the lack of accountability for the damage afflicting their homelands.
“Young Pacific Islanders initiated this call for humanity to the world. And the world must respond,” said UN chief Guterres, praising Vanuatu’s leadership.
The fight pitted major wealthy economies against the smaller, less developed states which are most at the mercy of a warming planet.
More than 100 nations and groups made submissions, many from the Pacific who gave impassioned appeals in colorful traditional dress.
“It’s such a perfect ending to a campaign that started in a classroom,” said Vishal Prasad, director of the student-led campaign that kicked off the case.
“We have now a very, very strong tool to hold power accountable, and we must do that now. The ICJ has given everything possible,” he told AFP.
The United States, which has embraced a fossil fuel agenda under President Donald Trump, had a muted response to the ruling.
A US State Department spokesperson said it “will be reviewing the Court’s advisory opinion in the coming days and weeks.”
French Ecological Transition Minister Agnes Pannier-Runacher hailed the advisory opinion as a “victory for the most vulnerable states, a victory for France and a victory for the climate.”
John Kerry, the former US special envoy for climate change, said “it should not take the stamp of international law to motivate countries to do what is already profoundly in their economic interests.”
“We shouldn’t need another reason to act and accelerate action,” he told AFP.


Russia warns Europe: we will go after any state which takes our assets

Russia warns Europe: we will go after any state which takes our assets
Updated 58 min 1 sec ago

Russia warns Europe: we will go after any state which takes our assets

Russia warns Europe: we will go after any state which takes our assets
  • President Ursula von der Leyen wants the European Union to find a new way to finance Ukraine’s defense against Russia using the cash balances associated with Russian assets frozen in Europe

MOSCOW: Russia on Monday warned European states that it would go after any state which sought to take its assets after reports that the European Union was floating the idea of spending billions of dollars worth of frozen Russian assets to help Ukraine.
After President Vladimir Putin sent his army into Ukraine in 2022, the United States and its allies prohibited transactions with the Russian central bank and finance ministry and blocked $300-$350 billion of sovereign Russian assets, mostly European, US and British government bonds held in a European securities depository.
Reuters reported that European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen wants the European Union to find a new way to finance Ukraine’s defense against Russia using the cash balances associated with Russian assets frozen in Europe.
Politico reported that the European Commission is mulling the idea of using Russian cash deposits at the European Central Bank from maturing bonds owned by Russia to fund a “Reparations Loan” for Ukraine.
“If this happens, Russia will pursue the EU states, as well as European degenerates from Brussels and individual EU countries who try to seize our property, until the end of the century,” former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev wrote on Telegram.
Russia will pursue European states in “all possible ways” and in “all possible international and national courts” as well as “out of court,” said Medvedev, who serves as deputy chairman of Russia’s Security Council.
Russia says any seizure of its assets amounts to theft by the West and will undermine confidence in the bonds and currencies of the United States and Europe.


Cluster bombs kill, wound over 1,200 in Ukraine since 2022: monitor

Cluster bombs kill, wound over 1,200 in Ukraine since 2022: monitor
Updated 15 September 2025

Cluster bombs kill, wound over 1,200 in Ukraine since 2022: monitor

Cluster bombs kill, wound over 1,200 in Ukraine since 2022: monitor
  • Since Russia expanded the invasion of its western neighbor in February 2022, Ukraine has registered the highest number of recorded annual cluster munition casualties worldwide, the Cluster Munition Coalition said in its annual report

GENEVA: Cluster munitions have killed or injured more than 1,200 civilians in Ukraine since Russia’s full-scale invasion began, a monitor said Monday, decrying “troubling setbacks” in global efforts to eradicate the weapons.
Since Russia expanded the invasion of its western neighbor in February 2022, Ukraine has registered the highest number of recorded annual cluster munition casualties worldwide, the Cluster Munition Coalition (CMC) said in its annual report.
Russia has used the widely-banned weapons “extensively” since the first day of the war, it said, adding that Ukraine too had used the weapons, and faces Russian accusations of deploying them inside of Russia.
At least 193 cluster munition casualties were recorded in Ukraine in 2024, out of 314 globally, the report said.
In total, more than 1,200 such casualties have been registered in Ukraine since the start of the war, most of them in 2022.
But the report stressed that the figure was surely a dramatic underestimate, pointing out that last year alone, Ukraine suffered around 40 cluster munition attacks where casualty numbers were not given.
Cluster munitions can be dropped from planes or fired from artillery before exploding in mid-air and scattering bomblets over a wide area.
They pose a lasting threat since many fail to explode on impact, effectively acting as land mines that can explode years later.


