Uncorrected
Non corrigé
CR 2012/16
International Court Cour internationale
of Justice de Justice
THHEAGUE LAAYE
YEAR 2012
Public sitting
held on Friday 4 May 2012, at 10 a.m., at the Peace Palace,
President Tomka presiding,
in the case concerning the Territorial and Maritime Dispute
(Nicaragua v. Colombia)
____________________
VERBATIM RECORD
____________________
ANNÉE 2012
Audience publique
tenue le vendredi 4 mai 2012, à 10 heures, au Palais de la Paix,
sous la présidence de M. Tomka, président,
en l’affaire du Différend territorial et maritime
(Nicaragua c. Colombie)
________________
COMPTE RENDU
________________ - 2 -
Present: Presient ka
Vice-Presipeúnltveda-Amor
Judges Owada
Abraham
Keith
Bennouna
Skotnikov
Cançado Trindade
Greenwood
Xue
Donoghue
Sebutinde
Judges ad hoc Mensah
Cot
Registrar Couvreur
⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯ - 3 -
Présents : M. Tomka,président
SepMúl.vvae-poé,ident
OwMada.
Abraham
Keith
Bennouna
Skotnikov
Crinçade
Greenwood
XuMe mes
Donoghue
Sebgutisnde,
MeMnsah.
jugesCot, ad hoc
Cgefferr,
⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯ - 4 -
The Government of Nicaragua is represented by:
H.E. Mr. Carlos José Argüello Gómez, Ambassador of the Republic of Nicaragua to the Kingdom
of the Netherlands,
as Agent and Counsel;
Mr. Vaughan Lowe, Q.C., Chichele Professor of Inte rnational Law, University of Oxford, Counsel
and Advocate,
MrA. lexOudeElferink, Deputy-Director, Netherlands Institute for the Law of the Sea,
Utrecht University,
Mr.AlainPellet, Professor at the University Pa risOuest, Nanterre-La Défense, former Member
and former Chairman of the International Law Commission, associate member of the Institut de
droit international,
Mr.PaulReichler, Attorney-at-Law, Foley Hoag LLP, Washington D.C., Member of the Bars of
the United States Supreme Court and the District of Columbia,
Mr.AntonioRemiroBrotóns, Professor of International Law, Universidad Autónoma, Madrid,
member of the Institut de droit international,
as Counsel and Advocates;
Mr.RobinCleverly, M.A., DPhil, C.Geol, F.G.S., Law of the Sea Consultant, Admiralty
Consultancy Services, The United Kingdom Hydrographic Office,
Mr.JohnBrown, R.D., M.A., F.R.I.N., F.R.G.S., Law of the Sea Consultant, Admiralty
Consultancy Services, The United Kingdom Hydrographic Office,
as Scientific and Technical Advisers;
Mr. César Vega Masís, Director of Juridical Affairs, Sovereignty and Territory, Ministry of
Foreign Affairs,
Mr. Walner Molina Pérez, Juridical Adviser, Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
Mr. Julio César Saborio, Juridical Adviser, Ministry of Foreign Affai
rs,
Ms Tania Elena Pacheco Blandino, Juridical Adviser, Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
Mr.Lawrence H. Martin, Foley Hoag LLP, Washi ngton D.C., Member of the Bars of the United
States Supreme Court, the District of Columbia and the Commonwealth of Masschusetts,
MsCarmen Martínez Capdevila, Doctor of Public International Law, Universidad Autónoma,
Madrid,
as Counsel; - 5 -
Le Gouvernement du Nicaragua est représenté par :
S. Exc. M. Carlos José Argüello Gómez, ambassadeur de la République du Nicaragua auprès du
Royaume des Pays-Bas,
comme agent et conseil ;
M.VaughanLowe, Q.C., professeur de droit interna tional à l’Université d’Oxford, titulaire de la
chaire Chichele, conseil et avocat,
M. Alex Oude Elferink, directeur adjoint de l’Ins titut néerlandais du droit de la mer de l’Université
d’Utrecht,
M.AlainPellet, professeur à l’Université de Pari sOuest, Nanterre-La Défense, ancien membre et
ancien président de la Commission du droit inte rnational, membre associé de l’Institut de droit
international,
M. Paul Reichler, avocat au cabinet Foley Hoag LLP, Washington D.C. , membre des barreaux de
la Cour suprême des Etats-Unis d’Amérique et du district de Columbia,
M.AntonioRemiroBrotóns, professeur de droi t international à l’Universidad Autónoma de
Madrid, membre de l’Institut de droit international,
comme conseils et avocats ;
M.RobinCleverly, M.A., D.Phil, C.Geol, F.G.S., consultant en droit de la mer, Admiralty
Consultancy Services du bureau hydrographique du Royaume-Uni,
M.JohnBrown, R.D., M.A., F.R.I.N., F.R.G.S., consultant en droit de la mer, Admiralty
Consultancy Services du bureau hydrographique du Royaume-Uni,
comme conseillers scientifiques et techniques ;
M. César Vega Masís, directeur des affaires juridiques, de la souveraineté et du territoire au
ministère des affaires étrangères,
M. Walner Molina Pérez, conseiller juridique au ministère des affaires étrangères,
M. Julio César Saborio, conseiller juridique au ministère des affaires étrangères,
Mme Tania Elena Pacheco Blandino, conseiller juridique au ministère des affaires étrangères,
M.Lawrence H. Martin, cabinet Foley Hoag LLP, Washington D.C., membre des barreaux de la
Cour suprême des Etats-Unis d’Amérique, du district de Columbia et du Commonwealth du
Massachusetts,
Mme Carmen Martínez Capdevila, docteur en droit international public de l’Universidad
Autónoma de Madrid,
comme conseils ; - 6 -
Mr.Edgardo Sobenes Obregon, First Secretary, Embassy of Nicaragua in the Kingdom of the
Netherlands,
MsClaudia Loza Obregon, Second Secretary, Embassy of Nicaragua in the Kingdom of the
Netherlands,
Mr.Romain Piéri, Researcher, Centre for Inte rnational Law (CEDIN), University Paris Ouest,
Nanterre-La Défense,
Mr. Yuri Parkhomenko, Foley Hoag LLP, United States of America,
as Assistant Counsel;
Ms Helena Patton, The United Kingdom Hydrographic Office,
Ms Fiona Bloor, The United Kingdom Hydrographic Office,
as Technical Assistants.
The Government of Colombia is represented by:
H.E. Mr. Julio Londoño Paredes, Professor of In ternational Relations, Universidad del Rosario,
Bogotá,
as Agent and Counsel;
H.E. Mr. Guillermo Fernández de Soto, member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, former
Minister for Foreign Affairs,
as Co-Agent;
Mr. James Crawford, S.C., F.B.A., Whewell Prof essor of International Law, University of
Cambridge, member of the Institut de droit international, Barrister,
Mr. Rodman R. Bundy, avocat à la Cour d’appel de Paris , member of the New York Bar,
Eversheds LLP, Paris,
Mr. Marcelo Kohen, Professor of International Law at the Graduate Institute of International and
Development Studies, Geneva, associate member of the Institut de droit international,
as Counsel and Advocates;
H.E. Mr. Eduardo Pizarro Leongómez, Ambassador of the Republic of Colombia to the Kingdom
of the Netherlands, Permanent Representative of Colombia to the OPCW,
as Adviser;
H.E. Mr. Francisco José Lloreda Mera, Preside ntial High-Commissioner for Citizenry Security,
former Ambassador of the Republic of Colombia to the Kingdom of the Netherlands, former
Minister of State,
Mr. Eduardo Valencia-Ospina, member of the International Law Commission, - 7 -
M. Edgardo Sobenes Obregon, premier secrétaire de l’ambassade du Nicaragua au Royaume des
Pays-Bas,
MmeClaudia Loza Obregon, deuxième secrétaire de l’ambassade du Nicaragua au Royaume des
Pays-Bas,
M.Romain Piéri, chercheur au centre de droi t international (CEDIN) de l’Université de
Paris Ouest, Nanterre-La Défense,
M. Yuri Parkhomenko, cabinet Foley Hoag LLP, Etats-Unis d’Amérique,
comme conseils adjoints ;
Mme Helena Patton, bureau hydrographique du Royaume-Uni,
Mme Fiona Bloor, bureau hydrographique du Royaume-Uni,
comme assistantes techniques.
Le Gouvernement de la Colombie est représenté par :
S. Exc. M. Julio Londoño Paredes, professeur de relations internationales à l’Universidad del
Rosario, Bogotá,
comme agent et conseil ;
S.Exc.M.Guillermo Fernández de Soto, membre de la Cour permanente d’arbitrage, ancien
ministre des affaires étrangères,
comme coagent ;
M.James Crawford, S.C., F.B.A., professeur de dr oit international à l’Université de Cambridge,
titulaire de la chaire Whewell, membre de l’Institut de droit international, avocat,
M.Rodman R.Bundy, avocat à la Cour d’appel de Paris, membre du barreau de NewYork,
Cabinet Eversheds LLP, Paris,
M. Marcelo Kohen, professeur de droit internationa l à l’Institut de hautes études internationales et
du développement de Genève, membre associé de l’Institut de droit international,
comme conseils et avocats ;
S. Exc. M. Eduardo Pizarro Leongómez, ambassadeur de la République de Colombie auprès du
Royaume des Pays-Bas, représentant permanent de la Colombie auprès de l’OIAC,
comme conseiller ;
S. Exc. M. Francisco José Lloreda Mera, haut conseiller présidentiel pour la cohabitation et la
sécurité des citoyens, ancien ambassadeur de la République de Colombie auprès du Royaume
des Pays-Bas, ancien ministre d’Etat,
M. Eduardo Valencia-Ospina, membre de la Commission du droit international, - 8 -
H.E. Ms Sonia Pereira Portilla, Ambassador, Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
Mr. Andelfo García González, Professor of Intern ational Law, former Deputy Minister for Foreign
Affairs,
Ms Mirza Gnecco Plá, Minister-Counsellor, Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
Ms Andrea Jiménez Herrera, Counsellor, Embassy of Colombia in the Kingdom of the
Netherlands,
as Legal Advisers;
CF William Pedroza, International Affairs Bureau, National Navy of Colombia,
Mr. Scott Edmonds, Cartographer, International Mapping,
Mr. Thomas Frogh, Cartographer, International Mapping,
as Technical Advisers;
Mr. Camilo Alberto Gómez Niño,
as Administrative Assistant. - 9 -
S. Exc. Mme Sonia Pereira Portilla, ambassadeur, ministère des affaires étrangères,
M. Andelfo García González, professeur de droit inte rnational, ancien ministre adjoint des affaires
étrangères,
Mme Mirza Gnecco Plá, ministre-conseiller au ministère des affaires étrangères,
Mme Andrea Jiménez Herrera, conseiller à l’ambassade de Colombie au Royaume des Pays-Bas,
comme conseillers juridiques ;
Le capitaine de frégate William Pedroza, bureau des affaires internationales, Marine colombienne,
M. Scott Edmonds, cartographe, International Mapping,
M. Thomas Frogh, cartographe, International Mapping,
comme conseillers techniques ;
M. Camilo Alberto Gómez Niño,
comme assistant administratif. - 10 -
The PRESIDENT: Please be seated. Good morn ing. The sitting is open. The Court meets
today in order to provide the opportunity to Colombia to present arguments in the second round. I
give the floor to His Excellency, Agent for the Government of Colombia.
Mr. LONDOÑO PAREDES:
1. COLOMBIA ’S UNQUESTIONABLE SOVEREIGNTY OVER
THE S AN A NDRÉS A RCHIPELAGO
1. Thank you, Mr.President. Mr.Preside nt and distinguished Judges, during their
presentation last Tuesday the Agent and counsel for Nicaragua allowed themselves to make
statements that Colombia rejects, and which do not comport with the behaviour that is to be
expected of representatives of a State which owes a duty of respect for the opposing Party.
2. The Government of Nicaragua built an artificial case based on ignoring and rewriting
history, rejecting a fundamental treaty, refashioning geography and distorting the facts. In a
last-ditch misguided attempt to buttress its positi on, Nicaragua, portraying itself as a defenceless
country, once again ignores and misrepresents the realit y of the situation in the relevant part of the
Caribbean.
3. Contrary to its portrayal, it is thanks to the enormous efforts that my country has devoted
to the fight against illegal traffic in drugs arms, that peace and stability have been assured in
the area of the San Andrés Archipelago. This atti tude is in marked contrast with the activities
engaged in by our opponent, as officially attested to in a report on the diversion of arms from
Nicaragua to illegal armed groups in Colombia, by the Secretary-General of the Organization of
1
American States in 2003 .
4. Mr.President, Members of the Court, these misrepresentations in the pleadings by
Nicaragua’s counsel, make it necessary to once agai n, set the record straight. For 191years,
Colombia has exercised its sovereignty and jurisdiction over each and every one of the
archipelago’s components, including the cays of Roncador, Quitasueño, Serrana, Serranilla, Bajo
1OEA/Ser.G, CP/doc. 3687/03, 29 Jan. 2003. “Report of the General Secretariat of the Organization of American
States on the Diversion of Nicaraguan Arms to the United Defense Forces of Colombia” dated 6 Jan. 2003. Available at:
http://www.oas.org/oaspage/ni-coarmas/ni-coenglish3687.htm. - 11 -
2
Nuevo, Alburquerque and East-Southeast . As shown by Colombia, the archipelago has been
considered as a unit in historical, political and geographic terms 3.
