Audience publique tenue le lundi 28 février 1994, à 10 heures, au Palais de la Paix, sous la présidence de M. Bedjaoui, président

Document Number
087-19940228-ORA-01-00-BI
Document Type
Number (Press Release, Order, etc)
1994/1
Date of the Document
Bilingual Document File
Bilingual Content

Non- Corrigé

Uncorrectecl

International Court Cour international*
de Justice
of Justice

THE HAGUE LA HAYE

Public Sitting

held on Monday 28 February 1994, at 10 a-m., at the Perce Palace,

President Bedjaoui preafdfng

in the case concerning Maritime Delimi ta tion and Terri torirl Questi on8
Between Qatar and Bahrain

(Qatar v. Bahrain)

VERBATIM RECORD

Audience publique

tenue le lundi 28 février 1994, à 10 heures, au Palais de la Paix,

BOUB la présidence de M. Bedjaoui, président

en l'affaire de la Délimitation maritime et den qrie#tion# territoriale#
entre le Qatar et Bahrein

(Qatar c. Bahreïn)

COMPTE RENDU President Bedjaoui
Vice-President Schwebel
Judges Oda
Ag0
Sir Robert Jennings

Judges Tarassov
Gui1laume
Shahabuddeen
Aguiïar Mawdsley

Weeramantry
Ranjeva
Herczegh
Jiuyong
Fleischhauer

Koroma

Judges ad hoc Valticos
Ruda

Registrar ~alencia-OspinaPréçentç M. Bedjaoui, Président
M. Schwebel, Vice-Président

MM. Oda
Ag0
sir Robert Jennings
MM. Tarassov

Gui1laume
Shahabuddeen
Aguilar Mawdsley
Weeramantry
Ranjeva

Herczegh
Jiuyong
Fleischhauer
Koroma, juges

MM. Valticos,
Ruda, juges ad hoc

M. Valencia-Ospina, Greffier~lre Cover~mcnt of Qatar is be represented by:

H.E. Dr. Najeeb Al-Nauimi, Minister LegalAdviser,

as Agent and Counsel;

Mr. Adel Sherbini, Legal Expert,

as Legal Adviser;

Mr. Sami Abushaikha, LegalExpert,

as Legal Adviser;

Mr. Jean-Pierre Quéneudec, Professor of InternationalLaw at the
University of Paris 1,

Mr. Jean Salmon, Professorat the Universitélibre de Brwcelles,

Mr. R. K. P. Shankardass, Senior Advocate, Supreme Court of India,

Former Presidentof the International Bar Association,

Sir Ian Sinclair, K.C.M.G., Q.C., Barrister at Law, Member of the
Institute of InternationalLaw,

Sir Francis Vallat, G.B.E., K.C.M.G., Q.C., Professor emeritusof
InternationalLaw at the University of London,

as Counsel andAdvocates;

Mr. Richard Meese, Advocate, partner in Frere Cholmeley, Paris,

Miss Nanette E. Pilkington,Advocate, Frere Cholmeley, Paris,

Mr. David S. Sellers, Solicitor,Frere Cholmeley, Paris

The Government of Bahrain is represented by:

H.E. Dr. Husain Mohammed Al Baharna, Minister of State for Legal
Affairs, Barrister at Law,

as Agent and Counsel;

H.E. Mr. Karim EbrahimAl Shakar, Ambassador of the State of Bahrain
to the Netherlands; <i

Mr. Derek W. Bowett, C.B.E., Q.C., F.B.A., Whewell Professoremeritus
in the University of Cambridge,

Mr. Keith Highet, Mernberof the Bars of the District of Columbia and
New York,Le Gouvernement du Qatar est représenté par :

S. Exc. M. Najeeb Al-Nauimi, ministre conseiller juridique,

comme agent et conseil;

M. Adel Sherbini, expert juridique,

comme conseillerjuridique;

M. Sami Abushaikha, expert juridique,

comme conseiller juridique;

M. Jean-PierreQuéneudec, professeur de droit international à
l'universitéde Paris 1,

M. Jean Salmon, professeur à l'Universitélibre de Bruxelles,

M. R. K. P. Shankardass, SeniorAdvocate à la Cour suprême

de l'Inde, ancien président de l'InternationalBar Association,

Sir Ian Sinclair, K.C.M.G.,Q.C., Barrister at Law, membre de
l'institut de droit international,

Sir Francis Vallat, G.B.E., K.C.M.G.,Q.C., professeur émérite de
droit international à ltUniversitéde Londres,

comme conseils et avocats;

M. Richard Meese, avocat, associé du cabinet Frere Cholmeley à Paris,

Mlle Nanette E. Pilkington,avocat, du cabinet Frere Cholmeley à
Paris,

M. Davld S. Sellers, Sollcitor, du cabinet Frere Cholmeley à Paris.

Le Gouvernement de Bahreïn est représenté par :

S. Exc. M. Husain Mohammed Al Baharna, ministre d'Etat chargé des
affaires juridiques,Barrister at Law,

comme agent et conseil;

S. Exc. M. Karim EbrahimAl Shakar, ambassadeur de 1'Etat de Bahrein
aux Pays-Bas;

M. Derek W. Bowett, C.B.E.,Q.C., F.B.A., professeur émérite, ancien
titulaire de la chaire Whewell à l'Universitéde Cambridge,

M. Keith Highet, membre des barreauxdu district de Columbia et de

New York,Mr. Eduardo Jiménez de Aréchaga, Professor of InternationalLaw at

the Law School, Catholic University, Montevideo, Uruguay,

Mr. Elihu Lauterpacht,C.B.E., Q.C., Honorary Professorof

International Lawand Director of the Research Centre for
InternationalLaw, University of Cambridge; Memberof the Institut
de droit international,
*

Mr. Prosper Weil, Professor emeritus at the Université de droit,
diéconomie et de sciences socialesde Paris,
..
as Counsel and Advocates;

Mr. Donald W. Jones, Solicitor,Trowers & Hamlins, London,

Mr. John H. A. McHugo, Solicitor, Trowers & Hamlins, London,

Mr. David Biggerstaff, Solicitor,Trowers & Hamlins, London,

as Counsel.M. Eduardo Jiménez de Aréchaga, professeur de droit internationa l
la faculté de droit de l'université catholique de Montevideo,

Uruguay,

M. Elihu Lauterpacht,C.B.E., Q.C., professeur honorairede droit
internationalet directeur du Research Centre for InternationalLaw

de l'Universitéde Cambridge; membrede l'Institut de droit
international,

M. Prosper Weil, professeur émérite à l'universitéde droit,

d'économie et de sciences socialesde Paris,

corne conseils et avocats;

M. Donald W. Jones, Solicitor, du cabinet Trowerset Hamlins à

Londres,

M. John H. A. McHugo, Solicitor, du cabinet Trowers et Hamlins à
Londres,

M. David Biggerstaff, Solicitor, ducabinet Trowers et Hamlins à
Londres.

comme consei1 S. -8-

Le PRESIDENT : L'audience est ouverte.

La Cour se réunit aujourd'hui, en application des dispositions des

articles 43 à 46 de son Statut, pour entendre les Parties en leurs

plaidoiries dans l'affaire de la Délimitationmaritime et des questions

territoriales entrele Qatar et Bahrein, sur les questionsde compétence

et de recevabilité soulevées enl'espèce.

Avant d'ouvrir l'audience en cette affaire, il échet d'abord de

parachever la composition de la Cour. A compter du 6 février 1994, trois

nouveaux juges sont devenus membres dela Cour, après avoir été élus par

l'Assemblée générale et le Conseil de sécurité des Nations Unies. A la

même époque, deux de nos collègues, M. Oda et M. Herczegh, ont été réélus

pour un nouveau mandat; nous enles félicitonset sommes tres heureux de

pouvoir continuer à bénéficier de leur participation aux tâches dela

Cour. De surcroît, chacune des Parties en la présente affaire, le Qatar

et Bahrein, ont usé de la faculté que leur confère l'article 31 du Statut

de la Cour, de désigner un juge ad hoc pour siéger en l'affaire.

L'article 20 du Statut de la Cour disposeque "Tout membre de la Cour

doit, avant d'entrer en fonction, en séance publique, prendre

l'engagementsolennel d'exercer ses attributionsen pleine impartialité

et en pleine conscience." Au cas présent cettedisposition comprend les

juges ad hoc. Je vais donc direquelques mots de la carrière et des

qualificationsde chacun de ces juges, puis je les inviterai,.suivant

l'ordre de préséance et d'ancienneté, à faire leur déclaration

sole~melle.

M. le juge Shi Jiuyong, de nationalité chinoise, a été le conseiller

juridique du ministère des affaires étrangères dela République populaire -9-

de Chine, et membre de la Commissiondu droit international, dontil a

été le président lors desa quarante-deuxièmesession en 1990. Il a fait

ses études à l'Université St. John de Shanghai, et à l'université de

Columbia de New York. Il a accompli une carrière éminente dansle

domaine de la recherche juridiqueet de l'enseignement, comme professeur,

comme représentant de son pays et-comme conseilLer juridique.

M. le juge Carl-August Fleischhauer,de nationalitéallemande, est

certes bien connude la Cour, et plus encore de l'organisation des

Nations Unies, puisque depuis dix ans, il est le conseiller juridiquede

l'organisation. C'est en cette qualité qu'il a eu à participer à

trois affaires consultatives portées devant la Cour; plus tôt dans sa

carrière, il a participé, au nom de la République fédérale allemande, à

deux affaires auxquellescet Etat &tait partie. 11 a fait ses études à

Heidelberg, à Grenoble, à Paris et à Chicago, et il est entré dans la

carrière diplomatique,puis a accédé au poste de conseiller juridique du

ministère fédéral desaffaires étrangères.

M. le juge Abdul G. Xoroma, de nationalité sierra-léonienne,vient

aussi à La Haye en provenance de New York, où il était le représentant

permanent de son pays auprès de l'Organisationdes Nations Unies, avec

rang et qualité d'ambassadeurextraordinaireet plénipotentiaire. 11 a

fait ses études en Sierra Leoneet à l'universitéd1Etat de Kiev, ainsi

qu'à l'universitéde Londres. Il a accompli une longue carrièreau

service de son gouvernement,comme conseillerjuridique, comme

haut-commissaire,et comme ambassadeur; il a représenté son pays en de

nombreuses conférenceset, pendant seizeans, il a été membre de la

Sixième Commissionde l'Assemblée générale des NationsUnies. - 10 -

Quant aux juges ad hoc désignés pour la présente affaire, il est

heureux pour la Cour que le choix des Parties se soit porté sur

deux juges particulièrement expérimentés. Bahrein a désigné en qualité

de juge ad hoc M. Nicolas Valticos, juge a la Cour europeenne des droits

de l'homme, et récemment membre d'une Chambre de cette Cour

internationale de Justice, en qualité dejuge -adhoc;-dans -l'affairedu

Différend frontalier terrestre, insulaire et maritime entre El Salvador

et le Honduras. M. Valticos est membre de la Cour permanente

d'arbitrage, et ancien professeur de l'université de Genève.

,-
M. le juge José-Maria Ruda a été désigné par le Qatar. Il suffit de
v
rappeler à son égard qu'il a été un membre particulièrement éminent de la

Cour de 1973 à 1991 et en a 6té le Président de 1988 à 1991.

J'invite maintenant chacun de ces juges à prendre l'engagement

solennel prescrit par le Statut et je demande à toutes les personnes

présentes à l'audience de se lever.

M. SHI :

"1 solemnly declare that 1 will perform my duties and
exercise my powers as Judge honourably, faithfully, impartially

and conscientiously."

Le PRESIDENT : M. Fleischhauer.

M. FLEISCHHAUER :

"Je déclare solennellement que je remplirai mes devoirs et

exercerai mes attributions de juge en tout honneur et
dévouement en pleine et parfaite impartialité et en toute
conscience."

Le PRESIDENT : M. Koroma. Judge KOROMA :

"1 solemnly declare that 1 will perform my duties and
exercise my powers as Judge honourably,faithfully, impartially

and conscientiously."

Le PRESIDENT : M. Valticos

M. VALTICOS : .,

"Je déclare solennellementque je rempliraimes devoirs et
exercerai mes attributions de juge en tout honneur et
dévouement, en pleine et parfaite impartialitéet en toute

conscience."

Le PRESIDENT : M. Ruda.

Judge RUDA :

"1 solemnly declare that 1 will perform my duties and
exercise my powers as Judge honourably,faithfully,impartially
and conscientiously."

Le PRESIDENT : Veuillez vous asseoir. Je prends acte des

déclarationssolennelles faites par MM. les juges Shi, Fleischhaueret

Kororna,et les déclare dûment installés comme membres de la Cour.

Je prends acte également des déclarations solennelles faites par

M. le juge Valticos et M. le juge Ruda, et les déclare dûment installés

en qualité de juges ad hoc en l'affaire de la Délimitationmaritime et

des questions territoriales entrele Qatar et Bahrein.

The proceedings in the case were begun on 8 July 1991 by an

Application filed by the State of Qatar, institutingproceedings against

the State of Bahrain in respectof certain disputes definedby Qatar as

disputes between the two States relatingto sovereignty over the Hawar

islands, sovereignrights over the shoals of Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah,

and the delimitationof the maritime areas of the two States. - 12 -

In that Application Qatarfounded the jurisdiction of the Court upon

certain agreements between the Parties stated to have been concluded in

December 1987 and December 1990, the subject and scope of the commitment

to jurisdictionbeing determined, according to Qatar, by a formula

proposed by Bahrain to Qatar on 26 October 1988 and accepted by Qatar in

December 1990. By letters addressed to the:-Registrar of the Court on

14 July 1991 and 18 August 1991 Bahrain contested the basisof

jurisdiction invokedby Qatar. At a meeting between the Presidentof the

Court and therepresentativesof the Parties held on 2 October 1991 it

was agreed that questions of jurisdictionand admissibility in this case

should be separately determinedbefore any proceedings on the merits.

Time-limits were accordingly fixed for a Memorial of Qatar and a

Counter-Memorialof Bahrain on questions of jurisdictionand

adrnissibility, and those pleadings were duly filed. By an Order of

26 June 1992, the Court found that the filing of further pleadingsby the

Parties was necessary, and filed tirne-limits for a Reply of Qatar and

Rejoinder of Bahrain, which were duly filed. The case has therefore been

ready for hearing, for purposes of Article 54 of the Rules of Court,

since the filing of the Rejoinder on 29 December 1992; but as a result

of the number of cases on the Court's list, it has not been possibleto

open the oral proceedings until today.

Having ascertained the views of the Parties on the matter, the Court

has decided, pursuant to Article 53, paragraph 2, of the Rules of Court,

that the pleadings which have been filed, and the annexed documents,

shall be made accessible to the public with effect from the opening of

the oral proceedings. - 13 -

1 note the presence in the Court of the Agents, counsel and

advocates of the two Parties. It was Qatar, which, in accordance with

the Court's Order of 11 October 1991, filed the first pleading on

jurisdictionand admissibility,and Qatar will thus address the Court

first, and 1 give the floor to the Agent of Qatar.

. . ...... . .

Mr. AL-NAUIMI:

1. Mr. President,Members of the Court, it is not without emotion
*

that a laver appears before the International Court of Justice, and 1

would like to add that it is an honour and a privilege for me to

represent the Government of the State of Qatar before the Court in this

case between the State of Qatar and the State ofBahrain. My Governrnent

has asked me to communicate to you its sincererespects upon this

occasion when, for the first time, two Arab GulfStates are appearing

here. Mr. President, 1 would also like to take this opportunity, on

behalf of al1 the members of the deiegation of Qatar to congratulateyou,

Sir, on your recent electionas Presldent of this diçtinguished

institution. Our congratulationsequally go out to

Vice-PresidentSchwebel and to thenewiy-electedjudges whom we are

delighted to welcome on the bench today.

