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People & Points
Print Edition> People & Points
UPDATED: November 30, 2007 NO.49 DEC.6, 2007
Chinese Judge at WTO Court
China had its first judge appointed to the World Trade Organization (WTO) when the world body recently selected four senior justices to its seven-people Appellate Body-top court
 
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China had its first judge appointed to the World Trade Organization (WTO) when the world body recently selected four senior justices to its seven-people Appellate Body-top court. Lawyer Zhang Yuejiao was one of the four appointed on November 27 by the Dispute Settlement Body (DSB) for a four-year term. Her tenure will commence on June 1, 2008.

The appointment came after deliberation and recommendation of the Selection Committee comprising WTO director general, and chairpersons of the General Council, the DSB and other WTO organs. The Appellate Body shall "comprise persons of recognized authority, with demonstrated expertise in law, international trade and the subject matter of the WTO agreements generally," a WTO statement said.

Zhang, 63, studied at Renne University of France in 1964, obtaining a Bachelor's degree. She won her Master's degree in law at Georgetown University in 1981, and completed her Doctoral degree at the Law School of Columbia University in 1997. Zhang is currently professor of law at China's Shantou University.

With more than 20 years experience in handling foreign trade and trade disputes, Zhang's career began at the State Import and Export Commission, and then Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation (now the Ministry of Commerce) as director general of the Department of Law and Treaties, where regulations were drafted to initially construct a legal framework concerning China's trade issues.

Her curriculum vitae also includes positions as a legal counsel for the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank. Meanwhile, she served as chief legal counsel for China's negotiations concerning the resumption of its membership in the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and its WTO accession, as well as chief negotiator on intellectual property talks with the United States and the EU.

In 2005 Zhang was assigned to be China's representative on the Board of Directors of the West African Development Bank after China had become the organization's biggest foreign stakeholder. Her expertise in regional economic cooperation and international trade laws made her one of the most popular directors of the bank.

"Lawyers should behave like an upright broker to close the gap between different economies and cultures."

Zhang Yuejiao at an annual seminar of the International Bar Association

"The membership of the Appellate Body should be broadly representative of the WTO membership."

Geneva-based WTO saying on its website, requiring impartiality as a necessity for the selected judges

"Please don't demonize us."

Pan Jiazheng, head of the Quality Control Panel for the Three Gorges Project, slamming some Western media's selective, "distorted" and exaggerated reporting on the world's largest water conservancy project

"We agreed to immediately launch good faith, bilateral negotiations in order to conclude a peace treaty resolving all outstanding issues, including core issues, without exception."

Joint statement of Israeli and Palestinian leaders issued on November 27, the first day of a U.S.-sponsored Middle East peace conference in Annapolis, Maryland, pledging to immediately restart peace talks between the two sides

"This army is my life, this army is my passion. I have loved this army."

Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, addressing a ceremony on November 28 when he formally quit his army post. Musharraf was sworn in as a civilian president on November 29

"We apologize to the children who have fallen ill after swallowing the beads, and their families. We also apologize to other Chinese toy makers who have been affected by the damage to the Made-in-China label."

Hong Kong-based JSSY Co. Ltd., saying in a written apology issued on November 28. The company admitted that it had used a toxic chemical as a softener in the toys that were recalled in the United States and Australia earlier this year

"Take full responsibility for the involvement of the Japanese Imperial Forces in the system of forced prostitution, including through a formal and sincere apology to all of those who were victims."

A motion unanimously passed by Canada's parliament on November 28 urging Japan to apologize to foreign women forced into sexual servitude during World War II



 
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