- ‘Catastrophic’ -

Neither Russia nor Ukraine are among the 112 states that are party to the 2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions, which prohibits the use, transfer, production and storage of cluster bombs.
The only other two countries where cluster munition attacks were registered last year — Myanmar and Syria — have not joined the convention either.
The United States, also not a party to the treaty, sparked outcry with its 2023 decision to transfer cluster munitions to Kyiv.
It has since transferred the weapons to Ukraine in at least seven separate shipments, CMC said.
Submunitions with Korean language markings have meanwhile been found in Ukrainian-controlled territory this year, but the report said it remained unclear if they had been used by the North Korean forces fighting alongside Russians in the war, or if they had simply been acquired from North Korea by Russia for Russian use.
At a global level, CMC also warned of “troubling setbacks” threatening efforts to establish new international norms stigmatising the use of cluster munitions.
Lithuania in March this year became the first ever country to withdraw from the treaty, six months after it announced it was leaving, citing regional security concerns.
Following that move, Lithuania, along with Poland, Latvia, Estonia and Finland, also said they would quit a treaty banning anti-personnel land mines amid concerns over “Russia’s aggression.”
Tamar Gabelnick, head of the Cluster Munition Coalition, decried Lithuania’s departure, warning that it “undermines the norm created by the convention, with catastrophic implications for the rule of international law protecting civilians.”
“We have already seen the impact this decision has had on the Mine Ban Treaty, and states should be extremely wary of a wider domino effect.”


Australia, Papua New Guinea to sign ‘historic’ defense deal

Australia, Papua New Guinea to sign ‘historic’ defense deal
Updated 15 September 2025

Australia, Papua New Guinea to sign ‘historic’ defense deal

Australia, Papua New Guinea to sign ‘historic’ defense deal
  • The fresh defense agreement will be signed by Prime Ministers Anthony Albanese and James Marape on Wednesday in Port Moresby, part of celebrations to mark 50 years of Papua New Guinea’s independence from Australia
  • Australian media said the deal would enable Papua New Guinea nationals to serve in the Australian Defense Force with the same pay as other members and start a pathway to citizenship

SYDNEY: A defense deal to be signed this week could see Papua New Guineans serve in the Australian military, Canberra said on Monday, the pact seen as an attempt to counter Beijing’s rising Pacific influence.
The fresh defense agreement will be signed by Prime Ministers Anthony Albanese and James Marape on Wednesday in Port Moresby, part of celebrations to mark 50 years of Papua New Guinea’s independence from Australia.
Australian Defense Minister Richard Marles described the deal as “historic.”
He said Australia’s military had been open to foreign nationals from New Zealand, Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States since last year.
“At the time we said we would have an eye to the Pacific,” he told national broadcaster ABC.
“The agreement that we will sign with PNG contemplates this,” he said.
“There’s more work to be done in terms of walking down that path, but we certainly are interested in how we can recruit Papua New Guineans directly into the ADF,” Marles added, referring to Australia’s military.
The agreement follows an overarching security agreement signed between the two countries in 2023.
Australian media said the deal would enable Papua New Guinea nationals to serve in the Australian Defense Force with the same pay as other members and start a pathway to citizenship.
Speaking in Port Moresby on Monday, Albanese said the deal was an “upgrade in the relationship and its increased interoperability, its increased engagement and security relationship,” according to ABC.
Asked about concerns the deal could violate Papua New Guinea’s sovereignty, he said “people will get to see the agreement, what Australia does is deal with countries with respect and respect for sovereignty is front and center of that.”
Papua New Guinea’s Defense Minister Billy Joseph said the deal “promotes regional security.”
“A secure Papua New Guinea is a secure Australia, and a secure Australia is a secure Papua New Guinea,” he said.
Less than 200 kilometers (124 miles) from Australia’s northernmost border, Papua New Guinea is the largest and most populous state in Melanesia.
China has committed billions of dollars to Pacific nations over the past decade, funding hospitals, sports stadiums, roads and other public works.
It is an approach that appears to be paying dividends.
Solomon Islands, Kiribati and Nauru have all severed diplomatic ties with Taiwan in favor of China in recent years.
Canberra has stepped up its engagement with the region in a bid to counter Beijing’s influence.
Albanese was in Vanuatu last week to discuss a deal aimed at deepening Australia’s links to the Pacific nation.
However, the deal was not signed, with Prime Minister Jotham Napat citing concerns that its wording would limit Vanuatu’s ability to access funds for “critical infrastructure” from other nations.