2. 1 am also pieased this morning to convey throughDr. Al-Baharna,

to the Government and the people of the State of Bahrain, the most

sincere regardsof my Government and of the brotherly peopleof Qatar,

upon the occasion of Bahrain's presence todayin this courtroom. This

Court is, par excellence, a place wheredisputes are solved by the

peaceful means of judicial settlement, as mentioned by Article 33 of the

Charter of the United Nations. The case brought by Qatar's Application - 14 -

is important for both States. It involves questions of maritime

delimitation and territorial sovereignty which areof vital importance

for Qatar, for its relations with its neighbours and for other States in

the Gulf region.

3. Mr. President, Members of the Court, on 8 July 1991 Qatar filed

its Application institutingproceedings against Bahrain linrespect of

certain disputes betweenthe two States relating to sovereignty over the
w
Hawar islands, sovereign rights overthe shoals of Dibal and

Qit'at Jaradah, and the delimitationof the maritimeareas of the two

States. As explained in Qatar's Application, in 1987 and 1990, as a

result of many years of mediation, the two States entered into

internationalagreements conferring jurisdiction upon the Court in

accordance with Article 36, paragraph 1, of the Statute. Qatar has

seised the Courtby means of an ~ppiication in accordance with

Article 40, paragraph 1, of the Statute of the Court, read with

Article 38 of the Rules of Court. Counsel forQatar will develop these

points later.

4. Nearly three years have now passed since the filing of the

Application. In these introductoryremarks, Mr. President, 1 wish

briefly to recall Bahrain's attitude since that filing.

First, by letter of 14 July 1991, Bahrain requested that the

Application filed by Qatar shouldnot be entered in the General List, and

that no action shouldbe taken in the proceedings. Of course, Bahrain

was told thatArticle 38, paragraph 5, of the Rules of Court was mot

applicable in the present circumstances. The casewas then duly entered

in the General List and given a title, as recorded in the Order made by

the Presidentof the Court on 11 October 1991. - 15 -

Second, by another irregular communicationof 18 August 1991,

Bahrain purported to contest the basis of jurisdictionof the Court

invoked by Qatar. However, Bahrain,despite being a party to the Statute

of the Court, failed to comply with the Rules of Court, refusing to

appoint an Agent or to file a preliminary objection. This problem was

only solved as a result of..anagreement subsequcntly~eached~between the

two States that "questionsof jurisdiction andadmissibility in this case

should be separatelydetermined before any proceedings on the merits".

This agreement is noted in the Order of the Court dated 11 October 1991

It was only on 26 October 1991 that Bahrain appointed its Agent.

Third, Bahrain has alleged in itspleadings that it is an insult and

a dishonour for a State to be brought to the Court by another State and

placed in the situation of a defendant. Engagingin peaceful means of

settling a dispute can, of course, never be considered as a dishonour,

and, in any event, the Court will note that, if Bahrain had filed a

preliminary objection, it would todaybe in the position of a claimant

and Qatar would be in the position of defendant

5. Other aspects of the conduct of the Parties should also be

recalled.

In December 1987 both Qatar and Bahrain agreedthat until the final

ruling by the Court on the disputed matters:

"(a) Each party shall undertake from to date to refrain from
any action that wouldstrengthen its legal position, weaken

the legalposition of the other party, or change the
status quo with regard to the disputed matters. Any such
action shall be regarded nul1 and void and shall have no
legal effect in this respect."

This Agreement echoedthe Parties' earlier undertakingunder the Second

Principle of the 1978 Principles for the Framework for Reaching a - 16 -

Settlement, which were achieved withinthe context of the Saudi Mediation

and have been referred to in the pleadings as the "Framework" (MO,

Vol. III, Ann. 11.1, p. 3).

Qatar has done nothing to attempt to modify thelegal situation

existing between the Parties or to modify the statusquo with regard to

the disputed matters. Bahrain,. -however,has,not exercisedthe same

restraint. As the Court is aware, various incidents have taken place

since 1991 relating to the underlying disputes. Qatar can only regard

these incidents as a breach by Bahrain of its undertakingto respect the

status quo principle embodiedin the Framework and the December 1987

Agreement.

In addition, afterthe filing of the Application, Judge Jennings,

who at the time was Presidentof the Court, received an assurance from

Qatar that it would refrain from any act which mightendanger the peace

in the region. Since then, Qatar has abided by this assurance. However,

Qatar has reason to believe thatBahrain is reinforcing itsmilitary

presence on the main Hawar Island, including theentry into the islandof

heavy artillery and various military vehicles.

In any event, what do these actions show? They show clearly that

the long outstanding dispute betweenthe two sister States, with respect

to which Qatar has been constantly seeking justice for more than

50 years, is still alive and needs to be resolved peacefully on the basis

of international law. - 17 -

6.Mr. President,Members ofthe Court, inmy presentatica1inow

propose,as briefly aspossible, to recallto theCourtfirst (1)sane

aspectsof the gecyraphicaalndhistorical backgrountdo theexisting and

lmg-outstandind gisputes (seeMQ,pp. 9-31; CMB,pp. 12-17; RQ, pp.7-11

andRB,p. 8) and second (II)saneof the rmstimportant aspect of the

various attemptsto solvethesedisputes finally thm~gh negotiationor

by recourseto a thirdparty.I hopethat this willseme as auseful

introductiotno thepresentationo sf learnedcaniselon behalfof Qatar

whichwillfollow. 1 bearin mind that&en referring to the questions

of the jurisdictimof the Court to entertainthedisputeandof the

admissibilitoyf theApplicatim, theOrdermade by the Presidentof the

Court on 11Octaber 1991statedthat"itis necessary for the Courtto be

informedof al1thecontentiona sndevidence of factand law onwfiichthe

Parties relyin thatconnection".

1 also bearin mind thatboth Statesare herenowbefore the Courtat the

stageof theoralpleadings. Accordingto Article60 of the Rulesof

Court,Qatar'soralstatement:

"shallbe directedto the issuesthatstilldividethe
Parties,and shallnot go overthe wholegroundcavered
by thepleadings, or merely repeat t hectsand
arguments thesecontain".

Withyour permission,duringtheseoralpleadings we will notgive

thereferences fot rhequotationswe will use,but these -18 -

referenceswillbe cdcated to theRegistry, andwe dd be

gratefulif it couldinsertthem in thetextof the transcript.

7. (1) To begin,1 Mte yauto my regian,where the territories

of QatarandBahrain are locatedand, asa guide, 1 willprovideyauwith

a shortpresentatioo nf saneaspectsof thegecgraphicaa lndhistorical -
i
backgraundof the existingand long-outstandin disputes. 1 do not

intendto enter into the substan ofethe caserelatingto themaritime

delimitatioannd territorialquestionsbetweenQatar and Bahrain but

simplyto givethenecessary backgroundto thepresentproceedings

dealingwiththequestions oj furisdictioanndadrnissibility.

8.Mr. President,thismrning 1 havedistributedt ,hraughthe

Registry,forthe Court,and directly to Bahrain'sdelegation,an

enlaryedcopyof the mp (L/P& S/12/38066)appearingat page 36 of

Qatar'sApplication, so as toenablethe Court to followthispartof my

presentatiomnoreeasily. w

The disputes braughtbeforethe Court by Qatar'sApplicationof

July 1991are:

-
thedisputerelating to swereigntyovertheHawarislandç (see

Applicationof Qatar,paras. 11-17);and
-
the disputerelatingto thedelimitatioo nf themaritime baundary

(ibid.,paras. 18-25). - 19 -

9. The disputerelatingtothe Hawaxislands, whichliealangthe

westerncoastof Qatar,amse duringthe 1930s,againstthebackground of

explorationforoil in theregion. Followingpmtests by Qatarto the

Britishauthoritiea sgainstBahxainfsincusionson Ha-, theBritish

Governmentdecidedin 1939thattheHawaxislands belongedto Bahrainand

net to Qatar (MQ,Vol.II, Arin.1.38.-.Qatar.strungly-pmteste.against

thisdecision at thetirne(see,MQ,Vol.11, Anns. 1-40,1.43,1.45and

1-47),andhas continued to oppose itandto maintain thatit is irnmlid.

10. Thedispute relatin tgo thedelimitatiaonf themaritime

boundaryarisesoutof a Britishdecision of 1947to delimitthe sea-bed

boundarybetween thetwoStatesin accordance wit hquitableprinciples

by meam of adan linebasedgenerally on theccnzfiguratioc~lthe

coastlineof the Bahrain mainislandandthepeninçula of Qatar (MQ,

Vol.II, Ann. 1.53). Thatdecision specifiedtwoexceptions to the

dividingline. The firstpurported to recognizethatBahrain had

sovereignrightsin theareasof theDibalandQittatJaradahshoals

lyingon theQatarisideof the line,andthe second was th drawingof

the lineso as to giveeffectto theBritishdecision of 1939 thatthe

Hawar islandsbelongeàto Bahrain.

il. In the irmdiateaftennathof theBritishdecision of 1947,

Qatar didnotappose the part of the linewhichtheBritishGovernment

statedwasbasedon theconfiguratio nf the coastlineof thetwoStates

andwasdetermined inaccordancewithequitable principles. .But.Qatar

did protestvigorouslyagainstthe two exception (MQ,Vol.II, Ann.

1.551,andhas continued to appot seoseexceptians eversince. By way

of contrast,Bahrainargued thatJananIslandshouldhave been included

as partof the Hawarqroupof islands (MQ,Vol.II, Ann.1.55), and - 20 -

statedthatit cansidered DibalandQit 'at Jaradahas -1s over which

it had sovereignrights,assertingthatthedividing lineshdd be

adjustedaccordingly (ml Vol. II,Prrin1.54).

12.Now,letus leavethe idate aftermath of theBritish

decisiançand lookat the situationof thedisputes in the 1960s(MQ,

Vol. II,Anns.1.56-1.63). Thevie- of QatarandBahraincanbe

obtainedfranthe British Archivesand fm otherdocuments thatQatar
As theCourtwillbe aware,
andBahrainhavein theirownarchives.

documentsin theBritish Archive are subjectto a 30-yearnon-disclosure

rule. Therefore, so far,BritishArchive documentsdy up to theendof w

1963are in thepublicdanain.

13.In a memrandum of 1964 Bahrainut forwardcertainciaims

concerningthe "underseabaundarybetweenthe twoStates" (Ann.1-56).

In thatmermrandum,BahrainallegedthatDibalandQit'atJaradahwere

islandswiith territorial watearnd thattheyshdd be regarded as

"outercoaçtforthepurposeof determining thebase line frm which

territorial water andmedianlineis to be rneasured".In its 1965

memorandumin reply,Qatarrejected thoseclaimsandalsoreferred to the

disputemer theHawarislands (AM. 1-57).

14. In thesarnmrandum, Qatarpraposed thatal1 thesedisputes

be settledby arbitration.At firstBahrainagreedto this,and the

BritishGuvernment alsoagreedto theprocessof arbitration.

Qatarhad listedthe questioonf the maritime delimitatt ionether

withthequestion of title to the Hawaislandçin itsdraft arbitration

Agreement whichit submittedto theBritishPoliticalAgent in Qatarin

1966 (Ann.1.61). - 21 -

However, Bahrainfrustratedthatarbitral process by refuçingto

agreeto sdmit to ditration the issue of titleto theHawarislands.

On 29 March1966,Qatar was infod that Bahrainwas "netp??=pa.reto

çubnitto arbitrationt"he questioonf "thesovereignto yf theHawar

groupof islandswhich was awardedto Bahrain in 1939"(Ann.1.62).

Bahrainalso stated thatit-wasna- prepared.tosubmit -to.rbitrationthe

questionof the <'sovereignotyBahrainoveranyotherislandor shoal".

The Court willnot:havefailedto noticethatthequestion of

Zubarahwas notmentioned by eitherBahrain orQatar duringthese

praposalsforarbitration.

15. (II)Mr. Fresident,Membersof theCourt, 1 now wishto briefly

outline thestepsleadingto thefilingof Qatar'sApplication i nuly

1991, inparticular thosetakenduringtheperiodof thekindMediation

of the Kingdomof SaudiArabia. Thispresentatiow nillbe made in the

lightof theobjections to jurisdictiornaisedby Bahrainbeforethe

court.

16.AftertheBritish presenc in QatarandBahrainendedin 1971,

thedisputerelating to the Hawarislands remainedoutstandinga,s did

thedispute relatin to themaritime boundary. In additionn,o agreement

had beenreachedwithrespectto thedelimitatioo nf thedisputed

northernareabetweenthe Bahrain LightVessel,thenorthemst pointon

the lineindicated bythe BritishGwernmentdecision of 1947,andthecmtinentalshelfbaundaries of thetwoStates with Iran. in 1975and in

1976,Qatarraisedwith SaudiArabia issues relati togtheexisting

disputes withBahrain, andas a resultit was agreeàthat the Kingdcm of

SaudiArabiawouldunàertake dation betweenQatar andBahrain to

resolvethosedisputes.

17.On 13 March1978,KingKhalidof Saudi Arabiaproposed a setof

"Principlef sor themwork for Reachinga Settlement .

TheFirstPrinciple embodied in theF'rameworrkeferreàto the

ccxnplementa naytureof the disputebsetween thetwocomtriesrelating

to "savereignta yvertheislandç " "maritimeboudaries",and

"territoria waters".

TheSecandPrinciple praridedforthemaintenanco ef thestatusquo.

TheThirdh-inciple inter aliaprohibited QatarandBahrainfran

presenting the disput toany internationa organization.

TheFourth Wincipleenvisaged the formato ifoa cdttee canposed

of representative of thethree countries"withthe aimof reaching

solutions acceptab lethetwoParties on the basisof justice ...".

The Framework wasaccepted in 1983by BahrainandQatarwith a

FifthPrinciple which, initsfinalversion, reads asfol~ows:

"Incasethat the negotiationpsrovidedforin the
fourthprinciplefailto reachagreement on thesolution of one
or moreof theaforesaid bsputedmatters, thG eovernmentosf
thetwocountries shal undertake,in consultatiowniththe
Government of SauàiArabia,to detexmine thebest means of
resolvingthat mtter or mtterç, an thebasis of the
pmisians of internatianallaw.The rulingof the authority
agreedupn for ths purpose shallbe finaland binàing.
(Emphaçi sdded.)

1stress the words"resolvint ghat matters, the basis

of the provision sf internationallawnand "therulingof theauthority

agreedupon forthispurposeshall be fina andbinàing". As willbe - 23 -

shown,theseworùsmarkeda significan tve by QatarandBahrain towardç

the settlemen tf theirdispute. ThetwoStateshave thusbeen in

agreementsince 1983to havetheirdisputefinallysolvedby a third

partyon thebasisof international law.

18. It willbe seenthattheroadto theInternatiod Courtof

Justicehas beena longanddif ficult.one-No-materiapl-ogressin

negotiation sasmade between1983and 1986; anàin 1986a crisisamse

dueto thebreachby Bahrainof theSecd Principle of theFkarmwork,

providingforthemaintenance of the statusquo. Thisledto an armed

clash,hown as "theDibalincident",whichin turnledto theconclusion

of theDecember 1987AgreementunderwhichQatarandBahrainagreedto

refertheirexisting disputesto theCourt.

19. Thetem of the1987Agreementare setout in two letters

dated 19December1987 which were senby KingFahdof SaudiArabia, in

identicalte-, to theAmirof Qatar and theAmirof Bahrain. These

letters containepraposalswhichwereaccepted by kathAmirs and were

made thesubjectof a publicannouncemen tySaudiArabiaon 21December

1987.
Thereis no dispute between the Part thatthe 1987 Agreement

constitute sn internationaagreement.