5. In contrast, in its entire existence Nicaragua has never, even for a single day ⎯
Mr. President and Members of the Court ⎯ even for a single day, had any presence on any of the
archipelago’s islands and cays it now claims.
6. The territory of the San Andrés Archipelago is one of the world’s largest marine biosphere
reserves. Colombia’s decision to declare th e San Andrés Archipelago as its most important
4
protected marine area , was made in light of the importance of coral reefs biodiversity for coastal
protection. It is worth recalling that reefs in the Caribbean Sea are interconnected, which means
that the preservation of an area depends on the preservation of another.
7. Mr.President and distinguished Judges, the Mosquito Coast and the San Andrés
Archipelago were always separate and distinct geographical, historical, social and political entities.
Even the Royal Order of 1803 designated O’Neille as Governor of the islands of San Andrés, but
not of the Mosquito Coast. However, both the Mosquito Coast as well as the islands were allocated
to the Viceroyalty of Santa Fé (New Granada), in the same Royal provision 5.
8. What was the effect of this provision? That the entire Mosquito Coast, to the west, as well
as all the islands of San Andrés ⎯ as the ones located east of that Coast were
known ⎯appertained to the Viceroyalty of Santa Fé (New Granada) in 1810. There were no
islands or cays in the area that were not ascribed to the Viceroyalty.
9. Therefore, neither the Coast nor any of th e islands and cays east of it were part of the
Captaincy-General of Guatemala, of which Nicaragua was a province, in 1810. They were part of
the Viceroyalty of Santa Fé, predecessor of present-day Colombia.
6
10. It was only in the 1928/1930Treaty , that Colombia recognized Nicaragua’s sovereignty
over the Mosquito Coast, one of the two components that had been ascribed to the Viceroyalty in
2RC, pp. 41-44, para. 2.22.
3
CMC, Vol. I, pp. 36-74, Chap. 2, Sec. C.
4
CMC, Vol. I, p. 18, para. 2.8; pp. 118-121, paras. 3.89--3.91.
5POC, Vol. II, Ann. 2.
6CMC, Vol. II-A, Ann. 1. - 12 -
1803. In that instrument, Colombia also recognized Nicaragua’s sovereignty over the Corn Islands
that, although part of the San Andrés Archipelago, Nicaragua had forcefully occupied in 1890.
11. Nicaragua, for its part, recognized that all the islands located east of the Mosquito Coast,
by then known as the “San Andrés Archipelago”, that is, the other territorial entity that had been
ascribed to the Viceroyalty in 1803, belonged to Colombia. Therefore, all the other islands off the
Nicaraguan coast would continue to belong to Colombia.
12. Nicaragua realized that its general r ecognition of Colombia’s sovereignty over the
archipelago, could also imply its recognition of Colombia’s sovereignty over the Miskito Cays,
located in the same latitude as the Quitasueño cays. To prevent this, Nicaragua demanded that a
7
clause be added to the treaty stating that the western limit of the archipelago , over which
Nicaragua recognized Colombia’s full dominion, was the 82nd meridian.
13. The purpose of the inclusion of the 82nd meridian could not have been, as Nicaragua has
attempted to portray it, to prevent the Corn Islands to be considered as part of the archipelago, by
drawing a line along the meridian sole ly from Alburquerque to Providencia, since in the treaty
8
Colombia had already expressly recognized the Corn Islands as Nicaraguan .
14. However, in order to attempt to restrict the extent of the limit of the meridian to the
north, Nicaragua chooses to ignore the purpose reflec ted not only in the process leading up to the
addition of the 82nd meridian to the treaty, explained in Colombia’s Counter-Memorial, but also
9
acknowledged by Nicaragua in its Memorial and by the statements of high Nicaraguan officials .
15. As Colombia showed last week, Nicara gua’s motivation behind its proposal of the
82ndmeridian limit was to prevent that the Miskito Cays might be considered as Colombian, as
clearly explained by Nicaragua’s Acting Foreign Minister at the time, and 70years later, by a
distinguished former Foreign Minister, Mr.Alejandro Montiel Argüello 10. All of this, again,
Nicaragua’s counsel chose to forget.
7
Territorial and Maritime Dispute between Nica ragua and Honduras in the Caribbean Sea (Nicaragua v.
Honduras), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2007 (II), p. 867, para.115.
8CMC, Vol. I, pp. 247-248, paras. 5.13-5.14.
9CMC, Vol. I, Chap. 5, Sec. C, pp. 261-263, paras. 5.43-5.47; MN, p.176, pa ra. 2.251; CMC, Vol. II-A, p. 731,
Ann.197: Note No.1316, from the United States chargé d’affaires, a.i. at Managua, to the Secretary of State,
11 Feb. 1930.
10CR 2012/11, p. 14, para. 21 (Londoño). - 13 -
16. Yet, the same explanation was given by the Agent of Nicaragua. Indeed, in a conference
in Managua in 1999, this account was corroborated by him as follows:
“Mr.Carlos Argüello stated that when the treaty was submitted to the
Nicaraguan Senate in 1930, a Senator was c oncerned that if it was simply said that
Colombia had sovereignty over the San Andr és Archipelago, ‘by the time we realize 11
what is happening, they will say that the Miskito cays are part of the Archipelago.’”
17. As shown, in 1930 neither Nicar agua nor Colombia were thinking, even remotely, that
any of the cays and islands that Nicaragua now claims could belong to Nicaragua.
18. Following the inclusion of the limit of th e 82nd meridian in the Protocol of Exchange of
12
Ratifications of 1930 , all the islands, cays and banks off the Mosquito Coast located west of that
meridian, between Costa Rica in the south and Honduras in the north, were Nicaraguan. And
therefore, all the cays and islets located east of it, without exception, appertained to Colombia.
19. Consequently, it is surprising now to h ear Nicaragua attempt to claim that the cays
located east of the 82nd meridian belong to it, un der the extravagant argument that Colombia’s
recognition of Nicaragua’s sovereignty over the Mosquito Coast would have somehow appended
them to that territory as a bonus of sorts.
20. Mr.President and Members of the Court, a few days ago, Nicaragua alluded to a Note
containing an alleged e xpression of its purported rights to the cay of Serrana in 1868. However,
Nicaragua did not mention this document in the App lication, did not mention it in the Memorial or
in its Reply and, when it attempted to add it to the judges’ folders just last week, that attempt was
not allowed by the Court. Nevertheless, Professor Brotóns, on Tuesday, referred again to that Note
on the basis of secondary sources.
21. However, in the interest of completeness, it should be clarified that ProfessorBrotóns
forgot to mention the general framework re ferred to in one of the sources he used 13. The Note
mentioned by Nicaragua was not spontaneous; it was in reply to a Note from the Secretary of State
11“El Nuevo Diario” (Nicaraguan newspaper), Ma nagua,4ec1.999,1.0. Available at:
http://archivo.elnuevodiario.com.ni/1999/diciembre/04-diciembre-1999/na….
12CMC, Vol. II-A, Ann. 1, p. 4.
13Office of the Legal Adviser, Department of State, Sovereignty of Islands Claimed under the Guano Act and of
the North-western Hawaiian Islands, Midway and Wake, Washington D.C., 1932, pp. 104-106. - 14 -
to Nicaragua’s Legation in Washington inquiring whether they believed that country had any sort
of right over the cay 14.
T2he. same Secretary of State who received the answer to this question, would later reject
Nicaragua’s assertions as unfounded, in a Note of 10December1868 15. In the same year,
Nicaragua did not ever reply to that Note. Its memory lapse concerning Serrana lasted exactly . . .
exactly . . . 104years... until Nicaragua first asserted a claim over it against Colombia in 1972,
104 years after.
23. Additionally, Nicaragua, without producing any scientific evidence to the contrary, has
purported to discredit and delegitimize the two sc ientific and technical reports submitted by
16
Colombia on Quitasueño . They were conducted, as will be further explained today, with the
methodology and rigor that such evidence demands when intended for submission to this Court.
Nevertheless, if the Court, prior to rendering its judgment, would deem it proper to apply Article 66
of the Rules of Court, my country, Mr.President, would welcome an in situ visit either by the
Court or by a commission appointed to that e ffect, in order to corroborate the veracity of
Colombia’s reports.
24. Quitasueño has been depicted on maps a nd charts since the early times of the discovery
of the New World, throughout the entire coloni al period in the seventeenth, eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries ⎯ including that of 1885 17⎯ and obviously, in those of the twentieth century.
25. Nicaragua’s acquiescence in relation to the sovereignty and jurisdiction exercised by
Colombia over Quitasueño is evidenced, inter alia, in its silence ⎯ in its silence ⎯ between 1854
and 1928 ⎯ between 1854 and 1928, Mr.President ⎯ during the dispute between Colombia and
the United States. Also, by its silence with regard to the exchanges between Colombia and Great
Britain, and by its recognition that it was in dis pute between Colombia and the United States in the
14
Office of the Legal Adviser, Department of State, Sovereignty of Islands Claimed under the Guano Act and of
the North-western Hawaiian Islands, Midway and Wake, Washington D.C., 1932, pp. 104-106.
15
Ibid.
16CR 2012/14, p. 35-41, paras. 11-22 (Oude Elferink).
17CMC, Vol. III, Fig. 5.1, p. 79. - 15 -
18
1928 Treaty ⎯ all that time; silence. All of this means that it never considered that Quitasueño
could belong to it regardless of its physical status.
26. Besides, in Quitasueño Colombia has, for several decades, installed and maintained
lighthouses: conducted seismic and marine scientific research; hydrographic surveys;
cartographic updates, and has also authorized thir d States to conduct research and fishing activities
in its adjacent areas. Likewise, Colombia performs security-related tasks in those areas, relating to
the fight against transnational organized crime a nd fishing control. Also, it has concluded and
implemented agreements with the United States enforcing measures for the conservation of the
19
living resources in the area .
27. It is not possible for Nicaragua to now a ttempt to claim it, disregarding, Mr.President,
disregarding 150 years of history and the peaceful jurisdiction exercised by Colombia.
28. Nicaragua’s claims not only ignore Colombia’s interests, entitlements and rights, but also
third States, despite its protestations to the contrary. Colombia has concluded maritime
20
delimitation treaties and agreements with several States in the region that have, for decades, been
a source of co-operation, stability and harmonious relations in the region.
29. Now Nicaragua is purporting to destroy them on the basis of fallacious arguments,
against the principles of international law, sowing the seeds of conflict and tension in that part of
the Caribbean, without precedents in the area.
The Court no doubt will be aware of the implications that Nicaragua’s claims involve.
30. Mr.President and Members of the Court, I must therefore convey to the Court, the
despair of the 80,000 inhabitants of the San Andrés Archipelago, backed by millions of their fellow
nationals, in the face of Nicaragua’s attempt not only to fracture the archipelago, but also to
appropriate its areas, including the waters that connect its islands and cays, from which they and
their ancestors have derived their sustenance and earned their living, and where Nicaragua has
never been present.
18
CMC, Vol. I, pp. 247-248, paras. 5.13-5.14.
19CMC, Vol. II-A, Ann.172; CMC, Vol.I, p.32, para.2.29; CMC, Vol.I, p.96, para.3.35; CMC, Vol.I,
pp. 97, para. 3.39; CMC, Vol. II-B, Apps. 5-12; CMC, Vol. II-A, Anns. 11, 13 and 16.
20CMC, Vol. II–B, Anns. 2-5, 7-10, 12, 14, 15, 17 and 18. - 16 -
31. They are bewildered to learn that Nicaragua is requesting the Court to enclave them.
With the added affront that, once they sail beyond their immediate surroundings to conduct their
traditional fishing activities in the waters and cays where they have lived for two centuries, they
would encounter an unfriendly country that has never frequented those areas.
32. This does not comport with their basic ri ghts to development, and cannot be deemed to
achieve an equitable result in a case where their subsistence and essential economic activities are at
stake.
33. In this regard, it is worth recalling the Tribunal’s conclusion in the case of Guinea v.
Guinea Bissau to the effect that, “[t]he boundaries fixed by man must not be designed to increase
the difficulties of States or to complicate their economic life” 21.
34. Mr. President, Members of the Court, Colo mbia trusts that the Court will not endorse the
attempt by a country, portraying itself as weak and la w-abiding, despite the fact that neither is true,
to destroy what has been an essen tial part of the national heritage , on the basis of contradictory
arguments.
35. Mr.President, distinguishe d judges, 43million Colombians are confident that the Court
will not allow the appropriation of Colombia’s maritime areas, in light of the fact that its rights are
derived from geography which cannot be refashione d; from history, which cannot be rewritten;
and from law, which cannot be violated. In sum, that it will reject Nicaragua’s unfounded claims
and uphold my country’s position.
36. May I ask you, Mr.President, to give the floor to ProfessorKohen who will continue
Colombia’s presentation on the issue of territorial sovereignty. Thank you, Mr. President.
