Title: The Law of the Sea, p.179ff
1The Law of the Sea, p.179ff
- follow along with 1982 UNCLOS (United Nations
Convention on the Law of the Sea) (entered into
force 1994). Note The Deep Sea Bed regime (arts.
133-199) has been modified by the 1994 Agreement
Relating to the Implementation of Part XI. Useful
site www.itlos.org/ home of The International
Tribunal for the Law of the Sea. - The US Senate has voted the treaty out of
committee but has still not voted on its advice
and consent to ratification although all
departments of government have supported the
treaty. Nonetheless, the US abides by much of the
treaty.
2Law of the Sea The Law Prior to the United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)
- Prior to UNCLOS, the sea was divided into
- 1) Internal waters Lakes, rivers, bays (no
agreement on definition of a bay) internal
waters were entirely subject to the states
jurisdiction.
3Law of the Sea The Law Prior to the United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)
continued
- 2) Territorial waters A strip of water lying
directly off the coast of a state. In this water,
the coastal state could declare an exclusive
fishing (or other economic interests) zone. (No
agreement on the breadth of the territorial sea.
Western states argued for 3 nautical miles. All
miles are nautical miles in the law of the sea. A
nautical mile is 6076.1155 feet as opposed to
5280 feet in a regular mile. Scandinavian states
claimed four nautical miles and some Latin
American states claimed 200 nautical miles). Most
states agreed that foreign ships had a right of
innocent passage through the territorial sea.
Some states argued that military vessels had to
receive permission to enter the territorial sea
and had no right of innocent passage.
4Law of the Sea The Law Prior to the United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)
continued
- 3) The high seas All the sea beyond the
territorial sea. Ships on the high seas were
generally only subject to the jurisdiction of the
flag state but see, The Lotus Case (France v.
Turkey), 1927 P.C.I.J. (ser. A) No.10, cf. UNCLOS
art. 97. The high seas were open to all states,
Mare Liberum, and could not be claimed by them
in the way that territory could be.
5Regimes of the Sea after UNCLOS
- 1) Internal waters, including bays that meet the
UNCLOS - definition.
- 2) Territorial Sea.
- 3) The Contiguous Zone.
- 4) The Exclusive Economic Zone.
- 5) The Continental Shelf.
- 6) The High Seas.
- 7) The Deep Sea Bed (under UNCLOS as altered by
the - 1994 Agreement).
6Internal Waters
- Name some bodies of water that are classified as
internal waters. (UNCLOS art. 8). - What power does the State surrounding the
internal waters have over those waters? (UNCLOS
art. 2). - Some bays are also classified as internal waters.
Which ones? (UNCLOS art. 10). Where is the
baseline for measuring a bay? (UNCLOS art. 10). - What is an historic bay? (UNCLOS art. 10(6)).
7The Territorial Sea
- What is the territorial sea? (UNCLOS art. 2).
- How broad is the territorial sea? (UNCLOS art.
3). - From which point is the base line for the
territorial sea measured? (UNCLOS art. 5, 6,
7,9). - What rights does the coastal state have over the
airspace over the territorial sea? (UNCLOS art.
2(2)).
8Rights for Foreign Ships in the Territorial Sea
- What rights do foreign ships have in the
territorial sea of another state? (UNCLOS arts.
17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24-32). - Do aircraft also have these rights over the
territorial sea? - What is innocent passage? (UNCLOS art. 19)
- What can the coastal state do if it believes that
a foreign state is not engaged in innocent
passage through its territorial sea?(UNCLOS arts.
25(1), 30, 31).
9U.S. v. Conroy/U.S. v. Walker U.S. Ct of Appeals
1979
- What happened in this case?
- On what basis did the defendants claim that the
seizure in Haitian territorial waters was
illegal? - Do you agree with the courts interpretation of
14 USC section 89 (bottom of pps. 188-189) and
the courts view of the scope of the US Coast
Guards powers? - On what basis did the court rule that the Coast
Guard had the right to enter Haitian territorial
waters even without specific permission? - Does the right of innocent passage include the
right to arrest vessels in the territorial sea of
other states? If such an arrest is a violation of
the coastal states rights, which entity (or
entities) may complain about the violation?
10Archipelagos
- How are the baselines drawn around mid-ocean
archipelagos? - Do foreign ships have a right of passage through
the archipelagic waters inside the baselines? Is
this the same as the right of innocent passage
through territorial seas? - Do aircraft have a right to fly over archipelagic
waters without first securing permission?
11International Straits
- Why did the UNCLOS expansion of the breadth of
the territorial sea to a maximum of 12 nautical
miles create a problem for passage of ships and
aircraft through straits?
12Corfu Channel Case (U.K. v. Albania) 1949
I.C.J. 4
- Customary Definition of an International Strait
Map of Corfu (Kerkyra) http//apartments-alexandr
os.travel-greece.org/images/corfu_map.png - Britain claimed that Albania had fired at
two of her military cruisers while they were
passing near the Albanian coast in May 1946. The
Albanians claimed that the area was territorial
sea and that foreign military ships had no right
to pass without prior permission. The UK argued
that the water was an international strait and,
if so, all ships, whether military or mercantile,
had the right of innocent passage. - How did Albania argue that the Corfu Channel
should not be classified as an international
strait? How did the Court define an international
strait? What rights do foreign ships have in
international straits? What do you think the
Court meant by innocent passage.?
13UNCLOS Definition of a Strait
- Study the following articles of UNCLOS arts.
36-44 (transit passage and definition of certain
types of straits) 19 (innocent passage)
45(1)b() and 45(2) (innocent passage through
certain straits) 38 (island straits). - How is the right of transit passage different
from the right of innocent passage?
14Question p. 195
- Map of the Straits of Tiran www.worldatlas.com/aa
tlas/infopage/gulfofaqaba.htm - Study the map of the Straits of Tiran p. 196.
The Straits of Tiran run from the Red Sea into
the Gulf of Aqaba. The maximum width of the Gulf
is 17 nautical miles. The only navigable channel
through the Straits is 3 miles wide. Assume that
all States bordering the Gulf claim the maximum
territorial sea possible under UNCLOS. - 1)What right does a foreign ship have to pass
through the Straits of Tiran? - 2) What right does foreign aircraft have to fly
over the Straits of Tiran? - 3) What right does the coastal state have to
suspend rights of passage through the Straits and
when?
15The Contiguous Zone
- This zone started out as a type of a security
zone but there was no agreement on its breadth or
the limitations on the power of the coastal state
in the zone. Now read art. 33. Just what powers
does the coastal state have in the contiguous
zone?
16The Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ)
- Read UNCLOS art. 55.
- What rights does the coastal state have in the
EEZ? See arts. 56, 61, 62, 69, 70 73 74. - What rights do foreign states have in the EEZ?
See arts. 58
17The Continental Shelf (CS)
- Read art. 76, 82, 7, 77, 81.
- What are the rights of coastal states in the CS?
- What are the rights of foreign states in waters
above the CS? See art. 78, 79. - For delimitation of the CS when claimed by more
than one state see art. 83, 287, 284, 76 and
Annex II.