20. In hispreamble,King FahdremindedtheAmirsof thegood

officeshe hadundertakento helpto find a "justandfinalsettlement"

of the long-standingisputesbetweenthetwo States, relatingto

savereigntwyer theHawarislands, the maritimeboundariesofthe two

countries,andany othermatters.

21. As a basisforsettling thdeisputes,the firstparagraphof the

1987 Agreemenprwided asfollows: "Ailthedisputed matter shallbe referred to the
InternationaClourtof Justice,at TheHague,fora final
rulingbinding upn bothparties, who shailhaveto executeits
tenns"

22.The thirdparagraph of the1987 Agreementreads as follows:

"lhidy: Formationof a cdttee canprising
representativeof theStatesof QatarandBahrain andof the
Kingdomof SaudiArabiafor thepurposeof apprcaching the
InternationalCourtof Justice,andsatisfyinal.the-necessary
requirementtso havethedisputesuhittedto theCourtin
accordancewithitsregdationsand instructionsso thata
finalruling,binding upon kathparties,be issued."

Mr. President,Memhersof the Court,as will beshown by Qatar'sCounsel,

thisparagraph doesnotmakethebasiccdtment to refer thedisputed

mattersto theCourt, mentioned in the firstparagraph,canditianalon

the Partiesreaching a specialagreement, nodroesitprecludeQatarfran

seisingthe Courtunilaterallya ,s Bahrainnow alleges.

23.The fourthparagraph of the1987 Agreementprwides that

"Fourthly: The Kingdanof Saudi Arabiwaillcontinue its
goodofficesto guarantee the implementatioof thesetem."

24.On 15 Nwember 1988, dwing theFifth Meetino gf theTripartite

Ca-rrnittewhich had beensetup in accordance wit thethirditemof the

1987 Agreement,Prince SaudAl-Faisalof SaudiArabia, whowas presiding

mer themeeting, announcedthat mg Fahdconsidered thatDecember 1988

was the date fotrerminatingtheTripartite Ca-rrnitteework. By that

date, the TripartiteCarmitteehadbeen unableto reachan agreement, and

it thereafter cease tofunction.

25.The failureof the Tripartit earmittee'aspproachto theCourt

ledeventually to the conclusio of theD3haAgmxment on

25 Eecmber 1990. ThisAgreementwas reachedpursuantto SaudiArabia's

cornnitmenmt,ntionedin the preamblaend incorporateidn the fourth

paragraphof the 1987Agreement,to continue itsgood officesto helpto - 25 -

find a justand finalsettlementof thedisputes by theCuurt, as agreed

underthe firstparagraph.

26. Thus,after the TripartiteChttee ceasedto function,in

December1988it wasagreed onthe occasioo nf theGCCMt meetings,

in Bahrainand hm in 1988 and 1989,to giveSaudi Arabiafurther

limitedperiods to mediatein an atteqt to-reacha settlementon the

substanceof the disputes. However,no suchsettlementwas reached

duringthoseperiodç. Accordinglya,t theopenhg sessionof theannual

GCC Çumnitwhich wastakingplacein December 1990in Doha, theAmirof

Qatarreminded theotherHeadsof Stateof the -t reachedin 1987

to put anendto the disputeb setweenQatar andBahrain,by referring

them to the Internationalourtof Justice. To facilitatethereference

to the CaurttheAmirof Qatarannounced Qatar'sacceptanceof the

Bahrainifornila. Thisopenedthedcorto an agreement,it being

understccdthatthe Saudi mediationwouldbe givenone furtherchance

before theCourt cdd be seised. A draftagreement wa then prepared

with theassistanceof ûMn, reflectingtheoutcaneof thediscussion of

theHeadsof State. Al1 &s tookplace againstthe backgrounodf the

Iraq-Kuwaictrisis,whichhad demonçtratet dhenecessityof solving

disputesby peacefulmea. in sucha mer thatinternational peaa ced

security,and justice,arenot endangered.

27. The iXhaAgreementis an instrumentwhich,as franMay1991,

allowsthe fullimplementatio of thecdtments made by thetwoStates

in the 1987Agreement.Paragraph (1)of theDohaAg-reemen teadsas

follows: "Thefollowingwas agreed

(1)To reaffirmwhat wasagreedpreviously between thetwo
parties."

Thus, it reiteratesinter alia,the consentof theCourt'sjurisdiction

incorporateidn the 1987 Agreementreaffixmintgheundertakingby both

Partiesto referthedisputeto theCourt. Caunsel forQatarwill
. .
furtherdevelop thispoint.

28. Mr. President,now1 willreadtherelevant passageof

paragraph (2)of theDohaAgreement with respe totçubnissionof the

disputesto the Court:

The followingwas agreed

(2)... Aftertheend ofthispericd (1remindtheCourt that
this is in May 1991),the parties masukit thematterto the
InternationaClourtof Justicein accordance withheBahraini
formula,whichhas ken acceptedby Qatar ..."

29. The "Bahrainiformula"whichis incorporate dy referencein the

Agreementunderparagraph (2)and which wapsroposedby Bahrainin 1988

and finallyacceptedby Qatarin Doha in 1990,definesthe subjectand

scopeof thedisputes which wouldbe suhittedto the Court. Underthe

"TheParties requesttheCourtto decideanymatterof
territorialrightor othertitleor interest which may bea
matterof bfferencebetweenthem; andto drawa single
maritime bounàarybetween their respective maria timesof
seabed,subsoiland çuperjacenw taters"

No problemof translationcanarisesinceBahrainprwided thisfoda

Qatar Englishand

1 wouldadd two remarks:

30. First,thewrittenpleadings sho whatal1 thedisputes which

arebeforetheCourtfor adjudicatio fa11undertheBahrainiformula. - 27 -

Bahrain itselfhas admittedthattheclaimsQatarhaspresented, leading

to therequests thatQatar haçmadein paragraph 41of itsApplication,

areadmissible.

31. Secand,theBahraini formulais beforethe Court. Frcm

uainls pleadingsit appearsBahrainis canplainint ghatitsclaims

withrespect to Zubaraharenotbeforethe Court.

However,these havenot even beendescribedby Bahrain. What does

Bahrainclaim about Zubarah? Qatardoesnotlmm, andneither doesthe

Court. In itspleadings, Bahrainhas introducedsanecarplaints about

Qatar'sattitude vis-à-visZubarah,andthe behaviourof theBritishin

thatconnection. Are thesecanplaints and thearchivaidocuments

concerningZubarah,annexed byBahrainto its-ter-Mgnorial (OB,

Annç. 111.13-111.1and 111.18-111.25 thebasisof Bahrain's claims?

Whoknows? Neither theCourtnorQataryetknowsan whatbais it cauld

be determhedwhetherBahrain's claimsconcerning Zubarahare admissible

or not,underthe Bahrainiformulawhichis incorporate dy referencein

the DohaAgreement. Thetaskis madeeven more diffidt because

Ebhrain'spleadingsoffer no evidenceof any claimhavingbeen made

concerningZubarahbetween 195a 0nd 1988.

32. Mr. President,as theCourtwillrecall,Qatar seised th Court

by meansof an Application,in accordance with Artic40, paragraph1,

of theStatuteof theCourtreadwith Articl3 e8 of theRulesof Court.

It is Qatar'sçuànissionthat theihha AgreementallowedeachPartyto

seisetheCourtunilateralli yn accordancwith the Statuteand Rules,

andto presentitsown claims aftet rhe periodendingin May 1991had

elapsed.Thisviewis confirmed by a recentcammication,dated

29 January1994, franthe ûnaniMinister for Foreignffairs, whoplayed -28 -

a centralmle inthe draftingof theDahaAgreemnt. Bahrains'cancern

that,becauseitsallegedclaimsarenotmentioned by Qatarin its

Application, theycannotbe adjudicateà,reeasilydispelled becauseof

theuse of the wrd "al-Man" in theDahaPqreement, &ch pexmits

Bahrainto filea separate application.

33.As willbe explaine later,thereplacemeno tf.-the.rds "aw

minal-mrafainfl ("eitheroneof the parties"b)y "al-tarafan(""thetwo

parties"or "thepartiesv) in thedrafttextof theMiratteisn Dahawas

quiteacceptable to Qatar,becausebothPartieshad distinct claim so

makebefore the Court,andbecausethislanguage wouldenable each Party w

to presentitsown claimsto the Court. TheDahaAgreement givesboth

QatarandBahrain, separately,theapportunity to haveal1thedisputes,

fallingundertheBahraini formula,considereby theCourt. The

Bahrainiformula wasdeliberateldyesignedto coveral1 themattersin

dispute between Qatar and Bahw rainoutspellingthemout in detail

becauseof theirsensitivity. Againstthis backgroundand in viewof the

longhistoryof the negotiatimforthereference of thedisputes to the

Court, it is unrealistito believethat inDecember1990,in Doha,the

Partieswould havemadeseisinof theCourtconditionau lponthe

conclusionof a specialagreement tboe jointlyçulxrcittedtheCourt.

34. The disputes which Qatar consid fa11withintheBahraini

formula,arebeforetheCourt. If Bahrain wishetso add othedisputes

which it consideralsofa11withinthe Bahrainifornrulaal1 it has to

do is subnitan applicatioto the Court.

35. Moreover,1 recallthatBahrainhas qed thatit has been

disadvantagebdy the fact thait hasbeenput inthe position of a

defendant. 1 wouldliketo statepublicly tcùay,as Agentof theState - 29 -
of Qatar.that 1 dd agreeto thetheles requesting theCourtto

authorizethem to file theirwrittenpleadings sidtaneously in thenext

phaseof theprcceeàingsi tn orderto avoidany suchalleged

disadvantage. In addition,1 wuuldremind Bahrainthat,if it files an

application, th eourtmay at anytimedirectthattheproceedings in the

twocases be joined.to whichQatarwnifd lilcewishaveno objection.

36.FWlly, another passageof paragraph2 of theDdiaAgreement

deservesmention. In furtheranceof paragraph4 of the 1987Agreement,

thatpassage states:

"Thefollowing wasagreed

(2)... SaudiArabia's gd offices will contin dueringthe
subnissionof thematterto arbitration;"

Qatar mt Sayherethatit is verygrateful to theMediatorfor not

havingdeparted franits role of mediatorand foral1hispatient

endeavourswhichhave, interalia, redted in ourpresenceheretoday.

Mediationis,of course,alsoa meançof solvingdisputes according to

Article 33of the Charte rf theUnited Nations. Qataris likewise very

gratefulto theMediatorforhavg acceptedso readilyto continue its

good officeswhilethe case ispending beforethe Court

37. In conclusion ,r. PresidentMembersof the Court, it is

significantthatwithin a periodof threeyears two international

agreementswereenteredintoby Qatarand Bahsain providingforthe -30 -

referenceof theirlong-standind gisputeto theCourt. 1 firmlybelieve

thatthisis evidence of thewillingnessi,ntention andconsentof both

Statesthatyuu should finallyrule upcmthe existingdisputed rnatters,

cwered by theBahraini fonmila,betweentheStateof Qatar and theState

of Bahrainwhichhavebeenbraughtbeforethe Cuurtby Qatar's

Applicatim. .. .-, ...

*

38.1 willnow indicate how andin whatorderthe counselforQatar

are goingto àiscussthe variousissuesin theseproceedings.

First,Sir IanSinclair willexamine the requirementfsor abasisof

jurisdictioonf the Courtas set outin theStatuteandRulesof Court.

He will be followedby Mr. Shankardaswshowillpresentthe factsof

thecaseincluding thoserelating to themediation, the1987 Agreement,

theworkof the Tripartite CorrPnitt eedthe 1990 ihhaAgreement.In

particular,he willdemonstrate thatBahrain's inçistenceon the joint

suànissionby a specialagreement is notconsistent wit the facts.

SirIan Sinclairwillthentake the flooragainto àiscussthe

statu of the Doha Agreement. ProfessorJeanSalniaw nillcanpletethis

analysisof thestatu of the Eoha Agreementby showingthat Bahrain

cannotvalidlyarquethatitsconsentto be boundby thatagreement has

beenexpressed in violationof Bahrain'sconstitutiona requirements,

therebyinvalidatin ghatconsent. -31 -

ProfessorJean-PierrQeuéneudecwillthenturnto the subject of the

interpretatio nf theDahaAgreement and,as counçel,1 willdealwith

the linguisticissuesraisedby Bahrainin connectionwiththe

interpretatio nf theDohaAgreement.

ProfessorJeanSalmonwillalsotakethe flooragain in orderto

reçpondto variousconcernswhich haveken-expressed by-Bahrainin

connection wit hhepresentproceedings. He willthendealwiththe

questionof theadmissibilito yf Qatar'Application.

Finally,SirFrancis Vallat willconcludethis firstroundof

Qatar'spresentationby surrunarizithe casefor Qatarin fa- of the

jurisdictioonf theCourtto entertainthedisputeandtheadmissibility

of Qatar'sPgplication.

39. Mr. President,Membersof theCourt, 1wouldliketo thank you

forthe attentiot nhatyou havegivento my speech. Itmighthavebeen

tm long,but 1 wouldlike torecallthat 1 wasmakingshort a lons gtory

betweenthetwosisterly State of Qatar andBahrain.

As 1 saidbefore,the roadwhichhas ledto the Courthas been a long

one,and 1 wouldliketo repeat my satisfactioant beingpresent here

beforeyou with mybrothers frm Bahrain.

The President,couldyounow cal1upn Sir Ian Sinclairplease.

Thankyou very much. - 32 -

The PRESIDENT: Thank you,Your Ekcellency. 1 givethefloorto

Sir IanSinclair.

SirIanSINCLAIR:Mr. President, Membersof theCourt,it is,of

caurse,a very greatprivilege forme to appearthis mrning and to

aàdressthe Court anbehalfof the State of Qatar. My taskthismrning,

followingthe introductorsytatementby the Pgentfich youhavejust

is to analysethe requirements,s setout in theStatuteand
heard,

mes of Court, forestablishinag basisfortheexercise of jurisdiction

by theCourtin thepresentcase. 1 willinitially discussthe

conditimsfor theexercise of jurisdiction,andwillthenproceedto

deronstratethattheseconditions areamplyfulfilled in thepresent

case.

1. The requirement of cansent

The Parties arefortunateliyn agreementthatthe consentof the

Parties,whether giveinn advanceof the çutxnissioof acaseto the

Courtor in the faceof theCourtitself,is an essential prerequisi ttoe

theassumption of jurisdictiobny theCourtin contentious cases. Thuç,

Qatar hasunequivocallsytatedin itsMernorial:

"Theprinciple of consentof the Partieas the basisof
the jurisdictioonf the Courtto decidein contentious case is
embodiedinArticle 36 of theStatuteandhas beenconfixmedby
the Court on nurnerousccasions." (MQ,Vol. 1,para. 4.04.)

Qatarcited in supportof thispropositiona lengthyseriesof

passagesfranthejurisprudenco ef the present Court and indefran

thatof itspredecessors ,tretchingbackas faras theJudgment of

the PermanenCtourton jurisdictiuna lssuesin the Chonw Factory

casein 1927. - 33 -

Now,theCourtwillhardlyneedreminding thatcasent need not

be givenadhoc in each individualcase andmay havebeen given

generallybeforehand,as wherea Statebecanesa partyto a treaty

pruvidingforthereference to a tribunaof al1disputes thatmay

ariseconcerning its interpretatioonapplicationo ,r des an

OptionalClausedeclaration. TheCourtwihl- equallybleawareof the

consideratiotnhatconsentto theexercise of jurisdictioins quite

distinctfrantheconsentto thegeneralfuncti&g andaperation of

the Courtas an institutiownhichis hlved by beinga partyto the

Statuteof theCourt. Qatardoesnotof cmse contendthat the

jurisdictioonf theCourtis or can be foundedupona treaty

enbdyingtheconsentof both Bahrain andQatargivenin advanceto

refer al1disputes concernii ngsinterpretatio or application to

theCourt; nor indeeddoesQatarseekto relyuponparallel

declarationrseccgnizintgheccmpulsoryjurisdictioonf theCourt

underArticle 36,paragraph2, of theStatute.

