Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Amal Clooney: Making headlines for all the right reasons

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Amal Clooney: Making headlines for all the right reasons

    Amal Clooney: Making headlines for all the right reasons

    The media clamoured to see the global human rights lawyer in action
    this week. She was simply doing her job

    PETER POPHAM
    Friday 30 January 2015


    There is no doubting George Clooney's eye for beautiful women, but
    until October 2013 his relationships followed a certain pattern.

    Actress; cocktail waitress; waitress and reality show contender;
    underwear model and actress; professional wrestler - each abandoned in
    turn, the gossips tell us, when commitment raised its ugly head. As
    recently as September 2013, the actor told GQ magazine in answer to a
    question about marriage: "I haven't had aspirations in that way, ever.
    I was married in 1989. I wasn't very good at it."

    And now here he is, hitched - to another great beauty, to be sure, but
    a woman from a totally different place, in every sense, than her
    predecessors.

    No less in the public eye than her husband, this week Mrs Amal Clooney
    was in the headlines on her own account, standing in a courtroom at
    the International Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg before an
    international bench of judges, wearing black lawyer's robes and
    "falling bands", the two plain linen rectangles that cover the shirt
    collar.

    The subject was one of vast importance: the mass murder of some 1.5
    million Armenians during the First World War - long regarded as the
    first genocide of the 20th century, but which her antagonist in the
    case, Dogu Perincek, chairman of the Turkish Workers' Party, claims
    was nothing of the sort.

    The court was packed with far more journalists than the question at
    issue would normally draw, many of them from organisations whose
    interest in matters Turkish and Armenian is marginal at best. Geoffrey
    Robertson, the veteran human rights barrister and Clooney's colleague
    in the Doughty Street Chambers where they both work, twisted on his
    chair at her side. But Amal Clooney, speaking in the English vowels
    chiselled at St Hugh's College, Oxford, betrayed no nerves. She knew
    very well what she was about.

    Amal Clooney is no less in the public eye than her husband (Lauren Crow)

    The Armenians were killed, she told the court, "with specific
    genocidal intent". There are photographs of the River Euphrates filled
    with blood. "A campaign of racial extermination was in progress
    against the Armenians," she insisted. Its object was "the total
    obliteration of Armenians". She quoted a contemporary Turkish leader's
    statement that there was "no room for Christians" in Turkey.

    The court was hushed. God knows what some hacks were making of it. The
    world of Vegas cocktail waitresses and underwear models and curvaceous
    young women wrestling in bikinis seemed a very long way away. George
    Clooney had fallen head over heels for what one reporter called "the
    allure of the brainiac".

    The daughter of a prominent and intellectual Lebanese family, her
    father a Druze, Amal Alamuddin was brought to London aged three with
    her siblings, fleeing her homeland's civil war. The family was well
    off: a government minister and the founder of Lebanon's airline were
    among their relatives, and they settled in a comfortable home in
    Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire.

    Alamuddin - who turns 37 next week - shone at Dr Challoner's High
    School in the same county, winning an exhibition to St Hugh's, the
    formerly women-only college which was also alma mater of Aung San Suu
    Kyi. Gaining a 2.1, she went on to take a master's degree at New York
    University. While there she received the Jack J Katz Memorial Award
    for excellence in entertainment law - probably the first time that her
    world and that of the playboy film star, twice declared "sexiest man
    alive" by the US's People magazine, came within shouting distance of
    each other.

    Alamuddin was already clear that her future lay in international law,
    and graduation was followed by stints with the International Court of
    Justice and the special UN tribunals for Lebanon and former
    Yugoslavia. She was not only very gifted but also a workaholic of huge
    ambition. Over the following years she was involved in some of the
    highest profile international cases on the planet, including those of
    Yulia Tymoshenko, Muammar Gaddafi's former intelligence chief Abdallah
    al-Senussi, and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

    When she returned to London in 2010 and knocked on the door of Doughty
    Street Chambers, there was no doubting that she was a prize: not only
    a superb lawyer, but also one with unusually strong motivation.
    Geoffrey Robertson said that she showed strong commitment to "the
    basic idea that everyone is entitled to a basic level of dignity... We
    offered her an exceptional pupillage, which we do for exceptional
    people, and she indeed was exceptional."

    Nor was it surprising - to those familiar with the sort of dedication
    that lawyering at this level requires - that Alamuddin had not yet
    married or even, leaving aside vague suggestions of close friendship
    with Eric Schmidt, the chairman of Google, paired up with a serious
    boyfriend. As Robertson points out, human rights law is not
    intrinsically glamorous work - "cramped over a desk with thousands of
    pages of case law to get through in an evening".


    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/amal-clooney-making-headlines-for-all-the-right-reasons-10014807.html

Working...
X