Meet the 8 Chinese judges who’ll sit on belt and road cases
Optimists believe the judges of the China International Commercial Courts are so skilled their expertise will trump political considerations. Pessimists give a quite different verdict
We now know who will be making the judgments for some of the largest and most geopolitically significant disputes on the planet.
According to the Supreme People’s Court in Beijing, disputes regarding the “Belt and Road Initiative”– President Xi Jinping’s plan to fund infrastructure links throughout Eurasia – will be handled by two China International Commercial Courts (CICC).
Previously known as the Belt and Road Courts, one of these is based in the southern city of Shenzhen and will handle disputes along the maritime “Road”. The other, in Xian, will handle cases along the overland “Belt”.
The proposal to establish these courts was announced at the beginning of the year, but details of how they will work only became available this summer.
There are just eight judges. All are Chinese; all are Han. Their ages range from 39 to 59 and all but two of them are men.