The titleof jurisdictioinnvokedby Qatarin thepresent case

is Article36, paragraph1,of the Court'sStatute,which reads:

"Thejurisdictioonf theCourtccmprises al1 cases
which thepartiesreferto it andal1mattersspecially
providedforin the Charte rfthe UnitedNationsor in
treaties and conventionin force."

As the Qatari Agenhas alreadymadeclear,Qatarçuànitsthatthe

basic consenotfboth Parties toconferjurisdictiopnn theCourt

in respectof definedand establisheddisputes between Qatanrd

Bahrainis clearly evidenceby theAgreement enteredintohetween

thetwoStatesin December, 1987. The firstelementin thisAgreement (wfüch1 willhenceforth referto asthe "1987 Agrement")

"Al1the disputedmattersshallbe referred to the
InternationaClourtof Justice,at The Hague,fora final
rulingbindingup bothparties, who shallhaveto execute
itsterms.

The 1987?greement is confid andindeedçupplemente dy theDoha

Agreemmt in the formof agreedMinutessignedby the Foreign

Ministersof Qatar, BahrairandSaudiArabiaon 25 December 1990.

The consentgiven by the Partiesis thusan ad hocconsentevidenced

by theprwisionsof thetwoagreements to which1 havejustmade

reference.

In the jurisdictionalhaseof the CorfuChannel case,the

present Courtstated:

"Whilethe consentof the partiesconfersjurisdiction
on theCourt,neither theStatutenor theRulesrequire
thatthisconsentshouldbe expressed in anyparticular
form..." (I.C.J.Reports 1948,p. 27.)

1 cite this passag onlyto establishthatneithertheStatutenor

the Ruleslaydown thatthe consentof the partiesto confer

jurisdictioonn the Courtin respectof an individualcasemuçt be

evidencedby the conclusio nf a special agreement.

Thus, it is acceptedlawthatconsentgivenad hoc in an

individualcaseneednotbe givenin any specialform. In camienting

on thisproposition,
thelate SirGeraldFitzmaurica edds:

"Inparticular, it neednot takethe formof a joint
special agreementor carlpranicculcludeby the parties
before going t the Court.l1 (Fitzmaurice"TheLaw and
Procedure of the Internationalourtof Justice",29 BmIL
(1952),p. 43.)

Now, the requirementf consentby bothpartiesto the jurisdiction

of theCourtmay appearto weigh thescalesheavilyin favaurof -35 -

potentialor prospectivedefendants. However, theapplication of the

principleof consent hasbeenrefinedas a remit of thedevelapnent

of a rnnnberf conceptswithinthe f rameworkof the Court's

jurisprudence. 1 proposeto refervery brieflyto saneof these

concepts.

Thereis,in the firstplace, the distinctio netween the

principalandthe incidental jurisdictioonf theCourt. 1 neednot

fortunatelgyo intothisdistinctions ,inceit is not imnediately

relevantto thepresentproceedings.

A second concep whichservesto refinetheoperation of the

principleof consent isthe acceptedflexibilita ys reg& themeans

forexpressing consent,at leaçtwhere that consentis givenadhoc.

1 havealreadydrawnto the attentioo nf theCourtthepassagefran

itsJudgment in thejurisdictiona plhaseof the Cod Channelcase

wheretheCourt,of course,confirmed thatneithertheStatutenor

theRulesrequirethatconsentshouldbe expressed in anyparticular

form. As thateminentformerJudge, Sir HerschLauterpachtp ,utsit,

withreference to theRights of Muloritiesin üppr Silesia (Minority

Schools)case decide by the Permanen Court:

IlThCourt pointedoutoncemorethat its jurisdiction
in a particularcase is not subordinatetdo the observance
of certainforms such as theconclusionof a special
agreement, andthatthe conseno tf a Stateto the
subnission of a d-Lsputeaynotonlyfollowfranan express
declarationb ,utmay alsobe inferred frunacts
conclusivele ystablishinigt." (SirH. LauterpachtT ,he
Developnent of InternationaLaw by the Intematicad Court
(1958),p. 202.)

Now, Mr.F-resident thishasparticular significancien thepresent

casesince,as the Courtwill he awarefran thewrittenpleadings, - 36 -

Bahrainappearçto be insistingthatit is dy the

conclusionof aspecialagreement betweenBahrain andQatarthatthe

jurisdictiaonf theCourtto determine themeritsof thedispute

whichhasarisen betweet nhemwillbe perfected.

A thirdconcept affectin the operatioonf the principloef

consentis the notionof consentby subsequentect. This is,of

course, thebais of jurisdictiobny forum~orogatLnniq?anwhich,as

is alreadyapparent, Qatadroesnot relyin thepresentcase.

A fourthconceptwhichrefinestheoperatian of theprinciple of

consenthas been developedwithinthe frameworkof the Court's

jurisprudence- thisis theinability of a Stateto withdrawa

consentalreaùygiven,oncethat consen htasbeen acted by

anotherState. Anexampleof theprinciple that acançentto the

exerciseof jurisdictionby theCourtcannotbe withdrawn afterthe

Court hasbeenvaiidlyçeiçedof a caçeis theJudgment of the

presentCourt in the preliminary objectipohnsseof theRights of

Passagecase. It willbe recalledthat, inthatcasebetween

Portugal andIndia,Portugal hadacceptedthecanpulsory jurisdiction

of theCourt by anOptional Clause declaration maodne

19 December1955, Indiabeingon thatdateboundby a parallel

OptionalClausedeclaration. On 22 December1955, Portugal

institutedproceedingsagainstInàia byunilateral application.

Portugalrelied, asthebasisof jurisdiction ,n theparallel

ûptionalClausedeclarations.Indiaraiseda nurrbeo rf preliminary

objections ttohejurisdictioo nf the Court.Qne of those

preliminaryobjectionsmeritsattention in thecontextof thepresent

dispute. This waçthe objection whic challengedthevaiidityof the PortugueseOptimal Clausedeclaratioo nn thegruunà thatit

incorporatead conditionwhich,so Indiaalleged, enabledPortugal to

withdrawfranthejurisdictiao nf theCourta disputealready

referredto the Court. The Courtfoundthat,in fact,the Portuguese

cmditiandidnothavethelegaleffectallegedby India. But the

courtwenton to Say:

"Itis aruleof lawgenerally accepted,as wellas one
acteduponin thepast by the Court,that,once the Court
has beenvalidlyseisedof a dispute, unilateralaction by
thereçpondent State interminatingitsDeclarationi ,n
wholeor in part, cannotdivestthe Court of jurisdiction."
(IC.J. Reports1957,p. 142.)

The Court wenton to citeapprovinglay passagefran itsearlier

Judgementon thepreliminary objections raiseby Guatemalain the

Nottebc3rcase.

Thus,the jurisprudeno cfe theCourtfinnlyestablishes the

principlethat a Stateisnot entitled to withdrawa consentto the

jurisdictioonf theCourtalready givei nn sucha way as to have that

withdrawalof consent appltyo proceedingsinstitutedby anotherState

beforethewithdrawal of consent. In otherwords,lapseof a titleof

jurisdiction ,hether the laps ie the resultof effluxioof timeor of

a validdenunciation" ,oidytakeseffectfor thefutureand removesal1

foundationfortheexercise of jurisdictioby the Courton thebasisof

thelapsed title in respectto proceedingnsot instituteprior to the

effectivelapse" (Rosenne,TheLaw and Practiceof the Lntemational

Court,2ndRevised Ed. (1985)p. 502)-

So muchforthe conceptw shichrefinetheoperation of the principle

of consentor at any ratecirmcrihe its applicatio innparticular

cases. On theothersideof thecoin, it mightbe thuughtthat - 38 -

consideration selatingto the burdenof proofwodd offsetwhatever

advantagemight be thoughtto accrueto an applicantStatefranthese

indicationbsased uponthejurisprudenco ef theCourt thattheprinciple

of consentwillnotnecessarily be appliedwithunduerigidity and

krflexibility. Indeed- and it occasionsno surpriseto Qat= - -ah

has soughtto arguethatpatarmust bear a particulaturden of proofin

establishintghe consentof the Parties(bywhichof course is meantthe

ment of Bahrain)to theexercise of jurisdictio ny theCaurt onthe

meritsof thepresentcase (aulB,ara. 4.5).

Qatarsutxnitt shatthisBahraini argumentis a misconstructioof

the legal position.ObviouslyQatar.as an applicantState,is required

to specify,as it has in factdone,the legalgroundçuponwhichthe

jurisdictioonf theCourt is saidto be based. Bahrainconteststhe

interpretatio nhich Qatar puton the 1987Pgreement.as confirmedand

supplementebdy theDoha Agreementof 25December 1990,and indeed,in

the caseof the bha Agreement,contestswhethersuch an agreement exists

at all. Theseare essentiall yegalissueswhichthe Court willhaveto

detexmine.The determinatio of theseissuesraisesno particular

questionas to theburdenof proofon Qataras anapplicant State. Qatar

of coursefullyacceptsthe forceof the maxim actoriindit patio

wherebyeachpartyto a dispute has to proveitsownassertions, the

burdenof proofking in consequencs ehared betweetnheparties. Qatar

alsoacceptsthatit is a fundamentarlequiremenotf any judiciasystem

that apersonwho desiresa courtto takeactionmustestablish his case

to the satisfactioofnthecourt. But the jurisprudenc ofthe presentCourt, and hcieedof itç

predecessort,he PermanenCtourt,showsa marked reluctanceto rely

wmch on theincidence of theburden ofproof.

In a nwiberof cases,the presentCairthas indicatedthat the

Men of proofliessimultaneausl andequallyon bothparties. Thus,

in the Tapie of PreahVihearcase,the Courtma&. the ollowing

IfAcmcexns theburdenof proof,it nnmt be pointedout
that though,fran the formalstanàpointC,ambodiais the
plaintiff,havinginstituted theproceeàingsT ,hailandalsois
a claimantbecauseof the claim whichwas presentedby her in
the secondSulnissionof theCounter-Mernori anldwhich relates
Both
to thesuvereignto yverthe samepieceof territory.
Cambodia andThailandbase their respecti veaimson a series
of factsandcontentionw shich areasserted orput forwardby
one Partyor theother. The buden of proofin respectof
thesewillof course lie on the Partyaçsertingor puttingthm
forward." (I.C.J.Reports1962, pp.15-16.)

A broadlysimilarposition wastakenby theCourtin the Minquiersand

Ecrehoçcase (I.C.J.Reports 1953,p. 9).

Thepassage fran theCourt'sJudgement in theTqle casewhich 1

have juçtcited has aparticularrelevanceto the present proceedings.

It is indeedtrue thatQataris theApplicant Statein theseproceedings.

ButBahrainis contesting thebasisof jurisdictioo nf theCourtinvoked

by Qatarand,in so doing,is positivelyasserting that,in the

particularcirmtances. thejurisdictioo nf the Courtcanonly be

establishe dy meansof theconclusion of a specialagreemenbetween

BahrainandQatar. On thisissue - theallegedrequirement of a special

agreement- it isBahrain whichis in thepositim of applicantandQatar

in thepositionof respondent. On Bahrain'sown argument,therefore,the

burdenof pmf of this allegedequiremenrtestsonBahrain. Thisview

of thematteris,if anything,reinforcedby theconsideratiot nhat,in - 40 -

itsirregular canmmicatians of14 Julyand 18 Auwt 1991,Bahrain

vigorouslymtested the jurisdictioo nf theCaurtto entertain the

presentproceedmgswithout, however,formallyloCaginagpreliminary

objectionas mtemplated by Article79 of theRulesof Court. Qatarof

courseacknowledget shatthe ûrdermadeby thethenPresident on

11 Octaber1991, tookaccountof an agreemen-ma&& between the

representative of the Parties,t a meetingwhich theyheldwiththe

Presidenton 2 Octaber1991,thatquestions of jurisdictioannd

admissibilitsyhauldbe separatelydeterminedbeforeanypmeeàiqs on

the merits. Oatarmot, however,failto re4nindtheCourt that,if

main had followedtheprocedure indicatedinArticle 79 of theRules

of Court,as it shouldhavedme, it wouidthenhave been for Bahrainto

establish,bothfactually and legally,thegraunds onwhich the

preliminaqobjection is based. The Court will ofcoursebe awarethat

paragraph2 of Article79 of theRulesof Court pruvidesas follws:

"Thepreliminaryobjections shal setout the factsandthe
lawon which the objections based,thesubnissions anda list
of thedocuments in support; it shall mentionny evidence
whichthe party may desireto produce. Copiesof the
çupporting documentsshallbe attached."

Thisprovision canbe interpreteads suggestulgthatthe burdenof

prwing the facts andthe law whichwdd çuçtaina preliminaryobjection

to the jurisdictiolnieson theStatewhichraisesthatobjection - that

is to Say,Bahrain. Qatardoesnot seekto put the position anyhigher

thanthat. Indeed, paragraph 6of Article79 of theRulesof Caurt may

rathersuggest, as indeedQatar hasal- asçumed,thatthe burdenof

prooffallsequallypn bothparties. This provision iscertainlynot

suggestiveof the ideathat aspecial burderof prooffallson one - 41 -

particularpartyin the contextof argument on the validityof

preliminary objections.

Mr. President,thismayperhaps be a cormenienttim at whichwe

couldpausefor a coffee break. It isa point at which 1startto move

rnyargument a bitfurtherforward.
, .. . + .-- .

ThePRESDENT: Thank you verymuch, Sir Ian. Thiswill,1

understandb,e a cdent momentfor the custanary cofeebreak; the

Court willadjournfor 15 minutes. Thank pu.

lZlCourt adjoumed fmn 11.25 a.m. to 11.45a.m.

ThePRESDENT: Pleasebe seated. Sir Ian.

Mr.SINCLAIR: Mr. President,beforethewelcanecoffeebreak, 1was

in theprocessof addressing theCourton thequestion of theburdenof

proof and itmay be worth in thiscontextrecalling that the late

SirHerschLauterpachtb ,othin hisjudicial capacity andin hisprivate

writings, doesnot appearto havebeen much impressedby arguments based

on theburdenof proof. Forexample, in his separateopinionin the case

of CertainNorwegian LnMnç, JudgeLauterpachs ttated:

"There is, in general,a degreeof unhelpfulnesi sn the
argumentconcerning theburdenof proof. However, sane prima
facie distributio on the burdenof proofthererrrus be ... the
degreeof burdenof proofthusto be adducedoughtnot to be so
stringentas to rendertheproofundulyexacting."
(I.C.. Reports 1957,p. 39.)

