M. Sarmad
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It may interest you to know that I have, indeed, read all the articles - since much of my research is on a similar, related subject - and the Americans on my doctoral committee will not tolerate any gaps in my knowledge. (Apologies if I sound patronizing, not my intention)
This is a summary of what all the experts say: UN resolutions come in many forms and for different purposes. By default they are non-binding. Some, on procedural aspects, rules governing UN business, taking notice of facts, constitution of fact-finding groups and admission of new members are binding.
UN resolutions cannot, logically be binding because the UN is not an adjudicatory body. The UN does not examine witnesses before issuing resolutions, there is no cross examination, no discovery, etc. - in short it is a political body, not an adjudicatory body.
If what you say is right and UN resolutions are binding, Pakistan would / should have filed a lawsuit in the ICJ decades ago. Think about that.
That doesn't answer my question, does it ?
You really believe that you know more about the charter of the ICJ than the (former) president of ICJ ??