Global Embassy of Activists for Peace

Democratization of the UN, classification of ethnocide and politicide: proposals of CUMIPAZ 2016

International Public Law and the International Criminal Law were the judicial approaches that the second panel of the Justice and Democracy Session of CUMIPAZ 2016 was based on, with the objective of generating “Proposals for the democratization of the UN, the elimination or rationalization of the right to veto, and the classification of politicide and ethnocide”. 


Judge of the International Criminal Court considers the support of the GEAP: promote the adhesion to the Rome Statute Global Embassy of Activists for Peace

Judge of the International Criminal Court considers the support of the GEAP: promote the adhesion to the Rome Statute

During the session of the Peace Integration Summit CUMIPAZ -2016, Antoine Kesia Mbe-Mindua, judge of the International Criminal Court (ICC) considers the support of the Global Embassy of Activists for Peace (GEAP) to promote among the States that are still not a part of the Rome Statute, to adhere to it, in order to achieve more ratifications for the Charter to be genuinely universal.


Dr Antoine Kesia Mbe Mindua

Dr. Antoine Kesia Mbe-Mindua - Justice and Democracy Session (CUMIPAZ 2016)

"Article 16 of the Rome Statute, it's impact on the independence and autonomy of the International Criminal Court." - Antoine Keshia Mbe-Mindua -Judge of the International Criminal Court. El Congo


Proposals for the strengthening of justice and universal peaceGlobal Embassy of Activists for Peace

Proposals for the strengthening of justice and universal peace

Authorities and personalities with trajectory in the judicial field made up the first panel of the Justice and Democracy Session of CUMIPAZ 2016, with the central topic: “Efficiency of universal and national justice, as well as the recognition and respect of dignity and human rights.”


PANEL 1: "Effectiveness of universal and national justice, as well as the recognition and respect of dignity and human rights"