In the presentcase,Qatar acceptt shatit muçtestablish thatthe

Courthas jurisdictioo nn thebasisof thetwoagreements whic it has

invoked.But this, withrespect, Mr.President, in sotbecauseof the

incidence of anyparticular burdenof prooffavouring Bahrain andpenalisingQatar,or becauseof theexistence of any specialprinciples

of evidenceapplicablein thematterof establishint gheCourt's

jurisdiction. It is a simple application of tprinciplethatit is for

eachpartyto establish itsownassertions. Theposition hasbeen

felicitaiçlp yutby Sandifer:

"Thebroad basicruleof burdenof.proofadopted, in.
general,by internationatribunals ...may be simplystateà:
thattheburdenof proofrestsupn him who asserts the
affirmativoef aproposition tha ifnotsubstantiate dill
resultin a decisionaàverseto hiscontention. Thisburden
mayrest on thedefendant,
withtheplaintiff as theformermay incurtheburdenofually

substantiatinanyproposition he asser insanswerto the
allegatianoçf theplaintiff.I1(Sanàifer ,videncebefore
IntemationalIkihmais,RevisedEdition, 1975, p. 127).

A brcadly similarviewhasbeenexpressed by thelateand sadly

missedJudgeManfred Lachs in oneof thelast of hisprivatewritings.

He fin& that, in thecontext of the burdeof proof,thepositions of

applicantand respondentarevirtually indistinguishable:

"IntheStatute, they are assimilatetci eachother,which
&es a distinctioinn thisrespectratherdifficult.However
the case mabe, the partiesto a disputehave,as hasbeenso
rightlystated,notonlytherightbut thebty to prm their
claimandthey are underan obligationto CO-operateto this
endwith the internation judge."

Aftercitingwith apprml passagesfranan earlierarticle by

Witenberg,Manfred iachshimelf thenadds:

"Thepractice of theCourtindicates,in fact,thatthe
burdenwasplacedon theshoulders of eithertheApplicant or
theRespondent" (Lach, "Evidencein theproceàureof the
InternationaCourtof Justice: theroleof the Cairtn in
Mélanges Diezde Velasco,1993, p.428).

Now, Mr. Presiden,tif thetwoParties are in disagreements to the

incidenceof the burdenof prmf, there isless disagreeme nttweenthem

on the standardof proof. Of course,Bahrainseeksto muàày thewaters

by confusingthe burdm of prmf withthe standaro df proof; andit goesfurtherby accusingQatarof failing to drawto theattention of the

Courtcertain passagesfrm thewritings of SirGerald Fitzniauriacedof

Roçennewhich,according to Bahrain,areincaqatible with the arguments

advancedby Qatar (OB, para.4.5) . Thefactis , however,thatthe

passagescited by Bahraininparagraph 4.5of itsCounter-Mernori arle

selectiveandare farfm reflectintghe-balancweithwfüchboth

FitzmauricaendRosenne - thesehighlydistinguishe duthorities-treat

the issueof consentto thejurisdictioo nf theCourt. Forexample,

Fitzmaurice wisely poi nts that"by consent,in thelegalsenseof the

term, is notmeantwillingnessw ,hichrnaor rnaynotdst in the given

case". He gives theexample of theman preparedto undergoa surgical

operation; he doesnot actuallyundergoit willingly.Fitzmaurice

continuesby makinganother general point:

"Jurisdictionaobjections ar sometimesfrowneduponas
king an attempt by theState concerne to escapefranits
legalobligationo sr fran honourintheconsents it hasgiven,
but that of coursebegstheveryquestion whichthe
jurisdictiona objectionraises, andwhich hasto be decided,
namelywhether consen wtasgiven.Such a feelingmy be
natural, butit cannotjustify imputingto a Statea consent
that doesnotexist . Equally,if a trueconsentha been given,
theState oughtnot tobe allowedto escape itscançequenceson
a technicaltiy,or becauseof unwillingness&en it caneç to
thepoint." (Fitzmaurice lc. cit.,p. 86.)

1 woulddraw theparticvlar attentionoftheCourtto the lastsentence

of thiscitation. Here is thenecessary qualificatt ionthegeneral

point whichFitzmauriciesmaking,and it is a qualificatio nhichmust

not be forqottenor disregarded.It isnota question of.whichState

bearsthe burden of establishngconsent.WhattheCourthasto do is to

reviewal1theevidence and argumentsadducedby thepartiesrelating to

theallegedconsent and determinewhetheror not a trueconsenthas been -44 -

given. If theCourtconcludes thata truement has beengiven,the

respmàentStatecannotthereafter repudiateor disavowthat consent.

As 1 havealreaàyindicateà,there wouïd appear,on the faceof

things, to be lessdisputebetween theParties asto the standardof

proof than thereis as to theburdenof proof. Qatar&es not takeissue

withthe generalprincipleadmnced by thePexmanent Courtin the Factozy

at Chon&, Jurisdicticm ,açethat"the Court's jurisdictioins alwaysa

limitedane,existing anlyin so faras Stateshaveaccepteà ituandthat

ucançequently theCourt will,in theeventof an objection ...
oniyaffim itsjurisdictiop nrovidedthattheforceof the
argumentsmilitatingin favourof it is prepnderantw.

Thisis accordingly thetestto be appliedso faras the standardof

proofis cmcerned. But what doesit require?Whatis the meaning of

preponderantin thiscontext? Primafacie,it wwuïd seemto requirethat

the Court shouldcanparethe evidence adducb edthepmponent of an

issuewith the evidence addu ceditsapponentwitha viewto

detexminingthe relativeweightto be accorded to thatevidence. It

wouldthen be therelative weightwhichwouldrneaçurt ehe preponderance

of thearguments. Thiswouldaccordwiththedictionary definitionof

preponderant The Worù mg1 ish Dictonq, forexample, deinesthe

word "preponderant" as meanin in,the firstplace,"çurpassinign

weight; outweighingh ,eavier"and,in thesecondplace,"surpassin gn

influence,mer or importance;preàaninant". Boththesedefinitions

embodythe notion of canparisono,f relativity.So what is requiredof

the Courtin thiscaseis, Qatarwould çulxnita weighingof the

respective argumentfavowingor denying the exercio sejurisdiction.

Thesearguments will,of necessity,be a mix of factualandlegal

elements,proofof the factual elemenk tsng governed bythegeneral -45 -

rulesof evidenceto the exclusioonf any specialburdenof proofon

Qatarbeyondthatwhichflowsnaturally franits positionas applicant.

1 çhould perhapsat thisstageSaya few wordsabout thecanceptof

reciprocitoyf consent. Qatar,in its Memorial(para. 4.40to 4.43),

drewattention to the considerationsnderlyingthis conceptS.o faras

Qatar canjudge,Bahrain hasnot seen fitto cament directly anthis

partof theQatarMemorial.However, Bahrainappearsto be açserting

that, becauseQatarhas invokedthe jurisdictioonf theCourt in this

case by wayof unilateralapplicatiant,here isno effectivereciprocity

of consent,particularlbyecauseQatarhas not includedthe questianof

Zubarahwithinthe SC- of its Application.The Bahrainiargumenton

thispoint (CMF3paras. 8.4-8.14),it nnrçbe said,has, whether

deliberateloyr not and Qatairs in no positioto judge,distorted

argumentsadvancedby Qatar. Forexample, inparagraph 8.5 of the

BahrainiCaunter-Mernorial,t is statedthatQatarhad made

suggestiontso overcanethediffidty thatZubarahis not amongthe

issuescareredby theQatarApplication: the first is"forBahrain to

intrcducethe Zubarahclaim by wayof acounter-claiimn the present

proceedings". Tothisis appended a footnotereferenceto paragraph5.81

of theQatari Memorial. But if one look at paragrap5.81 of theQatari

Memorial,one fi& onlya citation £roma Bahrainiletterof

16 September1991,in which thenrqumentis advancedthat "itis by no

means clearthatBahrainwould be freeto raisethe issue of Zubarahby

way of counter-claim".But Qatarhas notmaintainedthatBahrainwould

haveto raise thequestion ofZubarah by way of a counter-claimo the

claimçachmnced byQatar in itsApplication. So al1the argumentatio nn

the BahrainiCounter-Memorlaabout therequiremenotf establishin g - 46 -

link betweena mter-claim andthe principac ll& is totallybeside

thepoint. WhatQatar has beenasserting, andcantinues to assert,is

that,under the Bahrainifoda, Bahrainis perfectlyat libertyto

raisethe Zubarah questionby makingits own separateApplicationto the

Qatarhasnot soughtto denythat, for
CourtagainstQatar.

jurisdictid purposes,the questionof-~ubamh-can~-k-~~ as

fallingwithinthe scopeof the Bahrainifornarla.The admissibilit yf

potentialBahraini claimswith respect t Zubarahis a separateissue

which willbe aàdressedby ProfessorSalmn.

Nw, Mr.President, 1 willconclude theserelativelygeneral

observationosn the notionof consentby drawingattention to a

distinctionwhich has been made,kathindoctrine andin the

jurisprudencoef the Court,betweenthecategories of treatyi~oa nhich

the jurisdictioonf theCourtmay be founded. Thisis thedistinction

betweena treaty emboCtying generalobligationto accept the

jurisdictioonf the Courtin relationto any dispute whicmhayarise

concerningits interpretation a orplicationanda treatyembodying a

çpecificobligation taoccept the jurisdictioonf theCourtin relation

to a concrete dispute betwe the Parties. TheCourtitself has

acknowledgetdhis distinction. In itsJudgmentin thejurisdictional

phaseof the Fideries Jurisdicrim casebetweentheUnited Kingdan and

Iceland,the Court had occasion tcarnienotnan aryumentput fomard by

Icelandto theeffect that treatiesof judicialsettlementor

declarationosf acceptanceof the canpulsoryjurisdictioonfthe Court

are subjectto unilateraldenunciatioinn theabsenceof qress

provisionsas regardsduration or termination.Referringto this

argument,the Court stated: "Itis sufficient toreniarkthatsuchviews havereference
onlyto instrumentsin whichtheparties had asçumed ageneral
abligation to sut to judicialsettlemental1or certain
categoriesof disputes whicmhightarisebetweenthem inthe
unpredictablf euture. The 1961Bchaqe of Notesdoesnot
embodyan agreementof this type. Ictontainsa definite
canpdssory clauseestablishint ghejurisdictioo nf theCourt
todealwitha concrete kindof disputewhichwas foreseen and
çpeciicallyanticipate dytheparties. (IC.J. Reports
1973,p. 16.)
. .
1 havedrawnattention to this distinctio because,inthe presentcase,

the Courtis, Qatar wouldçubnit, canf-ted witha canbinatioo nf

twotreaties which,betweenthem, embdy a specificundertakingby both

Partiesto referto the Court identifiedand identifiable disputes

between Qatarand Bahrain.In otherworàs,the situation i sot

dissimilarto thatwhich the Court hadto dealwith in thejurisdictional

phaseof the FiçheriesJurisdictioncase,withthesignificand tifference

thatBahrainhasat least appeared in orderto arguethattheCourt has

no jurisdictiotno dealwith the meritsof thepresent case.

Now, Mr.President, 1 turnfranwhathas hitherto beena fairly

broad andgeneral discussio on the legalimplicationosf therequirement

of consentto theto a morefmed analpis of the essential aspec ts

the consentof both Qatarand Bahrainto conferjurisdictioo nn theCourt

in respectof the mtzers in disputebetweenthem,as evidenced by the

Agreementof 1987,confirmed and supplementebdythe Doha Agreementof

2. Theconsent ofBahrain andQatar to refarthe
dieputee to theCourt

Thebasic conseno tf bothStates to sutsrniternatterisn dispute

betweenthemto the jurisdictioonf the Courtis wressed in the

Agreementof December1987,whose existenc evenBahrain doesnot

dispute.
TheAgenthasalreadycited paragraph1 of thatAgreement. - 48 -

It is difficulto conceiveof a more unequivocaexpressio nf

consentby bothPartiesto the jurisdictioo nf theCourtin respectof

al1 thedisputed mattersthan is representedy thislanguage. It only

rernainfsorme to reminciheCourt thattheAgentfor Qatar hasalready

explainedthismrning the nature and scopeof thesemattersindispute

betweenBahrain andQatar.

Mr. Shankardaçsw,howillfollow me,will be reviewingthe long

drawnouthistoryof attempts to resolvethesedisputesandwill,in

particular,explainthe cirmtances of themediatica iffortundertaken

by the Kingdcmof Saudi Arabiafrun1976 onwaràs.

Dsspitethebestendeaxursof Saudi Arabia as mediatoràuringthe

pericdfm 1976to 1987,it had not pruvedpossible to securean

agreementon the substancoef anyof the disputebsetweenQatarand

Bahrain. In thecirmtances, KingFahdof Saudi Arabia wroteidentical

lettersto themers of QatarandBahrainon 19 December1987makinga

four-pointproposal. Paragraph1 of thatpropal, of course,prwides

for referencoef al1 the disputedriattetrs the Internationalourtof

Justice. Paragraph2 of theproposalcoveredthemaintenance of the

statusquoand relatedmatters; for presenpturposes,1 neednot recite

its tem. Paragraph3, on the otherhand,is significanta,nd its

wordingis important:

"Thirdly: Formationof a cum-iittecarprishg
representative of the Statesof QatarandBahrainand of the
Kingdanof Saudi Arabia fo thepurposeof approaching the
InternationaC lourtof Justice,and satisfyinthe necessary
requirementtso havethedisputeçubnitted to theCourt in
accordancewith its regulationasnd inçtructionso that a
final ruling,bindingupn bothparties, be issued. - 49 -

1 will come back to paragraph 3 in a moment. Finally, paragraph 4 of the

proposa1 provided for the continuanceof the good offices of the Kingdom

of Saudi Arabia to guarantee the implementationof these terms.

Both Qatar and Bahrain accepted this four-pointproposal, so that a

public announcement could be made on 21 December 1987 recording the

agreement of the Parties.

Now, Bahrain has of course argued that paragraph 1 of the 1987

Agreement wasexpressly made conditionalupon completion of the procedure

outlined in paragraph 3 of the Agreement.

Thus, Bahrain contends, with reference to paragraph 1 of the 1987

Agreement:

"The provision is certainly notan unconditional
undertaking togo to the Court. Quite self-evidently,the

commitment was vitally qualified by the provision for the
formation of a committee consisting of representativesof the
Parties and the Mediator" (CMB,para. 5.12).

This argumentbetrays a certain misunderstandingof what is Qatar's

position. Qatar has not asserted that the terms of the 1987 Agreement by

themselves provided animmedlatebasis forenabling the Courtto exercise

its jurisdiction. Qatar does not however concede that the clear

commitment of both Parties under paragraph 1 of the 1987 Agreement to

accept the jurisdictionof the Court in relation to "al1 the disputed

matters" was in any sense qualified or conditional upon the successful

outcome of the activities of the committee constituted under paragraph 3.

Qatar does not underestimatethe significanceof paragraph 3 of the

1987 Agreement, but paragraph 3 was clearly designedto facilitate the

reference of al1 the disputed mattersto the Court, and not to be used as

a weapon in the hands of one of the Parties to frustrate such a

reference. Mr. Shankardasswill, in the course of his presentation, - 50 -

review the proceedings of the Tripartite Committee and will demonstrate

that at no time was the conclusionof a "special agreementn considered to

be an essential prerequisiteto the establishmentof the jurisdictionof

the Court. Qatar was prepared to participate in the process of seeking

to elaborate a "special agreementu acceptable to both Qatar and Bahrain,

but most certainly did not regard the-failureof~the..joint effort to draw

up a "special agreementw within the framework of the proceedingsof the

Tripartite Cornmitteeas in any way invalidatingthe consent which both

Parties had already given to the jurisdictionof the Court in relation to

al1 matters in dispute between them by virtue of the 1987 Agreement.