The PRESIDENT: I thank Ambassador JulioLondoñoParedes for his statement. Et je
donne la parole à Monsieur Marcello Kohen, conseil et avocat de la Colombie. Vous avez la
parole, Monsieur.
2“Les frontières fixées par l'homme ne devraient pas a voir pour objet d'augmenter les difficultés des États ou de
compliquer leur vie économique.” 19 UN, RIAA 194, para. 123. - 17 -
M. KOHEN :
2. L’INCAPACITÉ DU NICARAGUA D ARTICULER UNE JUSTIFICATION POUR
SA REVENDICATION ARTIFICIELLE DES CAYES
1. Monsieur le président, Mesdames et Messieurs les juges, à la fin de cette procédure, une
conclusion simple s’impose : le Nicaragua a été incapable d’articuler ne serait-ce qu’un minimum
de justification de sa revendicati on de souveraineté sur les cayes. Face à cette incapacité, le
demandeur a focalisé ses efforts, d’une part, à v ilipender le traité de 1928-1930 et, impuissant de
présenter un vrai cas «positif» pour étayer une revend ication intenable, s’est contenté, d’autre part,
de présenter un cas «négatif». Autrement dit, de manière infructueuse, le Nicaragua a dépensé son
énergie uniquement à faire croire que les cayes ne feraient pas partie de l’archipel. Cela n’a
pourtant pas fait avancer d’un iota sa position. Car les deux hypothèses logiquement possibles
mènent au même résultat : que les cayes fassent ou non partie de l’archipel, dans les deux cas, elles
sont colombiennes. Si elles font partie de l’ar chipel de SanAndrés, le traité de 1928-1930 règle
définitivement la question. Si elles ne faisaient pas partie de l’archipe⎯idée que nous rejetons
fermement ⎯ elles seraient également colombiennes en vertu de l’ uti possidetis juris et des
effectivités.
2. Dans cet exposé conclusif, je vais montrer tout d’abord que, contrairement aux
affirmations du Nicaragua, le tra ité de 1928-1930 est un traité terr itorial conclu selon toutes les
formes n’ayant porté aucun préjudice au Nicaragua. Ensuite, que la Partie demanderesse a été
incapable d’articuler une revendication de souveraineté sur les cayes. Enfin, que le Nicaragua n’a
pas pu réfuter la preuve qui montre de manière accablante que, en interprétant le traité de
1928-1930, les cayes font partie de l’archipel de SanAndrés et qu’elles sont par conséquent
colombiennes.
A. Un traité déclaré «nul» par le Nicaragua qui maintenant
lui attribuerait tous les territoires objet du différend
3. Mesdames et Messieurs de la Cour, le Nicaragua a essayé de dresser un portrait caricatural
du traité de 1928-1930, se posant en prétendue vic time d’un dépouillement territorial. Après avoir
entendu la Partie adverse, je doi s avouer ma perplexité, car le Nicaragua prétend maintenant que, - 18 -
grâce au traité de 1928-1930, toutes les cayes relèvera ient de sa souveraineté. En d’autres termes,
la Colombie aurait renoncé par ce traité à la côte des Mosquitos, aux îles Mangles et à toutes les
cayes de l’archipel, alors qu’en même temps le Nicaragua serait victime d’un soi-disant traité
«inégal» qu’on lui aurait imposé contre sa volonté !
4. Ma perplexité ne s’arrête pas là Monsieur le président. Je note que l’agent du Nicaragua a
er
changé même l’histoire récente de ce différend. Le 1 mai, il a affirmé à deux reprises que le
Nicaragua avait «dénoncé» le traité de 1928-1930 en 1980 22. L’ambassadeur Argüello est pourtant
un diplomate avisé avec une longue expérience. Pour ne pas parler de la pléthore d’éminents
conseils qui constituent son équipe . Ils ne peuvent pas ignorer que «dénoncer» un traité est une
chose bien différente que de le déclarer «nul».
5. La vérité, Monsieur le président, est que, s’agissant de questions territoriales, «nullité» et
«Nicaragua» sont deux termes qui semblent aller de pair. Le traité de limites de1858 avec le
Costa Rica fut déclaré nul par le Nicaragua. N’étant pas satisfait de la sentence arbitrale rendue par
le roi d’Espagne en 1906 au sujet de la frontière avec le Honduras, le Nicaragua l’a aussi déclarée
nulle. Finalement, après un demi-siècle d’applica tion incontestée, le Nicaragua a déclaré nul son
traité territorial avec la Colombie de 1928-1930. Avec tous ses voisins donc, le Nicaragua a eu ce
comportement de rejet des traités ou de sentences arbitrales définissant les étendues territoriales des
parties. Et à chaque fois, le Nicaragua a essuyé des échecs. La sentence arbitrale du
président Cleveland a déclaré que le tr aité de limites de 1858 était valide 23. Votre Cour a déclaré
24
que la sentence arbitrale du roi d’Espagne était valide . Votre Cour encore a déclaré que le traité
25
de 1928-1930 était valide .
6. On peut supposer que cette tentative de déguiser la déclaration de nullité de1980 en
prétendue «dénonciation» vise à rendre moins grav e le comportement du Nicaragua. En réalité,
cela ne change rien, ni la gravité de celui-ci, ni les conséquences à l’égard du régime territorial
22 CR 2012/14, p. 11, par. 7 et p. 14, par. 15 (Argüello).
23 Différend relatif à des droits de navigation et des droits connexes (CostaRica c.Nicaragua), arrêt,
C.I.J. Recueil 2009, p. 230, par. 20.
24 Sentence arbitrale rendue par le roi d’Espagne le 23décembre1906 (Honduras c.Nicaragua), arrêt,
C.I.J. Recueil 1960, p. 217.
25 Différend territorial et maritime (Nicaragua.olombie), exceptions préliminaires, arrêt,
C.I.J. Recueil 2007 (II), p. 859, par. 81. - 19 -
établi. Les traités établissant des frontières ou de rè glement territorial ne sont pas, par leur nature,
dénonciables et même s’ils prévoyaient explicitement la possibilité de dénonciation, la frontière ou
26
le règlement territorial qui en découlent n’en seraient pas affectés .
7. Le Nicaragua a dressé un portrait de la situation qui ne s’accommode pas de la réalité.
S’il y a bien un Etat expansionniste ici, c’est le Nicaragua. Il a revendiqué la côte des Mosquitos
en1838, occupé par la force les îles Mangles en 1890 et revendiqué tout l’archipel en1913. Le
conseil du Nicaragua se demandait pourquoi la Colo mbie aurait accepté de perdre la côte des
27
Mosquitos si ces titres étaient fondés . Comme je l’ai expliqué lors du premier tour, l’Espagne n’a
jamais été capable d’exercer un contrôle effectif sur la côte des Mosquitos 28. Après l’indépendance
des républiques latino-américaines, la puissance qui a gagné le contrôle de cette côte fut le
Royaume-Uni, à travers un régime de soi-disant protectorat. Pour des raisons liées à une possible
construction du canal interocéanique, le Gouvernem ent britannique avait favorisé le Nicaragua et
lui transféra le contrôle de la côte des Mosquitos. En ce qui concerne les îles Mangles, le
Nicaragua les occupa par la forc e en 1890 pour les céder à bail aux Etats-Unis d’Amérique par le
traité Bryan-Chamorro de 1914, et qui les ont effectivement administrées jusqu’en 1971. Comme
on le sait, la sentence arbitrale Loubet en1900 reconnut la côte Mosquito méridionale comme
costa-ricienne ⎯ fait que la Colombie avait déjà accepté da ns le traité de 1856 et 1865, et suivit la
sécession du Panama en 1903. Dans ce contexte, il n’y a rien d’étonnant que la Colombie accepte
l’assignation de la côte des Mosquitos et les îles Mangles au Nicaragua en échange de la
reconnaissance de sa souveraineté sur l’archipel de San Andrés. En fait, par le traité de 1928-1930,
les parties se sont reconnu les territoires qui étaien t sous leur contrôle respectif au moment de sa
conclusion. Rien ne permet donc d’invoquer une quelconque injustice ou un quelconque détriment
que le Nicaragua aurait subi en vertu de celui-ci.
8. La tentative de présenter le Nicaragua comme l’Etat qui s’est vu refuser des propositions
d’arbitrage ne reflète pas non plus la réalité des choses 2. Voici la réponse catégorique du ministre
26
Différend territorial (Jamahiriya arabe libyenne/Tchad), arrêt, C.I.J.Recueil1994 , p.37, par. 72-73;
Différend territorial et maritime (Nicaragua c. Colombie), exceptions préliminaires, arrêt, C.I.J. Recueil 2007 , p.861,
par. 89.
27
CR 2012/8, p. 35-36, par. 15 (Remiro Brotóns).
28CR 2012/11, p. 32-33, par. 7 (Kohen).
29CR 2012/8, p. 35-36, par. 12,13 et 15 (Remiro Brotóns). - 20 -
des affaires étrangères nicaraguayen à son hom ologue colombien, datée du 24décembre1913,
faisant siennes les réponses de ses prédécesseurs au sujet des propositions colombiennes
d’arbitrage sur la côte des Mosquitos. Ils ont, di sait le ministre nicaraguayen, «rejeté totalement
l’idée d’arbitrage proposée par le gouvernement de Votre Excellence [la Colombie], estimant que
les droits du Nicaragua sont clairs et incontestab les, et que par conséquent il n’existe pas de
30
différend territorial entre les deux pays» [traduction du Greffe].
9. Voilà, Mesdames et Messieurs les juges, la toile de fond du traité de 1928-1930. Avant de
faire quelques remarques relatives à son interp rétation, permettez-moi quelques propos pour
montrer que le Nicaragua a été incapable de présenter un cas territorial «positif» dans cette affaire.
B. Le Nicaragua n’a pas un cas «positif» pour étayer sa revendication artificielle
10. Monsieur le président, normalement, dans une affaire territoriale, les parties expliquent à
quel moment elles ont revendiqué le territoire en cause pour la première fois et essayent de montrer
que leur comportement a été cohérent avec cette revendication. Ce n’est pas le cas ici. La
procédure s’achève et nous ne savons toujours pas ce que le Nicaragua pense sur la date à laquelle
il a estimé ⎯et agi en conséquence ⎯ que chacune des cayes relèverait de sa souveraineté.
Puisque leur situation était ⎯à en croire nos adversaires ⎯ totalement détachée de l’archipel de
San Andrés ⎯ quod non ⎯, on peut estimer que deux siècles constituent une période suffisamment
longue pour avoir la possibilité de se manifester sur chacune de ces cayes et agir, ne serait-ce que
sur le plan de la revendication. Comme il n’en est rien, le Nicaragua s’est vu forcé à inventer une
sorte de présomption irréfragable: selon lui, «tout ce qui n’est pas colombien est nicaraguayen».
Les fondements en seraient la présence des cayes su r le plateau continental et leur prétendue
proximité aux côtes du Nicaragua. Sur le premier point, vous comprendrez, Monsieur le président,
que je m’abstienne de tout commentaire sur le «cataclysme avant la lettre» qui ferait de Roncador,
Serrana, Serranilla et Bajo Nuevo des territoires nicaraguayens, selon la débordante imagination du
conseil mardi dernier 31. Sur la proximité, je remarquerai que nos contradicteurs ont une vue très
changeante lorsqu’ils regardent ve rs le large, ce qui fait que les adjectifs «lointain» et «proche»
30
Note diplomatique en date du 24 décembre 1913 adressée au ministre colombien des affaires étrangères par le
ministre nicaraguayen des affaires étrangères, CMC, vol. II-A, annexe 36, p. 172.
31CR 2012/14, p. 30, par. 49 (Remiro Brotóns). - 21 -
changent de signification selon leurs intérêts. Peu importe, Monsieur le président, je me permets de
renvoyer à nos considérations juridiques sur ces deux questions exposées la semaine dernière et
32
qui, elles, sont restées sans réponse de la part du demandeur .
11. Incapables de présenter la moindre preuve montrant que le Nicaragua ait considéré les
cayes comme relevant de sa souveraineté depuis l’ indépendance, la Partie adverse s’est donc
adonnée à présenter un cas «négatif» : les cayes ne seraient pas colombiennes. De toute évidence,
les efforts se sont avérés infructueux. En effet, le Nicaragua n’a pas pu contrer l’interprétation
effective du traité de 1928-1930, qui montre que les cayes tombent sous le coup de la notion
d’archipel de San Andrés.
C. La distance n’empêche pas les cayes de faire partie de l’archipel de San Andrés
12. Mesdames et Messieurs de la Cour, il vous appartient d’interpréter la notion d’«archipel
de San Andrés» dans le contexte du traité de 1928-1930. Les îles, îlots et cayes qui le comprennent
ont historiquement été considérés comme un ensemble constituant l’archipel de San Andrés. Selon
les conseils de la Partie adverse, ce serait impossible de définir l’archipel de SanAndrés comme
étant un archipel au «sens géographique» du mot 33. Pour le Nicaragua, la distance entre les cayes
et les îles principales constituerait un obstacle majeur à cet égard. Selon l’un des conseils, ce serait
même une «aberration géographique» d’imaginer le contraire 34. Les grandes paroles, Monsieur le
président, ne peuvent pas cacher la réalité. Vous avez à l’écran l’archipel de SanAndrés avec la
distance existante entre ses différentes composan tes. Regardez maintenant la distance de
136kilomètres entre MangleChico (Little CornIs land) et SanAndrés: c’est à peu près la même
distance ⎯ voire plus dans la plupart des cas ⎯ que celle existante entre les autres composantes de
l’archipel entre eux. Monsieur le président, co mment le Nicaragua peut-il alors soutenir que les
îles Mangles faisaient partie de l’archipel et que les cayes ne pourraient pas l’être en raison de la
distance ?
