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| An Iranian woman walks past a mural depicting the Statue of Liberty, painted on the wall of the former US embassy in the capital Tehran on August 7, 2018 (AFP Photo/ ATTA KENARE) |
The Hague (AFP) - The International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled Wednesday that Iran can proceed with a bid to recover billions of dollars in frozen assets the United States says must go to victims of attacks blamed on Tehran.
Judges of
the UN's top court rejected US claims that the case should be thrown out
because Iran had "unclean hands" due to alleged links to terrorism,
and that the tribunal in The Hague did not have jurisdiction in the lawsuit.
The court
will hold further hearings to decide whether Iran can get back $2 billion
frozen by the US Supreme Court in 2016.
Abdulqawi
Ahmed Yusuf, the chief judge at the ICJ, said the court "unanimously
rejects the preliminary objections to admissibility raised by the United States
of America".
The court
also "finds that it has jurisdiction" to rule on the case, which was
filed by Iran in 2016, Yusuf said at the end of an hour-long reading of the
judgment.
Iran said
the freezing of the funds breached the 1955 Treaty of Amity with the United
States, an agreement signed before Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution severed
relations between the countries.
The US
Supreme Court had said Iran must give the cash to survivors and relatives of
victims of attacks blamed on Tehran, including the 1983 bombing of a US Marine
barracks in Beirut.

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