Law Graduates Urged to Remain Committed to Cause of Justice
UN Legal Counsel Urges New Law Graduates to Remain
Committed to Cause of Justice
New York, May 18
2012 3:10PM
The top lawyer of the United Nations
today exhorted new law graduates of New York University
(NYU) to help usher in a new era of accountability across
the world and never to allow cynicism to erode their
commitment to the cause of
justice.
“I hope that, as lawyers,
you will recognize that your contributions to the legal
field may not yield immediate results, but that does not
make your day-to-day efforts any less important,” the
Under-Secretary-General for Legal Affairs and UN Legal
Counsel, Patricia O’Brien, said at the convocation of
Master of Laws (LL.M.) graduates of the NYU School of
Law.
Ms. O’Brien pointed out that in
the decades following the Nuremberg Tribunals in the
immediate aftermath of the Holocaust, international criminal
justice seemed unattainable, amid the divisiveness of the
Cold War. In recent years, however, many of those most
responsible for atrocities and war crimes in the former
Yugoslavia, Rwanda and Cambodia have been brought to
justice.
“We have changed the global
landscape by chasing criminals and putting them on trial
where they meet the hands of justice and the eyes of their
victims,” Ms. O’Brien told the
graduates.
She urged them to emulate
some distinguished members of the NYU alumni, including
Carol Bellamy from the class of 1968, who went on to serve
as Executive Direct of the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) for
10 years after exemplary public service in New York State
and New York City politics.
“From the
class of 1974, Mohammed ElBaradei became the
Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA),” Ms. O’Brien said. “For his efforts to prevent
nuclear energy from being used for military purposes, he too
won the Nobel Peace Prize in
2005.”
The NYU law school also
produced countless members of the United States Congress,
including Elihu Root from the class of 1867, who served as a
US Senator and a Secretary of State. Mr. Root was a pioneer
in international arbitration, an architect of the Permanent
Court of International Justice, and a Nobel Peace Prize
Winner, Ms. O’Brien pointed out.
“I
would urge you to make your choices with a keen awareness of
the incredibly privileged position that you are in. By
virtue of holding a degree from this esteemed law school, by
being part of this legacy, you will have doors open to you
that are not open to others,” she said. “You will have
access to people and opportunities that others could never
imagine to have for themselves – with the privileges of
access and opportunity, comes the responsibility to speak
out.”
ends