32
CR 2012/8, p. 43, par. 54 (Remiro Brotóns) ; CR 2012/11, p. 39-40, par. 27 (Kohen).
33
CR 2012/8, p. 40-41, par. 39 (Remiro Brotóns), p. 51, par. 11 (Pellet).
34CR 2012/8, p. 55, par. 21 (Pellet). - 22 -
13. La géographie montre partout qu’il est loin d’être «aberrant» que des îles soient
relativement éloignées les unes des autres mais pour tant considérées comme faisant partie d’un
même archipel. Voici quelques exemples.
14. Wallis-et-Futuna. Le site Internet du ministère de l’intérieur et de l’outre-mer de la
République française les décrit de la manière suiv ante: «Le territoire des îles Wallis etFutuna
constitue un archipel de trois îles principales : Wallis, Futuna et Alofi.» 35 La distance entre Wallis
et Futuna est de 222 kilomètres, plus que celle existante entre n’importe laquelle des composantes
de l’archipel de San Andrés.
15. Kiribati, pour sa part, est composé de trois archipels séparés entre eux par des distances
d’environ millekilomètres, voire plus. A l’inté rieur de chacun des archipels, vous trouvez des
distances entre ses parties composantes bien plus supérieures que celles existantes entre les cayes
de l’archipel de San Andrés, parfois atteignant presque 800 kilomètres, comme dans l’archipel des
îles de la Ligne à l’est, ou les 438 kilomètres séparant Banaba du reste de l’archipel des îles Gilbert,
à l’ouest.
16. L’archipel de Svalbard, où l’île aux Ours se trouve à 234 kilomètres de l’île principale de
Spitzberg, distance majeure que celle existante entr e les composantes de l’archipel de San Andrés
entre elles.
17. Les Seychelles, dont certaines de leurs composantes se trouvent à presque
400kilomètres, parfois trois ou quatrefois la di stance existante entre les différentes composantes
de l’archipel de San Andrés.
18. Ces exemples, parmi beaucoup d’autres dont je vous fais grâce ici, écartent la thèse
nicaraguayenne selon laquelle la distance constituerait un obstacle pour parler des cayes comme
faisant partie de l’archipel. Ce dont il est questi on ici, Mesdames et Messieurs de la Cour, c’est
finalement de savoir à quoi se référaient les Pa rties lorsqu’elles parlaient de l’archipel de
San Andrés dans le traité de 1928 et le protocole de 1930.
35
http ://www.outre-mer.gouv.fr/?presentation-wallis-et-futuna.html. - 23 -
D. Les négociateurs colombiens ont clairement exprimé que les cayes font partie
de l’archipel de San Andrés
19. Face à la description catégorique faite en 1896 par le ministre colombien des affaires
36
étrangères, JorgeHolguín, quant à la composition de l’archipel , le Nicaragua a finalement
explicité sa position mardi dernier. Le demande ur semble invoquer qu’il ignorait cette prise de
position. Il cite à l’appui votre arrêt sur le fond dans l’affaire Cameroun c.Nigéria dans un
37
contexte qui n’a pourtant rien à voir avec la situation dans la présente espèce . Il s’agit ici d’une
déclaration publique faite par le ministre colombien des affaires étrangères au sujet du différend qui
opposait son pays au Nicaragua, publiée dans le journal du Congrès en1896 et dans les Annales
diplomatiques et consulaires de la Colombie en1914. Les représentants diplomatiques
nicaraguayens à Bogotá ne pouvaient pas ignorer la publication de l’annuaire du ministère des
affaires étrangères du pays où ils étaient accrédités et avec qui leur pays avait un important
différend territorial. Il ne s’agissait pas d’une co rrespondance privée, mais bien au contraire d’une
documentation publique de caractère officiel et destinée à faire autorité en matière de relations
internationales 3. Par ailleurs, cette déclaration témoi gne incontestablement de la conviction
absolue de la Colombie selon laquelle les cayes fa isaient partie de l’archipel, d’ailleurs à une
époque où le Gouvernement colombien exerçait des actes à titre de souverain sur celles-ci.
20. La note de1927 du ministre colombien à Managua, ManuelEsgue rra, négociateur et
signataire du traité de1928, décrivant toutes les cayes comme faisant partie de l’archipel, prouve
aussi de manière catégorique la co mpréhension que la Colombie portait sur l’étendue de l’archipel
39
de San Andrés qui fut décrit à l’ article premier du traité de 1928 . Ce document n’a pas suscité le
moindre commentaire de la Partie demanderesse.
21. La preuve que je viens de mentionne r n’est qu’une petite pa rtie de l’abondante
documentation présentée par la Colombie dans ses écrits et qui montre sans l’ombre d’un doute
40
l’unité historique de l’archipel de San Andrés .
36CMC, p. 52, par. 2.59, et vol. II-A, annexe 89.
37
CR 2012/14, p. 25-26, par. 28 (Remiro Brotóns).
38Voir Souveraineté sur Pedra Branca/Pulau Batu Puteh, Middle Rocks et South Ledge (Malaisie/Singapour),
arrêt, C.I.J. Recueil 2008, p. 92, par. 261.
39CMC, vol. II-A, annexe 112, p. 399.
40CMC, vol. I, p. 190, par. 4.81-4.82, p. 36-70, par.2. 32-2.85; CMC, vol. II-A, annexes 30, 74, 82, 85, 87, 89,
112, 173 et 180. - 24 -
E. Le deuxième paragraphe de l’article premier du traité de 1928
22. Dans son exercice d’interprétation du deuxièm e paragraphe de l’article premier du traité
de1928, l’agent nicaraguayen a affirmé avec rais on que «[l]e traité ne dit pas que ces cayes ne
seront pas considérées comme faisant partie de l’archipel» 4. C’est logique, puisque si elles
n’étaient pas considérées comme faisant partie de l’archipel, il n’y avait aucune raison d’insérer
cette clause: le Nicaragua reconnaissait dans ce tr aité la souveraineté colombienne de toutes les
îles, îlots et cayes qui font partie de l’archipel de San Andrés et les cayes Roncador, Quitasueño et
Serrana en font partie. Le contexte montre que le paragraphe en question vient tout de suite après
la reconnaissance nicaraguayenne de la souveraineté colombienne sur les îles, îlots et cayes qui
composent l’archipel de San Andrés. Le texte du deuxième paragraphe donne ensuite la raison de
cette exclusion : «le dominium [on entend, la souveraineté] fait l’objet d’un litige entre la Colombie
42
et les Etats-Unis d’Amérique» . S’il y avait eu un différend entre la Colombie et le Nicaragua au
sujet des trois cayes, ou même entre le Nicaragua et les Etats-Unis ⎯ ce qui n’était pas du tout le
cas, l’application du traité aurait conduit à mettre un terme à ces différends. Les travaux
préparatoires montrent pourtant qu’il n’y a jamais eu de revendication spécifique nicaraguayenne
sur ces troiscayes. Durant les négociations concomitantes entre les Etats-Unis et la Colombie à
propos de leur différend sur ces trois cayes, plusieurs formules ont été discutées, parmi lesquelles,
la reconnaissance états-unienne de la s ouveraineté colombienne, l’arbitrage, le statu quo ou une
formule favorable aux Etats-Unis mais pourtant re jetée par ces derniers. La raison invoquée par le
gouvernement de Washington est révélatrice. Je cite un télégramme du ministre de la Colombie à
Washington adressé à son ministre des affaires étrangères expliquant la situation : «La formule [de
la cession] au Nicaragua et du transfert par ce de rnier aux Etats-Unis a été accueillie avec froideur
43
parce qu’ils estiment que le Nicaragua n’a pas possédé de droits sur les cayes.» Ceci est la
traduction. En fait, l’original en espagnol est bien plus catégorique: «Nicaragua nunca ha
44
sostenido derecho sobre cayos» , «Le Nicaragua n’a jamais invoqué des droits sur les cayes.»
«Nunca» : «Jamais» !
41CR 2012/14, p. 15, par. 19 (Argüello).
42
CMC, vol. II-A, annex 1.
43CMC, vol. II-A, annexe 111.
44CMC, vol. II-A, annexe 111. Documents originaux déposés à la Cour par la Colombie. - 25 -
23. Mesdames et Messieurs les juges, le texte du deuxième paragraphe n’est pas obscur. Au
contraire, il est dépourvu de toute ambiguïté. Il est simplement impossible de l’interpréter comme
signifiant que non seulement la Colombie et les Etats-Unis revendiquaient la souveraineté de
Roncador, Quitasueño et Serrana, mais aussi le Nicaragua.
F. Le 82 méridien constitue «la limite entre les deux archipels»
24. Monsieur le président, j’en viens mainte nant à l’interprétation à donner à la limite
constituée par la ligne du 82 e méridien. Selon la Partie adverse, «[c]’est l’archipel de San Andrés,
une fois identifié, qui détermine les limites sud et nord du méridien 82° comme ligne d’attribution
45
de souveraineté sur les cayes en litige» . C’est un curieux raisonnement, c’est le moins qu’on
puisse dire. Si l’on suit le Nicaragua, le 82 eméridien ne définit pas l’étendue de l’archipel de
e
SanAndrés, mais c’est l’archipel de San Andrés qui définit l’étendue pertinente du 82 méridien.
Le monde à l’envers, dirait-on.
25. Nos contradicteurs persiste nt à affirmer que le but du 82 méridien est de séparer
46
l’archipel de San Andrés des îles Mangles , lui ôtant tout effet utile. Mes collègues Alain Pellet et
AntonioRemiroBrotóns ont insisté ces deux semaines sur la coupure du 82 eméridien aux
parallèles correspondant selon nos calculs aux 12° 23' et 12° 08' 47. Vous avez à l’écran les lignes
qu’ils ont montrées dans ces croquis. Je vais main tenant superposer cette ligne sur la véritable
carte à prendre en considération, celle de 1885 du bureau hydrographique des Etats-Unis.
26. Mesdames et Messieurs de la Cour, la lecture de la résolution commune du Sénat et de la
Chambre des députés du Nicaragua du 6 mars 1930, ratifiant le traité de 1928, nous aidera à mieux
comprendre la situation :
«Le traité conclu le 24mars1928 entre le Nicaragua et la République de
Colombie, qui a été approuvé par le pouvoir exécutif le 27 du même mois de la même
année, est ratifié ; ce traité met fin à la question pendante entre les deux républiques à
propos de l’archipel de San Andrés et Provide ncia et de la Mosquitia nicaraguayenne,
45
CR 2012/14, p. 27, par. 34 (Remiro Brotóns).
46
CR 2012/8 p. 40, par. 39 (RemiroBrotóns ); p. 52, par. 15, p. 54-55, par20, p. 60, par. 30-31, p. 62-63,
par. 38-41 (Pellet).
47 o
Nicaraguao onglet n 29 du dossier deerjuges, 23 avril 2012, [AP1-7] ; CR 2012/8, p. 62-63, par. 38-40 (Pellet).
Nicaragua, onglet n 18 du dossier des juges, 1 mai 2012, [ARB-3]; CR 2012/14, p. 27, par. 34 (Remiro), p. 39-40,
par. 14 (Pellet). - 26 -
étant entendu que l’archipel de SanAndrés mentionné dans la pr emière clause du
traité ne s’étend pas à l’ouest du 82 [degré] de longitude [de] Greenwich dans la carte
publiée en octobre1885 par l’Hydrographic Office de Washington sous l’autorité du
48
secrétaire à la marine des Etats-Unis.»
27. Plusieurs commentaires s’imposent. Primo , le différend est décrit comme relevant de
«l’archipel de SanAndrés et Providencia et de la Mosquitia nicaraguayenne». Précisément, le
demandeur invoque comme source de sa souverainet é sur les cayes leur prétendue appartenance à
la «Mosquitia nicaraguayenne». Il est évident que si le Nicaragua considérait siennes les cayes qui
e
figurent clairement dans la carte de1885 à l’est du 82 méridien, il aurait fallu utiliser d’autres
e
lignes et non celle du 82 méridien. Secundo, les lignes des parallèles tracées en pointillés par mes
collègues de l’autre côté de la barre ne trouvent de fondement dans aucun texte. Les parallèles sont
aisément identifiables sur cette carte. Si le Nicaragua voulait s’en servir, cela n’aurait pas été
difficile de s’y référer. Tertio, le texte indique que l’archipel de SanAndrés «ne s’étend pas à
e
l’ouest du 82 [degré] de longitude [de] Greenwich dans la carte publiée en octobre 1885, etc.». Un
simple regard sur la carte montre que le 82 eméridien s’étend tout au long de la carte dans un
espace quasi totalement maritime, ce qui correspond de façon idoine à une délimitation insulaire. Il
est évident aussi que si le but était celui décr it par mon collègue AlainPellet, autrement dit de
tracer une ligne séparant les îles Mangles de la partie sud de l’archipel de San Andrés, on n’aurait
pas eu besoin d’utiliser une carte avec de telles dimensions. Quarto , si la limite fixée était
e
vraiment le petit segment du 82 méridien dépeint par le Nicaragua durant cette phase orale, alors la
référence au 82 e méridien n’aurait servi à rien, non seulement par rapport aux îles Mangles ⎯ déjà
reconnues explicitement comme nicara guayennes par le traité de 1928 ⎯, mais aussi parce que la
démarche nicaraguayenne visait à éviter que la Colombie revendique plus tard les cayes des
Miskitos comme faisant partie de l’archipel.