Myanmar junta says no voting in dozens of constituencies

Myanmar junta says no voting in dozens of constituencies
Updated 15 September 2025

Myanmar junta says no voting in dozens of constituencies

Myanmar junta says no voting in dozens of constituencies
  • A civil war has consumed Myanmar since the military snatched power in a 2021 coup
  • The military has touted elections – due to start in phases on December 28 – as a path to reconciliation

YANGON: Myanmar’s junta acknowledged Monday its long-promised election would not be held in about one in seven national parliament constituencies, as it battles myriad rebel forces opposed to the poll.
A civil war has consumed Myanmar since the military snatched power in a 2021 coup, jailing democratic figurehead Aung San Suu Kyi and deposing her civilian government.
The military has touted elections – due to start in phases on December 28 – as a path to reconciliation.
However monitors are slating the poll as a ploy to legitimize continuing military rule, while it is set to be boycotted by many ousted lawmakers and blocked by armed opposition groups in enclaves they control.
A notice by Myanmar’s Union Election Commission shared in state media said elections would not be held in 56 lower house constituencies and nine upper house constituencies.
The notice did not provide a specific reason for the cancelation but said “these constituencies have been deemed not conducive to holding free and fair elections.”
However, many of the territories are known battlegrounds or areas where the military has lost control to an array of pro-democracy guerrillas and powerful ethnic minority armed organizations defying its writ.
There are a total of 440 constituencies for Myanmar’s upper and lower houses, with the 65 canceled accounting for nearly 15 percent of the total.
They include the rebel-held ruby mining hub of Mogok, a majority of constituencies in western Rakhine state where the military has lost ground, and numerous areas the junta has been hammering with air strikes.
Myanmar’s junta lost swaths of territory when scattered opposition groups committed to a combined offensive starting in late 2023, but it has recently clawed back some ground with several victories.
Nonetheless, there have been other signs the poll will be limited in scope.
A census held last year in preparation for the election estimated it failed to collect data from 19 million of the country’s 51 million people, according to provisional findings.
“Significant security constraints” were cited as one reason for the shortfall.


Indian forces gun down top Maoist rebel, two others

Indian forces gun down top Maoist rebel, two others
Updated 15 September 2025

Indian forces gun down top Maoist rebel, two others

Indian forces gun down top Maoist rebel, two others
  • India is waging an all-out offensive against the last remaining traces of the Naxalite rebellion
  • Last week, forces killed another Maoist commander and nine others in a fierce gunbattle

NEW DELHI: Indian security forces killed a top Maoist commander and two other rebels in a gunbattle on Monday, officials said, as the government intensifies efforts to crush the decades-long conflict.
India is waging an all-out offensive against the last remaining traces of the Naxalite rebellion, named after the village in the foothills of the Himalayas where the Maoist-inspired guerrilla movement began nearly six decades ago.
More than 12,000 rebels, soldiers and civilians have been killed since a handful of villagers rose up against their feudal lords there in 1967.
The latest gunbattle took place early Monday in the mineral-rich eastern state of Jharkhand, India’s Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) said in a statement.
The federal police described the operation as a “major breakthrough.”
Three “top Naxal commanders” were killed in the fight, the CRPF said, including Sahdev Soren, who was part of the central committee of the Maoist organization.
Authorities had issued a bounty of around $113,000 for his capture.
Last week, forces killed another Maoist commander and nine others in a fierce gunbattle along the forested border between the states of Odisha and Chhattisgarh.
The Indian government has vowed to crush the rebellion by end of the March next year.
The rebellion controlled nearly a third of the country with an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 fighters at its peak in the mid-2000s.
A crackdown by Indian troops across the “Red Corridor” has killed more than 400 rebels since last year, according to government data.
The group’s chief, Nambala Keshav Rao, alias Basavaraju, was gunned down in May, along with 26 other guerrillas.
The conflict has also seen several deadly attacks on government forces. A roadside bomb killed at least nine Indian troops in January.