3. Tha conmant of Bahrain and Qatar to tha subjact-matterand mcope of

the disputes to be referred to the Court

It was the Doha Agreement of December 1990, which confirmedand

supplementedthe 1987 Agreement, and thereby finallyestablished the

jurisdictionof the Court over al1 the matters in disputebetween Bahrain

and Qatar. As 1 have just indicated, the 1987 Agreement had recorded the

basic consentof both Parties to refer al1 the disputed matters to the

Court for adjudication. Prlma facie, the expression "al1 the disputed

matters" would have covered the dispute relatingto title over the Hawar

islands, to sovereign rights over the two shoals of Dibal and Qit'at

Jaradah, and to the course of the sea-bed boundary between Bahrain and

Qatar. These were certainly the matters to which the mediation efforts

of Saudi Arabia had been directed.

The wording of the first Principleof the Framework formally

approved by both Bahrain and Qatar in 1983 clearly embracesthe specific

disputes between Qatar and Bahrain to which 1 have just made reference.

On the other hand, this formulationwould not have covered the question - 51 -

of Zubarah. Bahrain indeedseems implicitly to admit that Zubarahwas

not included within the first Principleof the Framework, since Bahrain

does not assert that the question of Zubarah fell within the initial

scope of the Saudi Mediation. Bahrain is careful to confine itself to

arguing that "The dispute over Zubarahthus forms an integral part of the

background (1 stress the word -mbackgrounda I-to-thc.differences--between

Bahrain and Qatarw (CMB,para. 2.11). Bahrain did not attempt to raise

the question of Zubarah within the Framework ofthe Saudi Mediation until

1986, when it supposedly filed a memorandum with Saudi Arabia (CMB,

para. 2.11). But Qatar never received a copyof this memorandum, nor

indeed has Bahrain filed a copyof this memorandumwith the Court. In

addition, it is noteworthy that no reference is made to the question of

Zubarah in the identicalletters of 19 December, 1987 £rom King Fahd of

saudi Arabia to the Amirs of Bahrain and Qatar. The Court will of course

be aware that it was the failure of Bahrain andQatar to agree uponthe

formulationof the question or questionsto be put to the Court which led

to the complete breakdown inthe work of the Tripartite Committeein

December, 1988. As Mr. Shankardasswill make clear, Qatar had made a

good faith effort during the last five meetingsof the Tripartite

Committee betweenMarch and December, 1988, to reach agreementon the

formulationof an agreed question orquestions to be submitted jointly to

the Court by Qatar and Bahrain. But the formulations proposedby Bahrain

in their draft special agreementsof March, 1988 (MQ,para. 3.37) and

June, 1988 (MQ,para. 3.46) were clearly designedto prejudge, in

Bahrainls favour, some of the major issues in disputebetween the Parties

and were therefore unacceptableto Qatar. It was not until late October,

1988, that Bahrain put forward a general formula for reference of the - 52 -

disputes betweenQatar and Bahrain to the Court. That general formula

subsequently came to be known as "the Bahraini formula". Qatar welcomed

this as a step forward but has sought some clarificationof its tem.

At the sixth and final meeting of the Tripartite Committeeon 7 December,

1988, Qatar suggested that it couldaccept the inclusionof Zubarah as a

subject of dispute if any Bahraini claim in,respectof eubarah was

restricted to claims of private rights and not claimsto sovereignty; but

this suggestionwas refused by Bahrain. 1 will not go into further

detail about the final meetingsof the Tripartite Committeein December

1988, as Mr. Shankardass will be covering that. Al1 1 would Say is that

both Qatar and Bahrain had been put on notice by Prince Saud towards the

close of the fifth meeting of the Tripartite-Committeeon 5 November;

1988, that the King of Saudi Arabia considered that thedate of the

beginning of the GCC summit, in December, 1988, was the date for

terminating the missionof the Tripartite Committee, whetheror not it

had succeeded in achieving its mission (MQ,para. 3.50). So it is quite

clear that the Tripartite Committee had become functus officio after its

sixth meeting on 7 Decernber, 1988.

As the Court will be aware, the Saudi Arabian Mediation was

continued in 1989 and 1990 as a result of decisions taken at the GCC

summit meetings in Bahrain in 1988 and in Muscat in 1989, but no progress

was made on the substance of the disputes between Qatar and Bahrain.

Qatar was becoming increasinglysuspicious that Bahrain was intent

on either withdrawingfrom its commitment to refer the disputed matters

to the Court or on so wearying the Qatari authorities as to cause them ta

accept language for such a reference whichwould be prejudicial to Qatari

interests. Qatar therefore decided toraise the subject at the opening - 53 -

session of the GCC summit at Doha on 23 December, 1990. ~ahrain proposed

that the Saudi Arabian Mediationbe further extended without any time-

limit. Qatar stronglyopposed this proposal. In so doing, and in order

to reach a solution on the subject-matter and scope of the disputes to be

referred to the Court, the Arnirof Qatar stated that Qatar now accepted

the "Bahraini formulam. It is noteworthy that the Sultan of.ORILlll.als0

played a prominent role by persuadingboth Parties to agree to the

continuanceof the good offices of Saudi Arabia until May 1991, after

which the Parties would be at liberty to submit the matter to the Court

in accordance with theBahraini formula. These developments opened the

door to the conclusion of the Doha Agreement represented by the Agreed

Minutes of 25 December, 1990. 1 and other of my colleagues, including

Professors Salmonand Quéneudec will, in later interventions, address

inter alia the status of the Doha Minutes as a treaty or convention in

force within the meaning of Article 36(1) of the Statute, the Bahraini

argument that, even if the Doha Minutes constituteda binding

international agreementat the time of their conclusion, Bahrain's

consent to be bound had been expressed in violation of Bahraini

constitutional requirements so as to invalidate that consent, and the

interpretationof the Doha Minutes, including Bahrain's falsedistinction

between jointand unilateral seisin. For the time being, 1 would simply

draw attentionto the considerationthat the Doha Minutes reaffirmed and

perfected the consent of both Qatar and Bahrain to the jurisdictionof

the Court over al1 the matters in dispute between the two States. They

did so by embodying two distinct elements which had not been covered in

previous exchanges, including the 1987 Agreement. These two distinct

elements are: - 54 -

(1) Qatari acceptanceof the "Bahraini formulan, that is to Say, the

neutral general formula which wouldensure that al1 Qatari and

Bahraini claims, including the Qatari claim tothe Hawar islands and

the Bahraini claim to Zubarah, would fa11 within the jurisdictionof

the Court;

(2) An agreed date (15 May 1991), after-which.-ttrta~Part= ieds be at

liberty to submit the matters in dispute to the International Ccnirt

of Justice in accordance with theBahraini formula, notwithstanding

the continuance of the Saudi Arabian mediation.

1 should add that theDoha Minutes also served another purpose. The

Tripartite Cornittee in 1988 had failed to fulfil the task entrusted to

it under paragraph 3 of the 1987 Agreement. The Doha Minutes succeeded

in elaborating alternative arrangements, including time-limits, for the

reference of the matters indispute between Bahrainand Qatar to the

Court. These alternative arrangementswere a substitute for the non-

fulfilment by the Tripartite Cornmittee of its mandate in 1988; they also

served to ensure that legal effect couldbe given to the consent to the

jurisdictionof the Court alreadygiven by both Bahrain and Qatar,

notwithstanding effortsby one Party to frustrate referenceof the

disputed mattersto this Court.

In sum, Mr. President, Qatar contends that the consent of both

Parties to the exercise of jurisdictionby the Court over identifiable,

territorial and maritime boundarydisputes is evidenced by the 1987

Agreement as confirmed and supplementedby the Doha Minutes of 1990.

Qatar likewise contends that, as Professor Queneudec will demonstrate,

there is a clear and acknowledged distinction between thejurisdictionof

the Court to entertain a dispute or series of disputes and the method of - 55 -

seisin of the Court. At the same time, Qatar denies that it ever agreed

with Bahrain that the only method of seisin of the Court in relation to

the disputes between the two States should be by joint submission

pursuant to a special agreement. Mr. Shankardass will show that Qatar

was willing to negotiate such a special agreement withinthe framework of

the Tripartite Committeein 1988, but nnfortunately-it-wasn -ot.possible

for the two States to agree upon a text before the work of the Tripartite

Committee came to an end in December 1988.

Mr. President,Members of the Court, 1 thank you for your patience
.

and courtesy. It would now be convenient,Mr. President, if you were to

cal1 on Mr. Shankardass. Thank you.

The PRESIDENT: Thank you Sir Ian. 1 give the floor to

Mr. Shankardass.

Mr. SHANKARDASS: Mr. President,Members of the Court.

May 1 Say what a very great honourand a privilege it is to address

this HonourableCourt and thevery distinguished membersof this great

institution.

Sir, it is my task today to address the Court on a number of

important issues on which Che Parties before the Courtremain divided -

and, in particular, on the question whether theirdecision to refer their

existing disputes to this Court was subject to a condition that such

reference had to be by joint submissionpursuant to a Special.Agreement.

The Court will have seen from the opening address of the Agent for

the State of Qatar, H.E. Dr. Najeeb Al-Nauimi, the presentation of

Sir Ian Sinclair, and the pleadings filed by the Parties, that disputes

arising out of two decisions of the British Government admittedlyexisted - 56 -

between Qatar and Bahrainat least £rom 1939 onwards in respect of

sovereignty over the Hawar islands; as also since December 1947 in

respect of sovereign rights over the Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah shoals and

the delimitationof the Qatar-Bahrainmaritime boundary. An attempt was

made to resolve the disputeswhen, in 1965, Qatar proposed a reference to

arbitration,and the proposal was approwd by t,he-BritishGovernment.

Bahrain at first acceptedthe proposal, but later frustrated the attempt

at arbitrationby seeking to exclude Qatar's claim to the Hawar islands.

Sir, for the purpose of addressing someof the developmentsrelating

to the subsequent efforts at resolving the disputes, with which this

Court is now concerned, 1 will focus on four main periods: first, the

period £rom the beginningof the Saudi Mediation up to the conclusion of

the 1987 Agreement. 1 will refer to the circumstances leadingto the

acceptance of the proposal by both Qatar and Bahrain that their dispute

had to be settled by this Court in accordancewith internationallaw;

second, 1 will examine the 1987 Agreementitself and its scope as it was

understood by bothBahrain and Qatar. 1 will seek to show the Court,

from the documents and from the record of views expressedby

representativesof the two Parties, that there is no substance whatever

in Bahrain's contention that the commitment of the two Parties in the

1987 Agreement to refer their disputes tothis Court was conditionalupon

the successful negotiationof a Special Agreement; third, 1 will attempt

to demonstrate that although during the work of the Tripartite Conunittee

the Parties tried to reach an agreementon the terms of a Special .

Agreement, this effort ultimately failed, and the Tripartite Conunittee

ceased to function in December 1988; fourth, and finally, 1 will examine

the circumstances surroundingthe conclusion of the Doha Agreement, which - 57 -

allowed both Qatar and Bahrain tosubmit their respectiveclaims to this

Court in accordance with the Bahraini formula, and the events that

followed the Doha Agreement.

1. THE SAUDI MEDIATION UP ULJTILTHE 1987 AGRgKMENT

Following theoutline 1 have just given, 1 will begin by discussing
. . ....
the period of the Saudi Mediation upuntil the 1987 Agreement.

(il The 1976 Agreement on Saudi Wediation and th. Pranrowork

By 1976, a few years after the British presence in the Gulf had

ended, it had been agreed that Saudi Arabia would act as Mediator between

Qatar and Bahrain in an endeavour to resolve the outstanding disputes.

The first significant stage reached in the course of the Mediation was

the proposa1 made by King Khalid of Saudi Arabia in 1978 of a set of Five

Principleswhich have been referredto as "the Frameworkl1 within which

the Mediation was to operate. Al1 important developments in the course

of the Mediation have been affirmedto be pursuant to this Framework.

The Court hasalready been addressed this morning about the content of

the Five Principles of the Framework and 1 will therefore,Mr. President,

only refer to those relevant to my presentation. The First Principle of

the Framework,which gave an indicationof the subjects of the disputes,

read :

"Al1 issues of dispute betweenthe two countries,relating
to sovereignty overthe islands, maritime boundaries and
territorialwaters are to be considered as complementary,

indivisible issues, to be solved comprehensivelytogether."

The Fourth Principle provided forthe formation of a Committee with

representatives fromQatar, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia and 1 quote "with

the aim of reaching solutions acceptableto the two Partiesu.Unlike the - 58 -

Committee under the 1987 Agreement, to which 1 will shortly refer, this

Committee was charged with the task of finding solutionson the substance

of the disputes. The FifthPrinciple, as originally proposed, stated

that if the Parties failed to reach agreementon any of the disputed

matters, Saudi Arabia would be authorised to propose a compromise which

would be regardedas "the solution agreed-upcmbetween the,PartiesU. In

other words, Mr. President, the compromise to be proposed by Saudi Arabia

was to be the finalsolution.

(ii) 1981-1983: Coneideration of Qatar1. proposa1 of an amended Fifth

Principle for the Franiework

However, in 1981, in response to a request from SaudiArabia for

comments on the terms of the draft Framework, Qatarproposed.an amended

text for the Fifth Principle,suggesting, that since the dispute was a

purely legalone, and so as to avoid any embarrassmentin the sensitive

relations betweenQatar, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, "the resolution of the

dispute be left to ... the principles and rules of internationallaw ...If

and that the "decisionof the authority, which will be agreed upon for

this purpose, shall be final and binding on both Parties" (see,MQ,

Annex 11.4).

Considerationof the proposed Framework,and Qatar's amendment of

the Fifth Principle,continued until May 1983, during a period of

increasing tension between Qatar and Bahrain over their long-standing

disputes. As explained in Qatar's Memorial (paras. 3.17-3.191, this

tension was a matter of serious concern to other countriesin the Gulf

region - so rnuchso that the GulfCooperation Council, generallyreferred

to as the GCC, also resolved, in March 1982, to request SaudiArabia to - 59 -

use its good offices to try and resolve the disputes between Qatarand

Bahrain .

Saudi Arabia subsequently convened ameeting on 22 May 1983 with

representativesof Qatar and Bahrainin Riyadh and the agenda for this

meeting was "to discuss the disputeon Hawar islands and the maritime

boundariesoo(see,MQ, para. 3.19 andyAnns. 11.8 and 11.9). .Thismeeting

finally approved the text of the Framework including the amended text of

The acceptance by the Parties of
the Fifth Principle proposedby Qatar.

the Fifth Principlerequiring resolutionof their disputes accordingto

InternationalLaw, a fact acknowledged byBahrain (see, CMB, para. 5.5),

was, Mr. President, in a sense the first step towards referring their

disputes to this Court.

During the years following the May 1983 meeting, SaudiArabia

continued to try to secure a settlement on thesubstance of the disputes.

Despite the Saudi efforts, no significantprogress was, however, made.

On the other hand, there were a number of occasions when Qatar found it

necessary to protest against actionsby Bahrain which it considered were

violations of the status quo and which led to a further increase in

tension betweenthe two countries.

(iii) The 1986 Crisie

Early in 1986 a serious crisis erupted - which the Agent for Qatar

this morning referredto -when Qatar discovered that Bahrain had begun

constructionwork on the Dibal Shoal in an attempt artificially to

transform its nature £rom a shoal to an island andto make it a post for

its coastguard. On 26 April 1986, Qatar sent a security forceto put an

end to this violation. Saudi Arabia immediately intervened by diplomatic - 60 -

action to resolve the crisis. In his letter of 14 May 1986 (MQ,

Ann. 11-12, p. 791, King Fahd of Saudi Arabia calledupon the parties

'net to use force as long as Saudi mediation is continuing and not to

execute any new works ...lu. As a result of the Saudi intervention, the

offending constructionwas removed. Saudi Arabia also intensified its

efforts to find a solution for the long-standing.dispute8.