28. Monsieur le président, cette carte fait par tie de l’expression de la volonté du Nicaragua.
Comme l’affirme votre jurisprudence :
«[D]ans quelques cas, les cartes peuve nt acquérir [une valeur juridique
intrinsèque aux fins de l’établissement des droits territoriaux], mais cette valeur ne
découle pas alors de leurs seules qualités intrinsèques : elle résulte de ce que ces cartes
ont été intégrées parmi les éléments qui constituent l’expression de la volonté de l’Etat
ou des Etats concernés. Ainsi en va-t-il, par exemple, lorsque des cartes sont annexées
48MN, vol. II, annexe 19. EPC, vol. II, annexe 10. - 27 -
49
à un texte officiel dont elles font partie intégrante.» (Différend frontalier (Burkina
Faso/République du Mali), arrêt, C.I.J. Recueil 1986, p. 582, par. 54.)
29. C’est à peu près le cas ici. La réso lution commune des deux chambres du Congrès
nicaraguayen approuvant le traité de1928 et se référant explicitement à la carte de1885 prévoit
que «[l]e présent décret sera reprodui t dans l’instrument de ratification» 50. L’interprétation du
texte du protocole de1930 dans s on contexte, à la lumière de ses objet et but, tenant compte de
l’expression de la volonté des parties au moment de la ratification, ainsi que des travaux
préparatoires et de la pratique ultérieure n’offrent pas de doute: les cayes à l’est du 82 eméridien
font partie de l’archipel de San Andrés.
G. La cartographie corrobore l’interprétation colombienne du traité de 1928-1930
30. Restons dans la cartographie, si vous le pe rmettez Monsieur le président. Tout ce que le
Nicaragua a pu dire sur la cartographie officielle de la Colombie, montrant toutes les cayes comme
relevant de «l’archipel de San Andrés appartenant à la République de Colombie», est que, comme
les originaux n’ont pas été déposés auprès de votre Cour, cela rend un commentaire à leur égard
«difficile» 51. Monsieur le président, ces cartes ont été présentées par la Colombie lors de la phase
des exceptions préliminaires et celle du fond 52. Comme toute la documentation présentée en
annexe, elles ont été certifiées conformes par l’ agent, comme votre Règlement l’exige. Le
Nicaragua a eu trois tours de pièces écrites pour soulever toute objection ou
question à leur égard.
Il ne l’a pas fait. Les choses sont donc claires: le Nicaragua est incapable de fournir une
explication différente de celle présentée par la Colombie, ou pour être plus court : de celle qui saute
aux yeux d’un simple regard des «Encart[s] de l’archipel de SanAndrés» qui paraissent dans les
cartes officielles de la République de Colombie.
31. L’explication que l’agent du demandeur a donné d’une carte officielle du Nicaragua
de 1967 est aussi révélatrice. On trouve le territo ire continental nicaraguayen, les îles Mangles, les
cayes des Miskitos et à l’extrême oriental deux indications «Islas de Providencia (Colombia)» et
49
Voir aussi Ile de Kasikili/Sedudu (Botswana/Namibi e), arrêt, C.I.J. Recueil 1999, p. 1098, par. 84;
Souveraineté sur Pulau Ligitan et Pulau Sipadan (Indonésie/Malaisie), arrêt, C.I.J. Recueil 2002, p. 667, par. 88.
50
MN, vol. II, annexe 19.
51CR 2012/14, p. 14, par. 14 (Argüello).
52Exceptions préliminaires de la Colombie (EPC), vol. III ; CMC, vol. III. - 28 -
53
«Islas de San Andrés (Colombia)» . Selon l’agent, «it must be recalled that it was only until 1980
that Nicaragua denounced the 1928 Treaty. Up to that moment, Nicaragua only claimed
sovereignty over the cays presently in dispute and not the islands of San Andrés, Providencia and
Santa Catalina» 54. Si cela était vrai, au lieu de mettre que les îles de Providencia et les îles de
San Andrés ⎯je souligne les deux pluriels ⎯ sont colombiennes, il aurait mieux valu pour le
Nicaragua de mettre qu’il y avait des cayes à l’est qui étaient nicaraguayennes. Il n’en était rien,
tout simplement, parce qu’en 1967 le Nicaragua ne revendiquait aucune caye. Ce n’est qu’après la
publication du Livre Blanc en 1980 que, pour la première fois da ns l’histoire, le Nicaragua procède
à l’«annexion» cartographique de l’archipel de San Andrés en y incluant toutes les cayes, ainsi que
les trois îles principales, même aujourd’hui.
32. Mesdames et Messieurs les juges, le silence du Nicaragua face à la cartographie
colombienne est remarquable. En effet, dans sa requête, le demandeur se réfère à une carte
officielle de la Colombie de1995 « que le Nicaragua a dûment protestée» 55. Pourquoi alors le
Nicaragua n’a-t-il pas protesté c ontre les cartes de1920, de1931 et toutes les cartes postérieures
montrant les sept cayes comme faisant partie de l’archipel colombien de San Andrés ?
33. Votre arrêt sur les exceptions préliminaires s’est déjà penché sur ces mêmes cartes à
e
propos de la nature juridique de la ligne du 82 méridien. Vous avez déjà constaté que le Nicaragua
n’a pas protesté contre ces cartes 56. Maintenant, au stade du fond, il vous appartient, Mesdames et
Messieurs les juges, de déterminer ce que ces cartes prouvent par rapport aux sept cayes
lorsqu’elles décrivent l’archipel de San Andrés.
34. Pour conclure sur ce point, Monsieur le président, le matériel cartographique présent
dans cette affaire a, pour reprendre votre analyse dans l’affaire Burkina Faso/Mali, une valeur de
preuve concordante qui conforte une conclusion ⎯ ici, celle découlant de l’interprétation du traité
53
CMC, vol. III, fig. 2.34, p. 67.
54
CR 2014/14, p. 14, par. 15 (Argüello).
55Nicaragua, requête introductive d’instance du 6 décembre 2001, par. 4.
56Différend territorial et maritime (Nicaragua c. Colombie), exceptions preliminaries, arrêt, C.I.J. Recueil 2007
(II), p. 867, par. 113 et p. 868, par. 118. - 29 -
57
de 1928-1930 ⎯ ou de caractère confirmatif de cette interprétation , à savoir que les sept cayes
font partie de l’archipel de San Andrés.
H. La relation titres-effectivités
35. Mardi dernier, le conseil du Nicaragua s’est livré à une lecture partiale aussi bien de
votre jurisprudence sur la relation titres-effectivités dans le contentieux territo rial en général, que
sur la situation concrète dans ce tte affaire. Quoi qu’il en soit, nous prenons tout d’abord acte de
son affirmation: «Le Nicaragua n’a jamais préte ndu se battre avec la Colombie sur le terrain des
58
effectivités.»
36. Le conseil du Nicaragua s’est trompé de cible en examinant le rôle des effectivités sur
des terrae nullius ou sur leur impossibilité de déplacer un titre 59. Ce n’est pas du tout la situation
dans cette affaire. Par contre, il est certain que les effectivités peuvent confirmer un titre territorial,
e
comme M Bundy vous a montré la semaine dernière que c’est le cas présent eu égard aux
effectivités colombiennes 60. La Partie demanderesse a oublié de mentionner une autre possibilité
envisagée par votre jurisprudence. Ce sont «des cas où le titre juridique n'est pas de nature à faire
apparaître de façon précise l'étendue territoriale su r laquelle il porte. Les «effectivités» peuvent
alors jouer un rôle essentiel pour indiquer comment le titre est interprété dans la pratique.»
(Différend frontalier (Burkina Faso/République du Mali), arrêt, C.I.J.Recueil1986 , p.587,
par. 63.)
37. Les deux Parties s’appuient sur l’interpré tation du traité de 1928-1930 pour régler le
différend pendant devant vous. Au fond, la question peut être tranchée en déterminant si les cayes
tombent sous le coup de la définition «côte des Mosquitos» ou sous celle de s «autres îles, îlots et
61
cayes qui font partie de l’archipel de San Andrés» .
62
38. Le traité Molina-Gual de 1825 «est encore en vigueur» , dit le professeur
RemiroBrotóns. Je constate que le Nicaragua ne l’a pas déclaré nul. Le traité de 1928-1930 est
57
Différend frontalier (Burkina Faso/République du Mali), arrêt, C.I.J. Recueil 1986, p. 583, par. 56.
58
CR 2012/14, p. 21, par. 6 (Remiro Brotóns).
59
Ibid., par. 4-7 (Remiro Brotóns).
60 CR 2012/11, p. 50-63, par. 1-45 (Bundy).
61 CR 2012/14, p. 19, par. 32 (Argüello).
62
Ibid., p. 24, par. 22 (Remiro Brotóns). - 30 -
venu régler toutes les questions territoriales pendantes entre la Colombie et le Nicaragua, et le traité
Molina-Gual n’a donc qu’un intérêt historique. Il ne serait de toute manière d’aucune utilité pour
les revendications nicaraguayennes. Le décret royal de 1803 a tranché la question de l’ uti
possidetis juris en faveur de la Colombie. Contrairement à ce que le Nicaragua a affirmé mardi
63
dernier , la Cour avait des raisons pour se prononcer sur ce décret royal dans son arrêt en l’affaire
Nicaragua c.Honduras 64. La Cour devait examiner laquelle des deux anciennes provinces de la
capitainerie générale de Guatemala administrait les cayes objet du différend territorial. A cette fin,
votre arrêt devait déterminer la période durant laquelle cette administration aurait pu s’établir.
C’était donc dans ce contexte que votre Cour a co nclu que la vice-royauté de Santa Fe obtint le
65
contrôle administratif de la côte des Mosquitos en vertu du décret royal de 1803 .
39. Compte tenu des positions des Parties, l’ interprétation du traité de 1928-1930 suffit donc
pour trancher le différend. Suivons malgré tout, et par hypothèse, le Nicaragua dans son exercice
de recherche d’autres possibilités. A supposer même que ce traité ne suffise pas ⎯ quod non ⎯, il
faudrait alors se tourner vers l’uti possidetis. A en croire le conseil du Nicaragua, les cayes «n’ont
été attribuées à aucune des en tités territoriales de la Couronne» 66. Nous ne le pensons pas et je
67
vous renvoie à la partie pertinente de notre exposé de la semaine dernière , restée par ailleurs sans
contestation. Mais poursuivons tout de même le raisonnement nicaraguayen. Même si ce que le
Nicaragua affirme était vrai, nous serions alors da ns une situation semblable à celle de l’affaire
Nicaragua c. Honduras, dans laquelle, bien que les cayes aient été reconnues comme appartenant à
l’Espagne, l’uti possidetis juris tout seul ne permettait pas d’établir le rattachement des cayes à une
68
division administrative coloniale espagnole ou à l’autre . C’est dans ce cas que votre arrêt s’est
69
tourné vers les effectivités . Alors, même dans cette hypothèse, les cayes seraient colombiennes
63
Ibid., p. 28, par. 40 (Remiro Brotóns).
64Différend territorial et maritime entre le Nicaragua etle Honduras dans la mer des Caraïbes (Nicaragua
c. Honduras), arrêt, C.I.J. Recueil 2007 (II), p. 709, par. 161.
65DC, p. 47, par. 2.29.
66CR 2012/8, p. 42, par. 47 (Remiro Brotóns).
67CR 2012/11, p. 32-33, par. 7-8 (Kohen).
68
Différend territorial et maritime entre le Nicaragua etle Honduras dans la mer des Caraïbes (Nicaragua
c. Honduras), arrêt, C.I.J. Recueil 2007 (II), p. 710-711, par. 167.
69
Ibid., p. 721-722, par. 208. - 31 -
e
du fait des effectivités déployées depuis le XIX siècle jusqu’à nos jours et l’absence totale
d’effectivités du côté nicaraguayen.
40. La dernière analyse du Nicaragua relative aux effectivités colombiennes sur l’archipel en
70
général et sur les cayes en particulier regorge en inexactitudes . Ce serait très fastidieux de
prendre chacun des documents auxquels s’est référé le conseil de la Partie adverse et de montrer la
manière détournée comme il les a interprétés. Je me contenterai d’examiner l’un des documents
invoqués, laissant à votre Cour le soin de comparer les affirmations du Nicaragua avec la réalité qui
ressort de cette documentation.
