Maureen Harding Clark
Maureen Harding Clark (born 3 January 1946) is an Irish judge who served as a Judge of the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia since June 2019, a Judge of the High Court from 2006 to 2014, a Judge at the International Criminal Court from 2003 to 2006, and a Judge at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia from 2001 to 2003.[1] Early life and educationClark was born to an Irish Catholic mother and a Scottish Presbyterian father in Scotland. When she was two years old, her family moved to Malaysia where she and her sister attended an English school run by French nuns.[2] At that time, she also learned Malay.[2] The school they attended in Malaysia was located in Bukit Nanas, Kuala Lumpur.[3] When she was twelve years old, the family moved to Ireland[2] where she attended the Muckross Park College in Dublin.[3] In 1964, Clark began studying at the University of Lyon where she obtained a diploma in French language.[3] In 1965, Clark returned to Ireland and studied law at the University College Dublin,[3] where she met her husband.[2] Following her graduation with a BCL degree,[3] she and her husband settled in the United States, where they had two children.[2] After an amicable separation, she and the children returned to Ireland, where she followed up her studies at Trinity College Dublin.[3] While at the university, her lecturer was Mary Robinson,[2][4] who later became President of Ireland. In 1975, she completed her studies and became a Barrister-at-Law at the Honourable Society of King's Inns.[3] In 2021, she was made an honorary fellow of Trinity College Dublin.[5] Legal careerFollowing her graduation in 1975[6] Clark was a barrister in the South Eastern Circuit[4][7] in a variety of cases.[7] In 1985, she assumed as the State Prosecutor for Tipperary.[2] In 1991, she became a Senior Counsel.[3][2] The same year, she quit her job in Tipperary[2] and became a prosecutor at the Central Criminal Court in Ireland.[8] She was described as "tough-minded", and "If she was prosecuting, you knew you were prosecuted".[2] She led the prosecution in the first money-laundering trial in Europe, as well as the first marital rape and male rape trials in Ireland.[3] In 2004, she was appointed a member of the Irish Human Rights Commission.[9] Judicial careerIn June 2001, Clark was elected as one of the 27 so-called ad litem judges at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) by the General Assembly of the United Nations.[10] She was assigned to a trial concerning human rights violations.[11] By March 2003, her chamber had sentenced Mladen Naletilić Tuta to 20 years' and Vinko Martinovic to 18 years' imprisonment.[12] In 2003, she was elected to a nine-year term as a judge of the International Criminal Court (ICC), where she was tasked with the organization of the trials and the establishment of a judicial infrastructure.[13] On 10 December 2006, she resigned from her post at the International Criminal Court after being appointed a High Court judge.[13] In 2019, following her nomination by the UN secretary-general António Guterres, the King of Cambodia Norodom Sihamoni[6] appointed Clark as a judge of the Supreme Court of the Khmer Rouge Tribunal, the court at which the leaders of the Cambodian Khmer Rouge are to be tried.[14] In December 2006, Clark became a Judge of the High Court of Ireland,[15][16] a post she held until 2014.[17] She was also the judicial visitor for the Trinity College Dublin between 2009 and 2020.[14] References
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