Unfortunately, success continued to elude the Saudi efforts; and

complaints by both Parties about infringements of the statu8 quo

continued. It was againstthis background, Mr. President, that Saudi

Arabia eventuallybrought about what hasbeen called the 1987 Agreement -

to which 1 will now turn.

2. THE AGREgMENT OF DECEEiBER1987

Because Saudi Arabia had not succeeded in securing a resolution of

the disputes through its own Mediation since 1976 - that is in a period

of over 11 years - King Fahdeventually decidedto invoke the Fifth

Principle of the Framework - that thedisputes be settled in accordance

with international lawby an authority whose decision would be final and

binding on both Parties. In hls identical lettersof 19 December 1987

(see,MQ, Ann. 11.15, p. 103) to the Amirs of Qatar and Bahrain,

King Fahd proposed to the two Parties an effectivealternative means of

reaching a final and just solution - words that 1 will have occasion to

refer to again - to what he termed"the long-standingdispute ... over

the sovereignty over Hawar islands, the maritime boundaries of the two

brotherly countries, and any other mattersu. He called upon them to

agree to refer their disputes to this Court for a final and bindingruling. Both Bahrain andQatar accepted this proposa1 and "the

1987 Agreement" came into existence.

1 believe, Mr. President, it is appropriate for me to recall (in

this instanceby using the United Nations translation which Bahrain

prefers) the relevant paragraphsof the new Agreement that had been

reached. These were:

"1. The issues subject to dispute shallbe referred to the

International Court of Justice at The Hague for the issuance of
a final and binding judgement whose provisions must be applied
by the two parties.

2. (The second paragraph referredto maintenance of the status
quo) .

3. A committee shall be formed, comprising two representatives
of the State of Qatar and the State of Bahrain and two

representativesof the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, for the purposc of
communicating withthe International Courtof Justice and completing
the requirements for referralof the dispute thereto in accordance
with the Court's regulationsand instructions,in preparation for

the issuance of a final judgement which shall be binding on both
parties.

4. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia shall continue to use its good

offices to ensure that these conditionsare fulfilled."
(UnitedNations translation; see CM., Vol. II, Ann. 1.3.)

The Court will have noticed from Qatar's pleadings thatthe announcement

of this 1987 Agreement by Saudi Arabia in December 1987 was welcomed by

rnemberStates of the GCC as 1s shown by a newspaper report which appeared

in the Gulf Times of 29 December 1987 (see,RQ, Ann. 1.21, which said:

"Saudi Foreign Minister PrinceSaud al-Faisal has said that
the GCC was very happy thatthe two sisterly Statesof Qatar

and Bahrain had decided to settle their territorial dispute by
referring it to the International Courtof Justice. ..

Prince Saud, who was answering a question from an Egyptian
journalist at Sunday night's Press conferenceat the close of the

day's sessions of the GCC Summit, said the submission of the issue
to the Court was something natural, since the GCC members were
members of the United Nations. 'Thereforethey were supposed to make use of that framework,
specially as the case is of a legal nature and deals withborders1
headded.I1 (See,RQ, Ann. 1.2, p. 13).

The Court will see that a solution for resolving the long pending

disputes had been found and agreed. Al1 that remained was to ascertain

and follow the procedure for implementingit. The Parties had at that

stage apparently notapplied their minds in.any way- as to the~particular

Rules of the Court which were to be invoked to implement their decision.

That appears to be the reason why they optedfor a procedural solution

through the constitutionof a Tripartite Committee.

In contrast to the Committee formed under the Framework whose task

as 1 said was to find solutions on the substance of the disputes, the

Tripartite Committee under the third paragraph of the 1987 Agreement was

to be constituted rnerelyfor procedural purposes,i.e., "for the purpose

of communicating with the International Court ofJustice and completing

the requirements for referral of the dispute thereto in accordance with

the Court's regulations and instructions ..." (see,CMB, Ann. 1.3, p. 18,

para. 3; emphasis added). Mr. President, it is impossible to see how

Bahrain can contend that this enabiing provisionfor "communicatingwith"

the Court and "cornpleting the requirernents" of its regulations to

lrnplernent the agreement was a condition requiring joint subrnission to the

Court pursuant to a special agreement and that otherwise the disputes

could not be subrnittedto the Court. 1 submit, Mr. President, that

Bahrain is wrong in contending (see,CMB, para. 5.13) that "the

irnplernentatio of the first paragraphwas expressed to be dependent upon

the subsequent activityof the Tripartite Committee referredto in the

third paragraph". The irnplernentatio of the decision in the first

paragraph to referthe dispute to this Court was dependent upon the - 63 -

applicable Rules of this Court and not upon the "activity"of the

Tripartite Committeeas such.

~s I have already explained,prior to the 1987 Agreement the Parties

had not addressed the questionof the method of approach to the Court.

In any event, the text of the 1987 Agreement says nothing about aSpecial

Agreement. To the contrary, it is clear that.part of .the.-td6k of.the

Committee establishedunder the third paragraph was to ascertain an

appropriatemethod. As 1 will presentlyshow, even Bahrain admits to

having concluded sornetimeafter the 1987 Agreement was reached that

"contactwith the Court should be through a Special Agreement''.

Bahrain assertsthat prior to the 1987 Agreement the Partieshad

always thought in terms of a "joint submissionwand never in terms of a

unilateral application; and that this backgroundis a "pertinent

consideration"in the interpretationof the 1987 Agreement isee,CMB,

paras. 5.3-5.6 and RB, para. 4.03). To support this assertion Bahrain

relies on Qatar's proposa1 of arbitration in 1965; on the fact that the

Frarneworkdescribed al1 issues of dispute between the Parties as being of

a cornplernentary indivisible natureto be solved comprehensively

together; and on King Fahd's proposa1 that the 1986 Dibal crisis might

have to be resolved by arbitration sanctionedby both Parties. In fact,

Mr. President, as is obvious, none of Bahrain's so-called pertinent

considerationshas anything whateverto do with the method of approaching

this Court. Bahrain also cites the Dubai-Sharjaharbitration as an

acceptable precedentof a joint subrnission in the Gulf area (see, CMB,

para. 1.7). 1 subrnit,Mr. President, firstly that it is obvious the

Dubai-Sharjahcase is not a valid precedent to cite for the simple reason

that the parties in that case are rnembersof a Federal State, namely theUnited Arab Emirates, and could not have brought their disputeto this

Court in any event; and secondly, it is most important to keep in view

the significant fact thatin December 1987King Fahd did not propose a

joint referenceto arbitration by nominated arbitrators (which wouldhave

required a further elaborateagreement) as in the Dubai-Sharjah case, but

instead proposed a reference to apermanent institution,. i-e.; this Court

with its established rules of procedure which permit the invoking of its

jurisdictionby a unilateral application or a reference (jointor

otherwise) under a Special Agreement.

In the light ofthese facts, there can be no justificationwhatever
-
for Bahrain's contentionthat the 1987 Agreement

"though evidently contemplatingthe eventual submission of the
dispute to the Court, was clearly conditional uponthe

successful negotiationof a Special Agreement ...IV(see, CMB,
para. 1.61,

or for the statement that the 1987 Agreement was merely"a cornmitment to

negotiate in good faith a Special AgreementN (see,CMB, para. 7.1). As 1

will show from the record of proceedings of the Tripartite Cornmittee,the

1987 Agreement was clearly understood and repeatedly referred to by al1

the parties as embodying the commltment of Bahrain and Qatar to submit

their disputes to the Court isee,e.g., the Signed Minutesof the First

Tripartite Committee Meeting-Qatar'sT.C.M. Documents, p. 51).

3. PROCEEDINGS OF THE TRIPARTITE COMMITTEE

1 now turn to the period after the conclusion of the 1987 Agreement

and, in particular, the Meetings of the Tripartite Committee. Bahrain

seeks to rely on what it calls "the conduct of theParties in the period

following the acceptance of the Agreement" and argues that this conduct

shows that the Parties "immediatelyand continuously recognizedthat they - 65 -

had to negotiate an agreement for a joint submissionn (see, CMB,

paras. 5.20 et seq.).

1 would respectfullysubmit, Mr. President, that when two States

agree to refer their disputes tothis Court, it would be natural for them

to try to see if they could also mutually agree on the terms of a special

agreement and the procedure to be followed (which may, or may nOt,

necessarilyprovide for a joint reference). But surely, Sir, that does

not mean that another available methodof approach is precluded if they

do not reach a special agreement. Qatarhas never denied that during the

Tripartite CommitteeMeetings theParties tried to reach a mutual

agreement on the text of a special agreement, an effort which ended in

failure when theTripartite Committee ceased to function in December-of

1988.

What Qatar does not accept, however, is Bahrain1s proposition that

the Parties "immediatelyand continuouslyrecognized that they had to

negotiate an agreement for a joint s~bmission~~.Such a proposition finds

no support in the facts, as 1 will now show.

(il The preliminarymeeting of the Tripartite
Committee and the draft procedural propoeale

At the time of the GCC Summit meeting in Riyad. in December 1987 at

which the 1987 Agreement was announced, there was a preliminary informa1

meeting of representativesof Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Bahrain where both

Qatar and Bahrain presenteddraft proposals in respect of the procedure

to be followed for "communicatingwith the Court". This was an

initiativeby the Parties to begin implementationof the third paragraph

of the 1987 Agreement. Findingno evidence in the text itself to support

its argument that the 1987 Agreement was conditionalupon the conclusion - 66 -

of a Special Agreement, Bahrain seeks to buttress its argument by praying

in aid these two procedural proposals (see, CMB, paras. 5.21-5.24).

This, 1 submit with respect, Mr. President, is really scrapingthe

bottom of the barrel. The proposals referredto by Bahrain which were

made just after the conclusion of the 1987 Agreement were not agreed to.

It must be doubtful therefore whether theycan be--of .any-~relevance. This

would be bad enough if Bahrain had not, as 1 will shortly explain, also

misdescribed itsown proposal.

Qatar's proposa1 consisted of a draft joint letter £rom Qatar and

Bahrain to be sent to the Registrar of this Court inmediately informing

the Registrar of three things:

First, a list of the disputes betweenQatar and Bahraini- Second,

that Qatar and Bahrain had agreed to submit the disputes to the Court;

and Third, that the two States were now opening negotiations for a

Special Agreement.

Qatar's airnin making its proposa1 was to get the matter before the

Court as soon as possible. But according to Bahrain this shows that

Qatar itself thought that the 1987 Agreement rneantthat a special

agreement was "necessary". This cannot be true, Mr. President, because,

as 1 shall explain, during the first Meetingof the Tripartite Committee,

Qatar was careful to avoid any language which would limit the Cornmittee's

role only to that of helping the parties to reach a special agreement.

In any event Bahrain rejected Qatar's proposa1 that 1 have just described

which then ceased to be a factor in the negotiations.

On the other hand, Bahrain's original proceduralproposa1 consisted

of a draft agreement to be signed by both Parties, but contained no

special agreementlanguage at all. It expressed profound appreciation - 67 -

for Saudi Arabia's help to the two parties in reaching what Bahrain

called in the preamble to its draft "a final and just solution for the

disputed matters between them by submitting these matters to the

~nternationalCourt of Justicen. Article 1, paragraph 1, of the draft

described the aim of theCommittee as "contactingthe InternationalCourt

of Justice" and "fulfilling.al1 .the. requirements..necessar -4o.have-the

dispute submitted to the Court accordingto its procedures and so that a

final and binding judgmentbe rendered" (see,MQ, Ann, 11-17). The Court

will no doubt immediatelyrecognize that this language reflectsthe

language of the 1987 Agreement itself and contains no implicationof

conditionalityand no suggestionthat Bahrain thought thatthe work of

the Tripartite Committeewas to be concerned only.with a special

agreement.

In fact Qatar offeredto accept this draft proposa1 during the first

forma1 Tripartite Cornmittee meeting on 17 January 1988; but at this

stage, i.e., several weeks after the 1987 Agreement was reached, Bahrain

sought to amend this first draftby changing the description of the aim

of the Tripartite Committee from "contactingthe International Court of

Justice and fulfilling al1 its requirements ..." to "reaching a Special

Agreement ..." - an amendment which Qatarrejected.

Bahrain's Counter-Memorial (in paragraph 5.1) contains a serious

inaccuracy (1 note in parenthesesthat this is a fact which Bahrain now

accepts - as will be seen from footnote 31 at page .l5of Bahrain's -

Rejoinder). The inaccuracyis in the atternptto suggest that Bahrainls

own draft procedural agreement referred to a special agreement. As 1

have just shown, Bahrain soughtto add such a reference by an amendment

which Qatar rejected. Despite this rejection,Bahrain annexed only the - 68 -

amended draft agreementas Annex 1.5 to its Counter-Memorialand then

proceeded to use it, together with a reference toQatar's proposa1 to

support its assertion that a Special Agreement was always regarded as a

prerequisite to the making of a reference to this Court.

Thus, Mr. President, the amended draftthat Bahrain refers to in

paragraph 5.21 of the Counter-Memorialis of 1ittLe.help to its cause.

First, it was not Bahrain's first reaction. Second, the amendment

proposed by Bahrain was categorically rejected by Qatar precisely because

of its reference to a specialagreement, and this rejection encountered

no comment or protest either from the Mediator or Bahrain. Third, and

most importantly,the very fact that Bahrain felt it necessary to amend

its first draft clearly impliesthat it did not think that in and of

itself the language of the 1987 Agreement requireda special agreement.

If the language of the 1987 Agreement had already required a special

agreement as Bahrain now alleges, Bahrain would not have needed to revise

that language to specifythe need for a special agreement. The truth

Mr. President is that the 1987 Agreement contained no such requirement.

There is thus no substance in Bahrain's contentionthat the 1987

Agreement was "clearly conditional uponthe successful negotiationof a

special agreement" (see,CMB, para. 1.6). There is no evidence for this

in the text of the Agreement, nor can any evidencebe found in the draft

procedural proposals presented by Qatar and Bahrain that 1 have just

referred to.

Let me now turn, Mr. President, to the deliberationsof the First

Meeting of the Tripartite Cornmittee. - 69 -

(ii) The Firet Meeting of the Tripartite Cdttee

The discussions in this First Meeting on 17 January 1988 clearly

shows that those present didnot think a special agreement wasthe only

method available for the approach to the Court. The commentsof the

Chairman of the Meeting, Prince Saud Ai-Faisal, the Foreign Ministerof

Saudi Arabia, are particularlypertinent in,this.-regard .;.-Hopened the

meeting by defining its main purpose as considering "ways and means for

referring the issue to the InternationalCourt of Justice" (see,Minutes

of the First Meeting of the Tripartite Cornmittee, Qatar's T.C.M.

Documents, p. 4). Later in the meeting he stated that the only concern

was "to discuss how to refer the subject to the InternationalCourt of

Justice" (ibid.,p. 21).

Such statements,Mr. President,make no sense whatever if it is

assumed an agreement had already been reachedto pursue only the rnethod

of a special agreement.

Even more striking is the explanation of Bahrain's attempt to amend

its first draft proceduralproposa1 (that 1have just referred to) - so

as to include a referenceto a special agreement - given by Dr.

Al-Baharna, one of Bahrain's representativesin the Tripartite Committee

Meetings, and now the distinguishedAgent forthe State of Bahrain in

this case. He said:

"The procedural agreement(i.e.,Bahrain's first draft)
referred to the contact, but after referring the subject to the
experts we learned that the contact with the Court should be
through a special agreementthat would allow the Court to

consider the subject." (Minutesof the FirstTripartite
Committee Meeting, CMQ, Documents,p. 9; emphasis added.)