41. Il s’agit de la note du préfet de Providencia adressée au secrétaire du gouvernement de
Carthagène du 19septembre1890 71, mentionnée à deux reprises par le conseil du Nicaragua. La
première fois, le professeurRemiro Brotóns avan ce que le préfet, «appelé à informer sur les
activités menées à Roncador, il déclara qu’il ne pouvait pas s’étendre là-dessus à cause d’[un]
72
manque total d’informations» . En fait, le préfet de Providenc ia informa que les services de la
province ne possédaient des archives organisées qu’à partir de 1870 et qu’il a fait des efforts pour
rassembler de la documentation. Ce qu’il indique n’est pas, malgré tout, mince ou négligeable. Par
exemple, il indique que les habitants de ces îles se rendent et s’installent à Roncador, chaque année,
depuis le mois de juin pour la pêche de l’écaille de tortue; Roncador, un rocher? Il inclut aussi
des échanges de lettres datées de 1875 relatives à la lutte contre l’exploitation illicite du guano ou à
des contrats passés avec des particuliers, ainsi que quatre témoignages sous serment de personnes
de nationalités différentes et ayant déployé des activit és sur Roncador et dans la région, attestant la
souveraineté colombienne de la caye. La deuxième fois que le conseil cite ce document, il affirme
que c’est la première mention dans un document de la Colombie que Roncador fait partie de
73
l’archipel de San Andrés . C’est faux. Pour preuve, je me ntionnerai seulement à titre d’exemple
la loin o25 du 24avril1871, dont l’article premier autorise le pouvoir exécutif à ordonner la
concession des droits portant sur l’extraction du guano et la collecte de noix de coco sur les îles
70
CR 2012/14, p. 22-24, par. 9-19 (Remiro Brotóns).
71
CMC, vol. II-A, annexe 82.
72CR 2012/14, p. 22, par. 11 (Remiro Brotóns).
73Ibid., p. 25, par. 25. - 32 -
d’Alburquerque, Roncador et Quitasueño, «sur le territoire de San Andrés et de San Luis de
Providencia» [traduction du Greffe] 74. Le professeur Pellet s’insurge contre ces effectivités qu’il
appelle «de papier» et fait semblant de croire que ces concessions se limitaient à Quitasueño 75, où
il n’y a certainement pas de cocotiers ⎯ pour cela il fallait aller à Alburquerque ⎯ mais du guano,
et ceci jusqu’à aujourd’hui, comme les photos pr ises lors des rapports sci entifiques à Quitasueño
76
l’attestent .
42. Mesdames et Messieurs de la Cour, des concessions octroyées par l’Etat ou la législation
sont considérées par votre Cour co mme des actes à titre de souverain 77. Que la critique provienne
du Nicaragua est d’autant plus étonnant, dans la mesure où il ne peut même pas présenter une seule
effectivité, même celle qu’il appelle fâcheusement «de papier».
I. Remarques finales
43. Mesdames et Messieurs de la Cour, la position de la Colombie quant à l’appartenance
des cayes à l’archipel de San Andrés et à sa souveraineté sur leur ensemble est bien documentée.
Par exemple, la déclaration du ministre Holguín au moment où le Nicaragua commença à
manifester son appétit insulaire revendiquant et occupant les îles Mangles en 1890, et ensuite
quand il demanda en 1913 tout l’archipel. Par ex emple, la note du ministre colombien à Managua,
ManuelEsguerra, négociateur et signataire du traité de 1928. Ou ultérieurement à l’entrée en
vigueur du traité, à travers la cart ographie, l’exercice public et pacifique de sa souveraineté et sa
reconnaissance internationale. Pour sa part, la position du Nicaragua de non-revendication des
cayes et de reconnaissance de la souveraineté colombienne est elle aussi clairement établie :
⎯ par son silence jusqu’en 1913 ;
⎯ par le traité de 1928 ;
e
⎯ par l’inclusion ⎯ à sa demande ⎯ du 82 méridien dans le protocole de 1928 ;
⎯ par l’application du traité de 1928-1930 durant des décennies ; et
74CMC, vol. II-A, annexe 73.
75CR 2012/15, p. 40, par. 14 (Pellet).
76DC, vol. II, appendice 1, p. 23.
77 o
Statut juridique du Groënland oriental , arrêt, 1933, C.P.J.I. sérieA/B 53, p. 48; Minquiers et Ecréhous
(France/Royaume-Uni), arrêt, C.I.J.Recueil1953, p. 65; Souveraineté sur Pulau Ligitan et Pulau Sipadan
(Indonésie/Malaisie), arrêt, C.I.J. Recueil 2002, p. 683-686, par. 142-149. - 33 -
⎯ par ses revendications tardives de souveraineté qui ne peuvent rien changer à une situation
acceptée durant si longtemps :
⎯ sur Roncador, Quitasueño et Serrana en 1972,
⎯ sur les quatre autres cayes, mais encore comme étant «circonvoisins» des îles de
San Andrés et Providencia en 1980,
⎯ et sur ses revendications individuelles pour ce qui est de Roncador, Quitasueño,
Serrana et Serranilla dans sa requête en 2001, et
⎯ pour ce qui est d’Alburquerque, Est-Sud-Es t et BajoNuevo dans son mémoire
en 2003.
44. Mesdames et Messieurs les juges, en concluant mon exposé, je peux me servir du croquis
présenté par le demandeur, et affirmer que, après la conclusion du traité de1928-1930, les seules
composantes de l’archipel qui méritent d’être biffées sont les îles Mangles. En ajoutant les cayes
d’Alburquerque et Est-Sud-Est ⎯oubliées dans le graphique nicaraguayen ⎯ et en donnant au
e
82 méridien sa vraie étendue sans amputations imaginaires, on retrouve l’archipel de SanAndrés
tel qu’il est, sous souveraineté colombienne, conformément au traité qui régit les relations entre les
deux pays et comme il est internationalement reconnu.
45. Pour compléter le tableau, j’ajouterai le périmètre établi par le Nicaragua en sa note
adressée au présidentLoubet montrant l’étendue véritable du domaine insulaire nicaraguayen.
L’explication donnée par le demandeur mardi dernier ⎯ la première depuis que cette instance a été
introduite ⎯ ne résiste pas à la moindre analyse: il s’agirait des «affirmations erronées d’un
fonctionnaire» qui, dans le souc i de «sauver les Mangles», aurait oublié les mangroves, selon la
manière très bizarre du conseil de se référer aux cayes 78. Sans accepter cette interprétation
fantaisiste, qui transforme des notes officielles d’un ambassadeur adressées à l’Etat où il est
accrédité en documents sans aucune valeur, je cons tate tout simplement que cette prétendue erreur
n’a jamais été rectifiée. Affirmer qu’il s’agit d’une erreur plus d’un siècle après, me semble-t-il,
Mesdames et Messieurs les juges, que cela ne so it quelque peu tardif pour emporter votre intime
conviction.
46. Vous remerciant de votre attention, je vous prie, Mons ieur le président, de donner la
e
parole à M Rodman Bundy. Probablement après la pause.
78CR 2012/14, p. 29, par. 42 (Remiro Brotóns). - 34 -
Le PRESIDENT: Merci, M.le professeur. Je déclare une pause de quinzeminutes.
L’audience est suspendue.
L’audience est suspendue de 11 h 15 à 11 h 35.
The PRESIDENT: Please be seated. The hearing is resumed, and I give the floor to
Mr. Rodman Bundy. You have the floor, Sir.
Mr. BUNDY: Thank you, Mr. President.
3. NICARAGUA ’S NEW CONTINENTAL SHELF CLAIM
Introduction
1. Mr. President, Members of the Court, in this presentation, I shall address Nicaragua’s new
continental shelf claim. And in so doing, I shall respond to arguments that were made by
Nicaragua’s representatives on Tuesday.
2. The first issue I shall deal with is the inadmissibility of Nicaragua’s new claim. That was
not a subject that Nicaragua addressed in the first round of its oral argument, although it had been
briefed by Colombia in its Rejoinder. In was only at the end of Tuesday that ProfessorPellet
discussed the question. I shall show that counsel’s attempts to explain why Nicaragua’s claim is
admissible fall well short of the conditions that your Court has consistently held must be satisfied
in order for a new claim introduced at a late stage of the proceedings to be admissible.
3. Following that, I shall take up the argume nts advanced by Professor Lowe that Nicaragua
possesses outer continental shelf entitlements beyond 200 nautical miles from its coast that should
be delimited with Colombia’s continental shelf. In the course of that discussion, I will also respond
to the technical presentation made by Mr.Cl everly, as well as to the question posed by
Judge Bennouna.
4. As a preliminary point, I would note that Nicaragua has once again changed its
submissions as to what it wants the Court to do: not once in fact, but twice in the course of
Tuesday afternoon. I will come back to that. Wh at is clear is that Nicaragua’s final submission
with respect to what it asks the Court to decide regarding the delimitation of now what is only a
continental shelf boundary is very different from wh at it requested in the Re ply, which in turn was - 35 -
radically different from what Nicaragua had su bmitted in its Memorial and what it said the
subject-matter of the dispute was in its Application.
5. Now that is just one more example of a series of claims advanced by the other side that are
literally all over the map. The claims keep changi ng; the legal and factual bases of those claims
are wholly inconsistent with each other; the goal posts keep moving. It is like a lottery. But at the
end of the day, Nicaragua still has not found the winning ticket.
Nicaragua’s new claim is inadmissible
6. Let me turn first to the question of admissibility.
7. In his intervention on Tuesday, Professor Pelle t insisted that Nicaragua had not modified
the subject of its request, and that its new continen tal shelf claim, raised only in the Reply, in no
way transformed the dispute into one that was different in character from that which it had
requested the Court to decide in its Application 79. In my respectful submission, those contentions
simply are not tenable.
8. My colleague started by saying that Nicaragua had no quarrel with the jurisprudence that I
canvassed last week. He cited in particular the Diallo case where the Court had clearly said that
additional claims formulated in the course of the proceedings are inadmissible if they would result
in transforming the subject of the dispute originally brought before the Court under the terms of the
Application. As the Court stated in Diallo, “ A fortiori , a claim formulated subsequent to the
Memorial... cannot transform the subject of the dispute as delimited by the terms of the
Application” 80.
9. In considering the subject of the dispute that Nicaragua brought before the Court in its
Application, ProfessorPellet felt that I had focused too much on paragraph8 of that Application.
He thought that paragraph was too long to read in its entirety, and he argued instead that it should
be interpreted in the light of paragraph 9 of the Application, where Nicaragua said that the principal
purpose of the Application was to obtain declara tions concerning title and the determination of
79CR 2012/15, p. 36, para. 8 (Pellet).
80See CR 2012/15, p.35, para.5 (Pellet), citiAhmadou Sadio Diallo (Guinea v. Democratic Republic of the
Congo), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2010, p.18, para.39; Territorial and Maritime Dispute between Nicaragua and
Honduras in the Caribbean Sea (Nicaragua v. Honduras), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2007 (II), p. 695, para. 108. - 36 -
maritime boundaries . According to ProfessorPellet, the expression “to determine the course of
the single maritime boundary”, appearing in paragraph 8 of the Application, was not the alpha and
omega of Nicaragua’s request 82.
10. In my respectful submission, ProfessorPellet has matters both backwards and wrong.
Paragraph8 of the Application shoul d not be read in the light of paragraph9; it is paragraph9
which should be re-read ⎯ or read in the light of paragraph 8. Let me explain.
11. Because Professor Pellet thought that paragr aph 8 was too long to read, he conveniently
left out the fact that that paragraph contained Nicar agua’s formal request to the Court. It is there
that Nicaragua stated the following ⎯ you can see it on the screen:
“Accordingly, the Court is asked to ad judge and declare [those were words that
Professor Pellet did not mention ⎯ the Court is asked to adjudge and declare]:
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Second, in the light of the determination concerning title requested above, the
Court is asked further to determine th e course of the single maritime boundary
between the areas of continental shelf and exclusive economic zone appertaining
respectively to Nicaragua and Colombia, in accordance with equitable principles and
relevant circumstances recognized by general international law as applicable to such a
determination of a single maritime boundary.” 83
12. Thus, when paragraph 9 referred to the purpose of the Application being the
determination of maritime boundaries, those bounda ries clearly referred to the determination of a
single maritime boundary, which in turn was to be determined in accordance with the legal
principles relevant to single maritime boundaries set out in Nicaragua’s formal request, not just any
maritime boundary, and certainly not solely a continental shelf boundary.
13. If there was any doubt on that point, Nicaragua’s Memorial made it abundantly clear that
the subject of the dispute was the determination of a single maritime boundary in accordance with
the legal principles applicable to that régime, not the régime of the geological continental shelf.
14. In paragraph 3.3 of the Memorial, Nicaragua repeated the second part of paragraph 8 of
its Application ⎯ that you just saw on the screen ⎯ not paragraph9 ⎯ and it did so under the
rubric of “The Delimitation Requested and the Applicable Law”. In paragraph3.37 of that
81CR 2012/15, p. 35, para. 6 (Pellet).
82
Ibid., p. 36, para. 8 (Pellet).
83Application Instituting Proceedings, Territorial and Maritime Dispute (Nicaragua v. Colombia), p. 9. - 37 -
pleading, Nicaragua emphasized that what it said was the “central question of delimitation” was “to
determine the course of the single maritime boundary” ⎯ the single maritime boundary between
the continental shelf and exclusive economic zone appertaining to the Parties. And in its
Submissions in the Memorial, Nicaragua again repeated its formal request for the Court to delimit a
single maritime boundary not just maritime boundaries in general.
