The Law Of The South China Seize
Territorial
sea disputes can be heated up or cooled off at will or when other political
issues require attention. We are currently in a “heating up” stage, though a
2002 Phnom Penh Declaration of Conduct of Parties in South China Sea calls for
trust, restraint, and settlement by juridical means. Today, world citizens call
for calm and a policy of mediation and arbitration before current tensions lead
to ever-greater divisions.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry
spokeswoman Hua Chunying replied on 24 January 2017 to statements of the new US
President on US interests in the South China Sea delimitation issues saying
“China is firm in safeguarding our rights and interest in the South China Sea…
China has indisputable sovereignty over the South China Sea islands and their
adjacent waters. The United States is not a party to the South China Sea
issue.” Her heated statement came in response to a 23 January statement of
White House spokesman Sean Spicer who had said “If those islands are, in fact,
in international waters and not part of China proper, we’ll make sure we defend
international interests from being taken over by one country.”
The South China Sea islands
delimitations have been an issue for some time and can be the source of
increasing tensions. Therefore, it is useful to look at the Law of the Sea
Convention and the way that national claims have come to dominate what my
friend John Logue, then Director of Villanova University Common Heritage
Institute called “the Law of the Seize.” What started out in November 1967 with
a General Assembly presentation by Ambassador Arvid Pardo of Malta as a call to
establish a new political and legal regime for the ocean space ended in
December 1982 with a draft convention. It was a mixed bag of successes and
disappointments, but the Convention on the Law of the Sea has now been ratified
by 162 states but not by the United States and certain other industrialized
states.
Ambassador Pardo’s phrase ‘the
common heritage of mankind’ meant more than a global commons, open to all to
exploit. It implied the establishment of rules by which exploitation of a part
of the earth’s resources were to be governed, and of institutions capable of
acting on behalf of mankind as a whole. For Pardo, the ‘common heritage of
mankind’ was to lead to the transformation of world politics.[1]
For world citizens, the quality of
the Law of the Sea Convention was of particular significance. The Convention
tried to structure what had been largely customary international law and state
practice into a legal comprehensive treaty. The Convention was an effort to
formulate a written constitution for the world’s oceans. It was perhaps the
most comprehensive legislative attempt in the annals of international law. The
Convention specified that the greater part of the oceans was considered res
communitis, a global common beyond national ownership, although the diplomats
accepted an extension of national sovereignty from three to 12 miles from the
coast line and a new concept of a 200 mile Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ).
However, the UN Law of the Sea
Conference was first and foremost a political conference with over 160 states
participating. From the outset of the conference, it was agreed that the
convention had to be drafted by consensus in order to create a political and
legal system for the oceans acceptable to all − to manage what Arvid Pardo had
called ‘the common heritage of mankind’. During the negotiations, there were
groupings that cut across the Cold War divisions of the times, especially
within a group called “the landlocked and geographically disadvantaged
countries.” There were also informal groups of persons who acted in a private
capacity, a mixture of NGO representatives, legal scholars, and business
corporation representatives who prepared suggestions on many of the issues of
the conference.[2]
Although the negotiations were
carried out by the representatives of governments, all considered to be equal,
there were a number of key individuals who through their personality, vision,
negotiating skills, and drive played roles well beyond the status in world
politics of their States. Thus, the President of the conference, Hamilton
Shirley Amerasinghe of Sri Lanka was an outstanding leader, so much so, that
when there was a change in government in Sri Lanka and Amerasingh was replaced
as Ambassador to the UN, it was decided, after heated debates, that he should
continue as President of the conference − the only case of a private citizen
directing a UN conference. Unfortunately, he died in 1980 before the conference
ended so he did not see the fulfillment of his efforts. He was replaced as
President by a man who had already played a key role as chair of a working
group, the very able Tommy Koh of Singapore. Paul Engo of Cameroon, chair of a
different working group, was the dynamic voice of Africa, while Jens Evensen of
Norway was the most active and constructive leader among European and North
American diplomats.
The conference was, in many ways, a
race against time as unilateral measures by individual states were breaking old
conventional rules, making ocean practices a mixed pattern of national
legislation, and customary international law. Unilateral legislation was being
passed concerning the two key issues of the conference: national sovereignty
beyond the shore line and deep sea mineral mining. South American states were
claiming a 200-mile limit beyond the shore line, and the US Congress had passed
legislation to allow US corporations to mine mineral resources on the sea bed,
in particular manganese nodules.[3]
The forces of nationalism were too
strong to be swayed by Pardo’s appeals to international cooperation and
technocratic rationality. Instead the coastal states, developed and developing
alike, saw in the newly available ocean areas an unexpected windfall, offering
the prospect of a previously unimagined extension of their natural resource
base through the creation of a 200-mile Exclusive Economic Zone. The economic
goal of national autonomy had prevailed over the interests in global
cooperation, setting in motion the processes of establishing vast national
enclosures of offshore areas, especially those enclosures consonant with the
new Exclusive Economic Zone regime. International cooperation had yielded to
national autonomy.
During the conference, there were
lengthy discussions concerning the exclusive economic zone of 200 miles around
‘islands’, ‘rocks’, and ‘low-tide elevations’. The distinctions were loosely
made, and no one saw that the mining of petroleum around islands would become
today an important political issue and a source of international conflict.
Conflicts over national sea boundaries are particularly strong in the Pacific
Ocean among China, Vietnam, the Philippines, Japan, Taiwan, and Cambodia, with
India and Indonesia watching closely. The disputes arise largely because of the
claims of waters around small islands as national territory. Most of these
island are not permanently inhabited but are claimed as the starting point of
“territorial waters”. Originally, the disputes concerned exclusive fishing
rights within national territorial zones. Now the issues have become stronger,
as it is believed that there are large oil and gas reserves in these areas.[4]
Concerning China’s dispute with
Japan (which is also largely true of China’s policy with other Asian
countries), Krista Wiegand writes “China’s current strategy is to negotiate
with Japan over joint development of natural gas and oil resources outside the
disputed zone This seems to be the most rational strategy it can take in the
disputes. Rather than dropping its territorial claim, China continues to
maintain its claim for sovereignty, while at the same time benefiting from
joint development of natural gas resources. By maintaining the territorial
claim, China also sustains its ability to confront Japan through diplomatic and
militarized conflict when other disputed issues arise”.[5]
Territorial sea disputes can be
heated up or cooled off at will or when other political issues require
attention. We are currently in a “heating up” stage, though a 2002 Phnom Penh
Declaration of Conduct of Parties in South China Sea calls for trust,
restraint, and settlement by juridical means. Today, world citizens call for
calm and a policy of mediation and arbitration before current tensions lead to
ever-greater divisions.
*Rene Wadlow is the President of the Association
of World Citizens, an international peace organization with consultative status
with ECOSOC, the United Nations organ facilitating international cooperation on
and problem-solving in economic and social issues.
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