Guido Raimondi

Guido Raimondi (born 22 October 1953) is an Italian judge born in Naples and former judge and President of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR). Raimondi was nominated to the court by Italy and began his 9-year term as ECHR judge on 5 May 2010. He was the President of ECHR from 1 November 2015 until 4 May 2019.[1]

Guido Raimondi
President of the
European Court of Human Rights
in respect of Italy
In office
1 November 2015  5 May 2019
Preceded byDean Spielmann
Succeeded byLinos-Alexandre Sicilianos
Judge of the
European Court of Human Rights
in respect of Italy
Assumed office
5 May 2010
Personal details
Born (1953-10-22) 22 October 1953
Naples, Italy
ResidenceStrasbourg

Early career

Between 1997 and 2003 Raimondi served on the Supreme Court of Cassation, first in the Advocate General's office and then as judge. During the same period he occasionally served as ad hoc judge in cases before the European Court of Human Rights. In May 2003 he joined the International Labour Organization (ILO) as Deputy Legal Adviser in Geneva. In February 2008 he became Legal Adviser of that organization.[2]

European Court of Human Rights

Raimondi was a judge at the European Court of Human Rights from 2010 until 2019. In September 2012 he was elected Section President and then Vice-President of the Court for a three-year term of office starting on 1 November 2012.

In January 2016, in the wake of the European migrant crisis, Raimondi announced that the court had put in place an “action plan” to cope with a forecast surge in legal cases from migrants seeking to avoid being sent to other European countries.[3]

gollark: You should probably have a lot of backups.
gollark: That's cool. I would have expected you'd need some sort of digital circuitry to do that.
gollark: Consists usually from (2.0.1) → usually consists ofIts (2.1.1.0) → it'sMuch more faster (2.1.1.1) → much faster2.1.2.0: it says "the parts ()", that should probably be filled in
gollark: Also, your code is... not monospaced, which is a bit weird to read.
gollark: Also more punctuation generally.

References


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