15. It is not surprising, therefore, that in its Judgment on the Preliminary Objections, the
Court noted that Nicaragua was asserting that ⎯ and I quote from the Judgment ⎯ “the
subject-matter of the dispute is the determination of a single maritime boundary” ( Territorial and
Maritime Dispute (Nicaragua v. Colombia), Preliminary Objections, Judgment,
I.C.J. Reports 2007 (II), p. 847, para. 35).
16. Professor Pellet now says that you have to distinguish between the subject of the dispute
introduced by Nicaragua in its Application and the means by which the Court is able to settle that
dispute 84.
17. I have already shown that the subject-matte r of the dispute introduced in the Application
was not the delimitation of maritime boundaries in a general sense; or, certainly not the
delimitation of solely a continental shelf boundary ⎯ it was specifically the delimitation of a single
maritime boundary. But notwithstanding this, my coll eague maintains that the task of the Court in
deciding that question can be accomplished by tracing one or more lines as a “means” of settling
85
the dispute between the Parties . The implication of that argument is that Nicaragua’s original
request to the Court to decide the course of a single maritime boundary can be transformed by the
use of a line or lines into delimiting only the contin ental shelves of the Parties. According to
Professor Pellet, that would simply constitute a means of effectuating the delimitation, not a change
in the subject-matter of the dispute.
18. That argument gains no traction whatsoever, and it does not magically transform
Nicaragua’s new continental shelf claim into an admissible one. Yes, Nicaragua has changed the
means by which it asks the Court to decide the delimitation line; but, more importantly, it has also
changed the very subject-matter of the dispute.
84
CR 2012/15, p. 36, para. 8 and p. 37, para. 9 (Pellet).
8Ibid., p. 37, para. 9. - 38 -
19. In the Application, the subject of the dispute was the delimitation of a single maritime
boundary. The means for carrying out that delimitation were explained in Nicaragua’s Memorial
where Nicaragua argued that the Court should adopt a mainland-to-mainland single maritime
boundary median line. In Nicaragua’s Reply, in contrast, and its final s ubmissions this week, the
subject of the dispute has become the delimitation of the continental shelf ⎯ including areas
situated more than 200nautical miles from its coast ⎯ which is a very different subject-matter.
The means that Nicaragua says the Court should adopt for delimiting the continental shelf have
actually varied: they involve either applying an equal division of the Parties’ geologic margins ⎯
that was Nicaragua’s formal position in its Reply ⎯ or dividing in equal parts the Parties’
overlapping continental shelf entitlements ⎯ that is what is now said in Nicaragua’s final
submissions read at the end of Tuesday.
20. Yes, the means are clearly different. But the crucial point is that the subject-matter of the
delimitation that Nicaragua now asks the Court to decide is fundamentally different. It is that
change of subject-matter that renders Nicara gua’s new claim inadmissible under your Court’s
consistent line of jurisprudence. Delimiting contin ental shelves, particularly when they involve a
claim to areas situated more than 200nautical miles from the coast of one of the Parties, cannot
possibly be deemed to entail the same subject -matter as the delimitation of a single maritime
boundary.
21. Professor Pellet seemed to suggest that the reason why Nicaragua changed its position in
its Reply was because of the Court’s Judgment, in 2007, on the preliminary objections 86. But he
conspicuously failed to provide the slightest explanation why that Judgment could justify
transforming the subject-matter of the case from the delimitation of a single maritime boundary
into a claim for outer continental shelf rights and a delimitation solely of continental margins.
There is no justification. Nicaragua knows this full well. In its Reply, it frankly admitted that the
87
Court’s Judgment “did not directly affect Ni caragua’s request for a maritime delimitation” . And
that is obviously right. The Judgment did not aff ect the subject-matter of the maritime delimitation
dispute that Nicaragua had introduced. It had no be aring; it simply said the Court had jurisdiction
86
CR 2012/15, p. 38, para. 11 (Pellet).
8RN, p. 12, para. 25. - 39 -
and Nicaragua admitted this in its Reply. But now Professor Pellet tries to explain to the Court that
Nicaragua changed its position because of the Judg ment on preliminary objections. That argument
does not hold water.
22. And there is a further point. As is clear from paragraph 8 of the Application, Nicaragua
also said that the delimitation of the single maritime boundary should be carried out “in accordance
with equitable principles and relevant circumstances recognized by general international law as
88
applicable to such a delimitation of a single maritime boundary” .
23. And that was, again, emphasized at several places in Nicaragua’s Memorial. For
example, the Memorial stated in really quite categorical terms that: “The applicable law consists of
principles of general international law relating to the delimitation of a single maritime boundary,
89
and this is the type of delimitation requested of the Court in the Application.”
24. On Tuesday, ProfessorPellet avoided addressing the question whether a delimitation of
continental shelves beyond 200nautical miles of th e coast of one of the Parties can be said to be
based on the same legal principles that Nicaragua maintained were applicable to the delimitation of
a single maritime boundary. But the Court made it clear in the Diallo case that an additional claim
is not “implicit in the Application”, and that it does not arise directly out of the question which is
the subject-matter of the Application, if the le gal bases of the new claim are different from those
underlying the original claim. It was precisely because the Court recognized that what it termed
“the applicable international rules” associated with the new claim in Diallo, that those rules were
different from those on which the original claim was based, it was precisely because of that reason
that the Court held that the new claim could not be considered to be implicit in the original claim,
90
and that the new claim was inadmissible .
25. So, what is the position in this case? Are the legal bases of Nicaragua’s new continental
shelf claim different from the legal bases of its original single maritime boundary claim? In a
word, the answer is: yes.
88
Nicaragua’s Application, para. 8.
89MN, para. 3.49.
90Ahmadou Sadio Diallo (Guinea v. Democratic Republic of the C ongo), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2010 , p.19,
para. 43. - 40 -
26. In both its Application and in its Memo rial, Nicaragua was at pains to emphasize that
factors such as geography and security were key to the delimitation of a single maritime boundary,
and that geological and geomorphological factors had absolutely no relevance, either for
establishing title or for delimitation. Recall the quote I put from Nicaragua’s Memorial on the
screen last week: 80 pages on maritime delimita tion; one sentence on the relevance of geology
and geomorphology. What did that sentence say? Th ose factors were completely irrelevant. And,
also, another difference, in 2007, my colleague said that the legal rules that this Court will certainly
wish to apply, as it systematically does in ev ery maritime delimitation, involve a two-step
process ⎯ not Mr. Reichler’s three-step process ⎯ a two-step process. First, trace the provisional
equidistance line; and second, take into account c onsideration of any special circumstances which
could be of a nature to warrant an adjustment of that line 91.
27. As I explained in my first round presenta tion, the legal principles that Nicaragua now
says are applicable are utterly alien to the princi ples that it said applied to the delimitation of a
single maritime boundary. The new claim depends on whether Nicaragua has established any
continental shelf entitlements beyond 200 nauti cal miles under Article76 of the Convention ⎯
principles that nowhere appear in Nicaragua’s earlier submissions; the new claim depends on the
identification of the limits of each Part y’s purported continental shelf entitlements ⎯ which now
rely on precisely what Nicaragua previously said was wholly irrelevant, geology and
geomorphology; and the new claim depends on an abandonment of the equidistance/relevant
circumstances rule ⎯ which Nicaragua had earlier argued was the governing rule.
28. It follows that not only has the subj ect-matter of the dispute been transformed by
Nicaragua in its Reply, the applicable legal principles have too.
29. I noted in my first round presentation that the Court has itself stressed that the provisions
of Article 40 of the Statute and Article 38 of the Rules of Court are essential from the point of view
92
of legal security and the good administration of justice . Apart from the considerations I have just
discussed, in this connection there is one final point that deserves mention.
91
CR 2007/19, p. 20, para. 9 (Pellet).
9Certain Phosphate Lands in Nauru (Nauru v. Australia), Preliminary Objec tions, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports
1992, p. 267, para. 69; Ahmadou Sadio Diallo (Guinea v. Democratic Republ ic of the Congo), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports
2010, p. 18, para. 38. - 41 -
30. As the Court pointed out in its Judgment in the Diallo case, when a new claim is only
introduced at the Reply stage, the Respondent is no longer able to assert preliminary objections to it
since, under Article79 of the Rules of Court, pr eliminary objections must be filed within the
time-limit for the delivery of the Counter-Memorial or, since the 1February 2001 change in the
Rules, within three months following the delivery of the Memorial. That is the time-limit for filing
preliminary objections. And in Diallo the Court called this “a fundamental procedural right” ⎯
and it went on to say: “This right is infringed if the Applicant asserts a substantially new claim
after the Counter-Memorial, which is to say, at a time when the Respondent can still raise
objections to admissibility and jurisdiction, but not preliminary objections.” ( Ahmadou Sadio
Diallo (Guinea v. Democratic Republic of the Congo), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2010 , p.19,
para. 44.)
31. Colombia’s rights in this respect have been infringed by virtue of Nicaragua’s new claim.
We will never know what would have been the result if Colombia had been confronted with outer
continental shelf claims in the Application or in the Memorial, and what the outcome of any
preliminary objections on this point would have been, because Colombia has lost that opportunity.
What we do know, however, is that, in the same year that the Court decided on the Preliminary
Objections in this case ⎯ objections that Colombia was able to raise ⎯ the Court also stated in its
Judgment in the Nicaragua v. Honduras case that in no case may the delimitation line extend more
than 200 nautical miles from the Parties’ baselines, because any claim to continental shelf rights
beyond 200 nautical miles must be in accordance with Article 76 of the Convention and reviewed
by the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf 93.
32. Mr. President, Members of the Court, Nicaragua’s new claim, its continental shelf claim,
goes far beyond the limits of the claim and the subj ect-matter set out in the Application. It has
transformed the subject-matter of the dispute and its legal basis into another dispute which is
fundamentally different in character; it is a cl aim that was not in any way implicit in the
Application; and it does not arise directly out of the question that was the subject-matter of the
Application. As a consequence Nicaragua’s continental shelf claim is inadmissible.
9Territorial and Maritime Dispute between Niragua and Honduras in the Caribbean Sea (Nicaragua v.
Honduras), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2007 (II), p. 759, para. 319. - 42 -
Nicaragua has not established any continental shelf entitlements
beyond 200 nautical miles
33. I turn now to the arguments raised by Nicaragua concerning its alleged entitlement to a
continental shelf extending well beyond 200nauti cal miles from its coast, and to its new
submission that surfaced at the end of Tuesday afternoon.
34. Professor Lowe began his rebuttal by positin g four points of principle which he said he
94
was confident Colombia would not question . I am afraid I will disappoint my good friend,
although I am sure this is not the first time ⎯ and it probably will not be the last.
35. Two of Professor Lowe’s principles were indeed uncontroversial: the continental shelf
appertains to the coastal State by operation of law, ipso facto and ab initio ; and the goal of
maritime delimitation is to achieve an equitable result. But, on those two points I would also add
that ipso facto continental shelf rights also apply to island ⎯ just like any other mainland ⎯ and,
with respect to achieving an equitable result, the Court has made it clear that that is accomplished
by applying the equidistance/relevant circumstances rule. This is a matter that Professor Crawford
will revert to later.
36. Where Professor Lowe and I part ways concerns the two other principles he referred to.
37. First, Professor Lowe said that it is common ground that Article 76 of the Law of the Sea
Convention reflects customary international law and is applicable in this case 95; and he referred to
page 306 of Colombia’s Counter-Memorial which be seemed to think confirmed the point.
38. At page 306 of the Counter-Memorial, Colombia did not say that it considered Article 76
to reflect customary international law. What Colombia said was that the provisions of the
Convention dealing with baselines, and Articles 74 and 83 dealing with delimitation, do reflect
customary international law. No mention was made of Article76. To the extent that Colombia
referred to a State’s entitlement to maritime areas, it was not referring to outer continental shelf
limits which have to be established in accordance with paragraphs4 to 7 of Article76. At that
point in the proceedings, when Colombia subm itted its Counter-Memorial, Nicaragua’s outer
continental shelf claim had not yet made an a ppearance. The entitlements that Colombia was
referring to were based on the well-known 200-mile distance formula for the exclusive economic
94
CR 2012/15, pp. 17-18, paras. 3-7 (Lowe).
9Ibid., p. 17, para. 5 (Lowe). - 43 -
zone and the continental shelf, the 12-mile territorial sea entitlements, and the rights to a 24-mile
contiguous zone. Those were the issues that were being briefed by the Parties at that stage.
39. While Colombia accepts that paragraph 1 of Article76 reflects customary international
law, Nicaragua has failed to demonstrate that paragr aphs 4 to 7 of Article 76 have the same status.
And, indeed, Dr. Oude Elferink in his writings has stated that the detailed provisions of Article 76
can probably not be considered to be customary international law 96.
Answer to Judge Bennouna’s Question
40. Now, at this point, it is appropriate, if I may, to respond to Judge Bennouna’s question.
At the end of Friday’s session, Judge Bennouna asked whether the legal régime of the continental
shelf for the portion located within the 200-nautical -mile limit is different from that for the portion
located beyond that limit. Colombia’s response is the following.
