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Louise Arbour was the
daughter of a comfortable middle-class family. She
completed high school at the Congrégation
Notre-Dame du Collège Régina
Assumpta, north of Montreal. In 1969, she began her
studies in law at the Université de
Montréal; two years later she graduated and
was called to the Quebec Bar. Intrigued by the
national capital, she made her home in Ottawa and
clerked for Mr Justice Louis-Philippe Pigeon of the
Supreme Court of Canada. She was called to the
Ontario Bar in 1977.
Ms Arbour's rise was
dazzling: she became first a professor of law and
then Vice Dean of the Osgoode Hall Law Faculty at
York University in Toronto. In 1987 she was
appointed to the Ontario Supreme Court. In 1990 she
moved to the Ontario Court of Appeal, the first
francophone ever appointed. She was recognized by
her peers as a first-class, indeed a
ground-breaking, judge, who was leaving her mark on
the profession. She wrote widely on the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Some of her
decisions attracted public attention, most notably
her 1992 ruling that prison inmates have the right
to vote. In 1995 she tabled a devastating report on
Canada's prison system following her investigation
of violent incidents at the Kingston Penitentiary
for Women.
Judge Arbour enjoyed wide
respect and became an international figure. In
1996, Un Secretary-general Boutros Boutros-Ghali
announced that he had chosen her to act as
prosecutor at the International Criminal Tribunal.
She was faced with a colossal task. She had to
supervise the work of two tribunals set up by the
UN in 1993-94. The first was investigating war
crimes in the former Yugoslavia and more recently
in Kosovo, the second was investigating the
genocide in Rwanda in the spring of 1994. Here too
Louise Arbour ruffled feathers: in 1997 she accused
France of "dragging its feet" in Bosnia by not
arresting war criminals. In May 1999, while the war
in Kosovo was at its height, she did not hesitate
to accuse the President of Serbia, Slobodan
Milosevic, of war crimes. Many international
observers criticized her willingness to speak out,
claiming that she was undermining the chances for a
peace treaty with Belgrade.
By June 1999, Louise Arbour
had become the best-known judicial figure on the
planet. She decided at that point to withdraw from
the hunt for war criminals, and accepted a seat on
the Supreme Court of Canada, replacing Mr Justice
Peter Cory, who had retired. Madam Justice Arbour
brings to the Supreme Court an incredible range of
experience and a vast knowledge of the law.
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