This, Mr. President, is again clear evidence that at the time of the

1987 Agreement Bahraindid not thinkthat the conclusionof a special - 70 -

agreement was the only method of "contacting"the Court. It was only

later, after consultation with"experts"that Bahrain decided themethod

of approach should be througha special agreement. However, this was a

separate conclusion that Bahrain had reached, not something required by

the 1987 Agreement.

In this context it is also significantthatwhen-Dr. Al-Baharna

stressed at the First Meeting that "what is required is a special

agreement specifyingthe disputed points and giving the Court the

authority to consider the matterw, Dr. Hassan Kamel for Qatar read out

paragraph 1 of Article 40 of the Court's Statute and drew attention to
I

the fact that it provides for cases to be brought before the Court either

by notification of a special agreementor by a written application (see,

Minutes of the First Meeting ofthe Tripartite Committee, Qatar's

T.C.M. Documents, p. 10). He was thus drawing the Committee's attention

to both the available methods of contacting or approaching the Court.

It is also important to stress that during the meeting Prince Saud

of Saudi Arabia expressly referred to the commitment of Bahrain and Qatar

to refer their disputes to the Court and to the Cornmittee'sduty to

transform the commitrnentlnto a submission to the Court; and said that

if it did not do so "this would rneanthe Cornmitteedoes not honour its

cornrnitrnent(s"inutesof the First Tripartite Meeting,Qatar's

T.C.M. Documents, p. 22). However, as 1 said earlier, at this First

Meeting of the Tripartite Committeeboth Parties rejected each other's

draft of the proceduralproposals. Therefore, the question of how to

rnakea reference to the Court rernained unsolved. The record of the

proceedings of the First Meetingclearly demonstratesthat the Parties' - 71 -

ideas on the question of how the disputes wereto be submitted to the

Court had not yet crystallized.

Finally, Mr. President, it is illuminatingto note that Bahrain's

own translationof the Signed Minutes of the TripartiteCommitteeasFirst

Meeting annexed to Bahrainus Rejoinder records that it met, that is, the

Committee met, ato consider the. procedures by whhh .thecmi Unent -of

the State of Bahrain and the State of Qatar to refer the differences

between them both to the InternationalCourt of Justice would be

implemented" (see, Ann. 1.1, p. 83; emphasis added). These Minutes

dernonstrate Bahrainas own clear understandingof the scope of the first

and third paragraphsof the 1987 Agreement; that is that thedecision to

refer the disputeto the Court wasa corniunentand the work of the

Tripartite Committee was merely "to consider the procedures to implement

the commitment". This was in fact the common understandingof the two

Parties and it is therefore impossible, Mr. President, to understand how

Bahrain can today contend that the commitment or what Bahrain also

describes as "an undertaking" (see,RejB, para. 1.04) of the Parties was

"vitallyqualified by the provision for the formation of a committeen

(see,CMB, para. 5.12). As already explained, the role of the committee

was merely to assist the Parties ln determiningand completing the

procedural requirernents of this Court's Rules. Al1 this is in itself

evidence that the 1987 Agreement did not reguire a special agreement.

It is true that inview of Bahrain's insistence at the First Meeting

that a special agreementwas the appropriate wayto refer the dispute

between the Parties to the Court, the Tripartite Committee then entered

upon an exercise to see if an acceptablespecial agreementcould in fact

be finalised. As Qatar has shown in its written pleadings,this attemptto reach a special agreementended in failure in December 1988, when the

Tripartite Comrnitteeceased to function, but at no time was it stated or

even contemplatedthat if no special agreement was reachedthe commitment

of the Parties in the 1987 Agreement to refer their disputes to the Court

would not be implemented.

(iii) Th6 Draft Spatial--hgroemants

After the Firstmeeting of theTripartite Committee, both Bahrain

and Qatar submitted in March 1988 drafts of a suggested text for a

special agreement. The Court will haveseen from Qatar's Memorial that

in Article II of its draft the following questions were raised (see, MQ,

AM. 11.21):

"1. To which of the two States does sovereigntyover Hawar
islands belong?

2. What is the legal status of the Dibal and Jaradeh shoals?

In particular,does either State have sovereignty, if any,
over the Dibal or Jaradeh shoal or any part of either
shoal?

3. By a letter dated 23 December 1947, the British Political

Agent in Bahraln informed the Ruler of Qatar and the Ruler
of Bahrain of the decision of the British Government
establishing the existing median line which at present
determines the respective continental shelvesof the two
States. Does that median line representthe right boundary

between the said continental shelves?

4. Having regardto the answers to questions one, two and
three, what should be the course of the boundary or
boundaries betweenthe maritime areas appertaining

respectively to the State of Qatar and the State of
Bahrain?

Mr. President and Membersof the Court, 1 submit to you with great

respect, that this description of the issues to be referred to the Court

accurately reflected thedisputes which the parties sought a resolution

of under the Framework and under the 1987 Agreement. - 73 -

As 1 mentioned a short whileago, the Framework had referred to "Al1

issues of dispute between the two countries relatingto sovereignty over

the islands, maritime boundariesand territorialwaters"; and King Fahd

of Saudi Arabia had proposed the 1987 Agreement "as a basis for settling

the dispute", which he had stated (in his letter of 19 December 1987) was

"with respect to sovereigntyover the Hawar Islands,--the marine boundary

between the two brotherly countries andany other matters". This was

therefore a descriptionof the disputes which had already been accepted

by both Parties and was now incorporated in thequestions which 1 have

just read that Qatar proposed should be included in a special agreement.

As against this, Mr. President,let me now read out to you Bahrainas

unbelievably slanted description of the disputes contained in its draft

special agreement also submitted in March 1988:

"1. The Parties request the Court

(a) to draw a single maritime boundarybetween the respective
maritime areas of Bahraln and Qatar; such boundary to pass
between the easternmost featuresof the Bahrain archipelago
including most pertinently the Hawar Islands,Fasht ad
Dibal and other adjacent or neighbouringfeatures and the
Coast of Qatar, and to preserve Bahrain's rights in the

pearling bankswhich lie to the north east of the Fasht ad
Dibal, and in the fisheries betweenthe Bahrain archipelago
and Qatar

(b) to determlne the rights of the State of Bahrain in and

around Zubarah." (see, MQ, Annex 11.22.)

As the Court will çee, this descriptionof the disputes to be

referred to the Court assumed therewas no dispute with regard to the

Hawar Islands orthe Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah shoals and in effect

required an advance recognitionby Qatar that these belonged to Bahrain

The question posed by Bahrain only askedfor a decision of the Court on a

maritime boundary based upon recognition,despite the fact that the - 74 -

Framework and the December 1987 Agreement clearly showed that disputes

relating to these islands and shoals were outstanding. F'urthermore, as

has been explained by Sir Ian Sinclair, Qatar was made aware of a claim -

which had at no time been the subject matter of Saudi Arabia's Mediation

- for the determinationby the Court ofBahrain's alleged rights"in and

around Zubara" on the western Coast,ofQatar, without any- indication of

the nature or basis of such rights. Bahrain acknowledgesthat the claims

to Zubarah were not includedin the First Principleof the Saudi

Framework (see, CMB, para. 5.4) but alleges that it brought the issue of

Zubarah to Saudi Arabia's notice in 1986. As Sir Ian Sinclair has

already explained tothe Court, Bahrain has offeredno evidence in these

proceedings in support of this allegation,nor indeed that Qatar was

informed.

Bahrain also included in its draft texta provision which would have

in effect prevented Qatarfrom adducing evidence relevant toshow the

existence and nature of the disputes. This provision - Article V - will

be discussed indetail by my colleague Professor Jean Salmonin a later

presentation. It suffices for me to mention here that Qatar also

strongly rejected this provision.

The terms of Bahrain's draft, which Qatar found outrageous, also

gave grounds for a strong suspicion that Bahrain had decided eitherto

obstruct the reference of the disputed mattersto the Court in the same

way as it had frustrated the 1965 decision to go to arbitration, or to

use the opportunity of drafting a Special Agreementradically to

transform the scope of the issues to be referred, by ignoring those

issues which had been the subject matter of the Mediation under the

Framework, and by adding new issues, including that ofZubarah. The Amirof Qatar said as much in his letter of 25 March 1988 to King Fahd

conveying his "total rejection" of the Bahraini draft coupled with his

Mstrongestprotestw at this development.

It is also useful to refer to the Memorandum of 27 March 1988

incorporating Qatar's detailed views on Bahrain's proposed Special

Agreement circulated to the Tripartite Conmittee, in which Qatar

submitted thatthe terms of the Bahraini draft, including ArticleV,

meant :

"the impositionon the State of Qatar of express admissionof
the non-existenceof the dispute whichactually exists between
it and the Stateof Bahrain ... and of conceding al1 Bahrain's
claims as well as abstaining £rom including in the evidence and
arguments presented by it any document whose dates precedethe

date of the Special Agreement.

In the face of al1 this, the Government of the State of
Qatar cannot but totally rejectthe Bahraini draft, and couple

this rejection with the strongestpossible protest". (See,
M.Q., Annex 11.24, p. 165.)

(iv) The Second Tripartite Codttee Meeting

The drafts submittedby the two Parties were taken up for discussion

at the Second Meeting of the Tripartite Cornmittee held on 3 Aprii 1988

when the above views were conveyed to Bahrain.

It was in this Meeting afterboth Parties had rejected each other's

descriptionof the disputes to be referred to the Court, that the

Chairman of the meeting, Prince Saud, observed:

"There are two possible attitudes representingtwo
different perspectives. Would it be possible, he asked,
merely to inform the Court that disagreements existbetween the
countries as Qatar claims so and so, while Bahrain claims so
and so ? Or, could we agree on pointsto be put before the

Court ?" (See,Minutes of the Second Tripartite Cornmittee
Meeting, Qatar's T.C.M. Documents,p. 84). - 76 -

In many ways, Mr. President, this question became the crucial issue

and marked the beginning of the realisationthat it might be difficult to

agree on a list of subjects to be included in a comrnondocument for a

joint submission, even if a Special Agreement was concluded andthat each

Party would have toplace its own separate claims separatelybefore the

Court. In fact, Prince Saud summarized-the.position-at-.te hed.of the

Meeting by saying: "The question to be put to both countriesis the

following: could al1 the points evoked by the two countries be included

in a common document to be put before the Court ?" (Ibid., p. 87.) The

Parties took time to consider their response to this question.

(VI The Third TripartiteCommittee Meeting

At the commencementof the Third Meeting of the Tripartite Committee

held on 17 April 1988 in Riyadh, Prince Saud reminded those present that:

"we are not discussingthe case in its entirety but
investigating the formatin which it is to be brought before
the Court". (see,Minutes of the Third TripartiteCommittee
Meeting, Qatar's T.C.M. Documents, p. 111).

However, at this Third Meeting the question posed by Prince Saudwas

not specificallyaddressed and the meeting continuedto discuss the

drafts of the Special Agreement presented by each of the States at the

previous Meeting without reaching any agreement. Bahrain continuedto

take the position that the subjects of the dispute were notdefined, Dr.

Al-Baharna, Bahrain's representative, stating:

"The State of Bahrain considersthat there has not been a
legal agreement on the matters in dispute, and consequently the
task of the comrnitteeis to define the subjects of dispute
irrespectiveof any proposals or exchange occurring during the
mediation period. Sadly, we have not yet reached that stage."

(Ibid., p. 131).

On the other hand Dr. Hassan Rame1 for Qatar, took the position

that:"thiscommittee has no brief to discuss or identifythe
matters differed upon,since the matters in dispute are
defined withinthe framework of the mediation" (ibid.,p.
133). The Court will observe that the emphasisin the deliberationsof

the Committee had shifted. Now, instead of considering waysof

"communicatingwithw the Court and "completingthe requirements for

referral of the dispute" the Committee becarneengaged in a

controversy on what the disputes were. Qatar maintained that the

issues in dispute had been clearly defined during the Mediation,

while Bahrain claimedthat this was not so and sought the inclusion

of a number of other issues. It was this controversywhich, from the

Second Meeting onwards, dominated the proceedings of the Tripartite

Committee and not the method of "communicatingwith" this Court

either through a SpecialAgreement or otherwise.

Both Parties however continuedto reiterate their commitment to

refer the disputes to the Court. Dr. Hassan Kamel stated on behalf

of Qatar:

"We are as brothers, as brothers who have made a commitrnent
to refer their disputes to the International Courtof
Justice. What do we have to do to fulfil this commitment ?

We have to agree on a reasonable formulaacceptable to both
sides." (Ibid., p. 116.)

Sheikh Mohammad bin Mubarak Al Khalifa, Foreign Minister of

Bahrain, stated:

"Bahrain insists that the laudable effortsof Saudi

Arabia must continueas shown in the letter of 19.12.1987
from the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, until such tirne
as a judgment is given by the International Court of
Justice." (Ibid., p. 126).

Except for these statements reiteratingthe commitment to come

to this Court with their disputes, The Third Meeting ended

inconclusively. - 79 -

(vi)The Fourth Tripartite Committee Meeting

The Fourth Meeting of the Tripartite Committeetook place on

28th June 1988 in Jeddah. Prior to thisMeeting both Bahrain and

Qatar had submitted revised descriptionsof the disputes to be

included in a possible SpecialAgreement. The revised draft version

presented by Bahrain was again found unacceptable by,Qatar for

substantiallythe same reasons as in the case of the first draft.

In his letter of 9 July 1988, sent after the Fourth Meeting, the

Amir of Qatar again complained to King Fahd of Saudi Arabia that in

its revised draft Bahrain had followed the very course it took in

preparing its firstdraft, entirely ignoringthe fact that the

subjects of dispute for referenceto this Court weredefined by the

First Principle of the Saudi Mediation; andthat Bahrainls action

appeared to be designed to block a reference to this Court (seeMQ,

Annex 11.28).

In spite of the objectionablenature of Bahrainls description of

the dispute in its second draft, Bahrain's Foreign Minister claimed

that Bahrain was disappointedand dissatisfied withQatar's new

proposa1 and alleged that al1 concessionswere being made only by

Bahrain (seeMinutes of the Fourth Tripartite Committee Meeting,

Qatar's T.C.M. Documents, p. 168).

The so-called "concession"in the new Bahraini draft he was

presumably referringto was, that insteadof asking the Court to draw

a maritime boundaryeast of Hawar (that is implying a recognitionin

advance by Qatar that the Hawar islands belongedto Bahrain), the

Parties were now to ask the Court to consider the limited questionof

the extent to which the two States had "exercisedsovereignty over - 80 -

the Hawar islands". In reality this formulation was justas

unsatisfactoryas Bahrain's former draft. Moreover, the maritime

boundary was still to be drawn so as to grant Dibal and Qit'at

Jaradah shoals to Bahrain (see,MQ, Annex 11.27).

The Fourth Meeting, therefore,ended with a sense of despair

amongst Qatar's delegation,without any further progress.

At this stage, the search for a formula describing the issuesin

dispute in a manner acceptable to bothQatar and Bahrain had reached

a deadlock, and no effort was made to summon another Meeting of the

Cornmitteefor some months. As 1 have said, the issue now was: could

the Parties agree on a list of subjects to be referred to the Court?

And if not, was there some way (regardlessof whether this would be

by a joint submission or otherwise) in which each Party could place

its own claims before the Court - a question which Had been posed by

Prince Saud at the Second Meetingand still remainedunanswered.

Mr. President, perhaps thiswould be an appropriate momentto stop.

The PRESIDENT: Thank you, Mr. Shankardass. The Court will now

rise, and the hearings will be resumed tomorrowat 10 a.m.

The Court rose at 1.10 p.m

Document Long Title

Audience publique tenue le lundi 28 février 1994, à 10 heures, au Palais de la Paix, sous la présidence de M. Bedjaoui, président

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