41. While the legal régime of the continenta l shelf within and beyond the 200-mile limit has
a number of elements in common, the two legal régimes are different.
42. Under Article 76, paragraph 1, of the Conve ntion, the continental shelf of a coastal State
extends to the outer edge of the continental marg in, or to a distance of 200 miles from the coastal
State’s baselines that are used for measuring the breadth of its territorial sea. And under this
paragraph, there is one continental shelf which may or may not extend beyond 200 nautical miles,
depending on the circumstances.
43. Under Article 77 of the Convention the coast al State exercises over the continental shelf
sovereign rights for the purposes of exploring it and exploiting its natural resources.
44. These provisions apply both to the continental shelf within 200miles and beyond
200 nautical miles. There is a difference. Under Article 82 of the Convention, the coastal State is
obliged to make payments or contributions in kind through the International Seabed Authority with
respect to the exploitation of the non-living resources of the continental shelf beyond 200 nm. That
is not the case within 200 nm.
45. The provisions of Article78 of the Conve ntion, which stipulate that the rights of the
coastal State over the continental shelf do not affect the legal status of the superjacent waters or of
96A. Oude Elferink: “The outer limits of the continen tal shelf beyond 200 nautical miles under the framework of
Article 76 of UNCLOS”; http://www.sof.or.jp/en/topics/pdf/aba.pdf 10. - 44 -
the air space above these waters, and that the exerci se of these rights must not infringe or result in
any unjustifiable interference with navigation and other rights and freedoms of other States as
provided for in the Convention, also apply within and beyond 200 nm.
46. But once again, there is a difference. Under Article 246, paragraph 1, of the Convention,
coastal States, in the exercise of their jurisdiction, have the right to regulate marine scientific
research on their continental shelf, in accordance with the relevant provisions of the Convention.
Under paragraph 5 (a) of Article 246, coastal States may, in their discretion, withhold their consent
to the conduct of a marine scientific research proj ect of another State on their continental shelf if,
inter alia , that project is of direct significance fo r the exploration and e xploitation of natural
resources. Within 200nm the State has the discr etion to withhold its consent. However, under
paragraph 6 of Article 246, coastal States may not exercise that discretion to withhold consent with
respect to projects undertaken on the continental shelf beyond 200 nm from their baselines, outside
of specific areas which the coastal States may desi gnate as areas in which exploitation or detailed
exploratory operations are occurring or are likely, or will occur within a reasonable period of time.
47. These provisions show that, at least as a matt er of conventional law, there is a difference
between the legal régime of the continental shelf within the 200-mile limit and beyond that limit.
48. Most importantly, however, there is a crucial difference relating to how a coastal State
establishes the limits of its continental shelf within which it may exercise sovereign rights
depending on whether the areas are within 200 nm of the baseline or beyond that limit.
49. Up to 200nm, the limits of the continen tal shelf of a coastal State are based on the
distance formula. Geology and geomorphology have no role to play in determining these limits.
97
This was emphasized by your Court in the 1985 Judgment in the Libya/Malta case . Clearly
correct. Beyond 200 miles, however, the basis of a State’s entitlement to the continental shelf out
to the outer edge of the continental margin is different, and it depends on meeting the conditions set
out in paragraphs 4 to 7 of Artic le 76, and satisfying the requirement s in paragraph 8 of Article 76,
if that State is a party to the Convention.
9Continental Shelf (Libyan Arab Jamahiriya /Malta), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1985 , p.33, para.34 and p.35,
para. 39. - 45 -
50. It is for these reasons that Colombia says that the legal régime of the continental shelf for
the portion within the 200-mile limit, while sharing a number of common elements with the régime
beyond 200 miles, is different from the legal régi me for the portion located beyond the 200-mile
limit.
Geologic and geomorphologic deficiencies in Nicaragua’s case
51. Now, let me turn to Professor Lowe’s other “key principle” that Colombia does not agree
with.
52. Professor Lowe noted that, while Colombia says that Nicaragua has not established any
outer continental shelf entitlements or substantiated the precise limits of its margin, Colombia does
not deny that as a matter of fact ⎯ as a matter of geology and geomorphology ⎯ that the
continental margin extends north-east from the continental coast of Nicaragua for around 500 miles
98
to an area where it is overlapped with Colombia’s 200-mile zone .
53. I can assure you, Mr.President, Members of the Court, Colombia does not accept this
proposition. It may be instructive to start w ith and to recall how Nicaragua described the
Nicaraguan Rise in its case against Honduras, to place the matter in perspective. After all, the
Nicaraguan Rise is the centrepiece of Nicaragua’s geologic and geomorphologic claim in this case.
The figure that appears on the screen shows how Nicar agua used to depict that Rise in its dispute
with Honduras.
54. In its written pleadings in the Honduras case, Nicaragua first stated the following:
“The Nicaraguan Rise is a wide triangular ridge that extends from the
continental landmass triangle formed by Honduras and Nicaragua, via the island of
Jamaica, to the island of Hispaniola (Dominican Republic and Haiti).” 99
55. Next, Nicaragua said the following:
“The continental shelf up to the 200 metre isobath, though not so generous in
the south, widens remarkably towards the north, fo100ng an ample submerged
territory covered by a tropical sea of very little depth.”
56. And then Nicaragua concluded:
98
CR 2012/15, pp. 17-18, para. 6 (Lowe).
99
Nicaragua’s Memorial in the Honduras case, p. 6, para. 5.
10Ibid., p. 9, para. 12. - 46 -
“Taking as its external limits the 200metre isobath, the continental shelf
fronting Nicaragua is widest in the region of Cape Gracias a Dios whence it continues
along the Nicaraguan Rise in a north easterly direction.” 101
57. Now, in the Honduras case, Nicaragua argued that one of the reasons why the bisector
method would be equitable is because it would divi de the Nicaraguan Rise roughly in half between
Nicaragua and Honduras. Having achieved its purpose in that case ⎯ a case in which Nicaragua
made no outer continental shelf claim, rather Nicaragua stressed that delimitation of a single
102
maritime boundary was the general rule ⎯ having gotten what it wanted, a division of the Rise
in the Honduras case, Nicaragua is now not satisfied. It wants the continental shelf based on the
Rise to consume a huge area lying further south, we ll within 200 nm of Colombia’s islands and its
mainland coast. Yes, Mr.President, Members of the Court, we do contest the proposition that
Nicaragua’s new version of geology and geomorphology establishes a continental margin
extending far across the sea towards Colombia’s mainland coast. Despite the efforts of
Dr. Cleverly and Professor Lowe, that proposition has not been demonstrated.
58. In his second round presentation, Dr. Cleverly tried to show that Nicaragua’s calculation
of the outer edge of its continental margin was reliable ⎯ in fact, reliable according to
Dr. Cleverly ⎯ up to plus or minus 100 m 10. That is simply not the case, and Nicaragua certainly
does not have the backing of the Commission on the Li mits of the Continental Shelf to support its
assertions.
59. Dr. Cleverly argues that Colombia cannot question the fact that Nicaragua’s continental
shelf, defined in accordance with Article 76, overlaps with Colombia’s mainland 200-mile zone 104.
But Nicaragua has not defined the outer limits of the margin in accordance with the requirements of
Article 76. It has not even made a full submissi on to the Commission, let alone establish the outer
limit on the basis of the Commission’s recommendations which only then become final and binding
and opposable to third States, as the ITLOS Tribunal clearly stated in the Bangladesh/Myanmar
case. I realize that Professor Lowe considered that this “final and binding” language was res inter
10Nicaragua’s Memorial in the Honduras case, p. 9, para. 13.
102
Ibid., p. 94, para. 15.
10CR 2012/15, p. 16, para. 25 (Cleverly).
10Ibid., p. 10, para. 2 (Cleverly). - 47 -
105
alios acta with respect to Colombia . But if Nicaragua’s outer edge of the margin is not
opposable to States that are party to the Convention, how can it be opposable to States that are not
parties to the Convention? That has not been explained.
60. ProfessorLowe then argued that Nicaragua has in any event fulfilled its obligations
under Article76 by filing preliminary information; and it did so in time. But preliminary
information, as we have said, is not even considered by the Commission and it in no way
establishes a State’s entitlement up to the outer edge of the margin.
61. Dr.Cleverly then argued that the reasons why some of the data contained in its
preliminary information would not satisfy the Co mmission have nothing to do with their substance
or accuracy; they only lack some of what he termed the “formal elements” the Commission
106
requires . And with the greatest respect, that assertion is badly misleading. The Commission
requires detailed data in compliance with its Guidelin es. It is not a matter of formalities; it is a
matter of substance. None of Nicaragua’s foot-o f-slope points are supported by the requisite data.
You either have the required data or you do not and Nicaragua does not.
62. Dr.Cleverly says that the Commission requires what he called data about data, or
107
“metadata” . That is not a term that can be found an ywhere in the Commission’s Guidelines and
it is a misreading of the submission process. Th e Commission requires data that supports the
claim. The required content of a submission is set out in Section 9.1.3 of the Guidelines, and
detailed further in Sections 4 and 5. So-called metadata is not acceptable. Foot-of-slope point 1 is,
by Nicaragua’s own admission, not suitable. Foot -of-slope point 5 is based on so-called “evidence
to the contrary”, which is not described or substa ntiated and has sample profile points up to 20 km
apart, which is insufficient for purposes of construc ting a proper profile, let alone analysing it with
a sophisticated suite of software. Those deficiencies were not mentioned by my good friend
Dr.Cleverly. Nor are the other three foot-o f-slope points supported by data that would be
acceptable to the Commission.
105
CR 2012/15, p. 19, para. 13 (Lowe).
106
Ibid., p. 11, para. 4 (Cleverly).
10Ibid., para. 5 (Cleverly). - 48 -
63. The same shortcomings undermine Dr.Cleverly’s bathymetric data. Once again, the
Commission’s Guidelines speak of a “full technical description of the bathymetric database”. That
has not been provided by Nicaragua. Gridded data is not admissible under the Commission’s
Guidelines.
64. Now, I realize that Dr. Cleverly tried to impress upon us that a good deal of information
had been provided, such as the details of the sh ip, the date and time, the recording equipment and
velocity of sound used 108. But the one thing that is missing ⎯ the most important thing ⎯ is the
data. Moreover, Nicaragua ⎯ to calculate the 2,500-metre isobath for purposes of constructing the
constraint line [tab9] ⎯ first of all relies on gridded information which would be considered
inadmissible by the Commission, and it relies on simply one track-line ⎯ this was the red line that
Dr. Cleverly showed you on one of these sketches, that also crosses so far to the north that it cannot
be used for calculating the constraint line throug hout the entire course of Nicaragua’s claim to the
south; but that is exactly what Nicaragua tries to do.
65. Mr.President, Members of the Court, the allegation by our colleagues that they have
calculated the outer edge of the margin to an accuracy of a few hundred metres is pure fantasy.
The irrelevance of the outer margin in Nicaragua’s new submission
66. But all of this now is beside the point in the light of the change of position in Nicaragua’s
final submissions. Let me explain this latest incarnation of Nicaragua’s claims.
67. In its Reply, we know that Nicara gua abandoned its mainland-to-mainland single
maritime boundary claim in favour of a claim based on an equal division of what Nicaragua said
was the geologic and geomorphologic edge of Colomb ia’s continental margin with the geological
and geomorphological outer edge of what it said w as Nicaragua’s margin. Nicaragua’s submission
in the Reply ⎯ it is No. 3 ⎯ set out the specific co-ordinates ⎯ they are listed there ⎯ of what
this equal division line was 109. That was the line that Nicaragua formally asked your Court to
endorse.
108
CR 2012/15, p. 14, para. 15 (Cleverly).
10RN, pp. 239-240, Submission I (3). - 49 -
68. And now Nicaragua has abandoned that cl aim as well. With respect to Colombia’s
geologic margin, Dr.Cleverly did not even try to defend Nicaragua’s position advanced in the
Reply. Rather, he admitted, “Nicaragua has not carried out a precise analysis of Colombia’s
110
continental margin.” And he added, “that is not our role” . Now, that, Mr.President, is a
complete volte face. The calculation of the edge of Co lombia’s margin was precisely what
Nicaragua purported to do in its Reply. It was one part ⎯ one half ⎯ of the equation for the
co-ordinates of what was then Nicaragua’s continen tal shelf claim line. Now, Nicaragua’s slides,
that they showed earlier this week, show a 200-nautical mile entitlement from Colombia’s
mainland, not any line depicting a so-called geologi cal margin of Colombia. We have one change
there: Colombia’s margin has disappeared. Of course, at the same time, Colombia’s 200-nautical
mile entitlements from its islands are also conveni ently ignored. That is the first change in
Nicaragua’s position. Colombia’s margin has now become irrelevant. It was the centrepiece of
their formal claim in the Reply, now it is irre levant. Of course, it always should have been
irrelevant.
69. Second, ProfessorLowe asserted, not once but three times, that Nicaragua was not
asking your Court to determine and validate the out er limits of Nicaragua’s purported continental
111
shelf beyond 200nautical miles either . But, once again, that is exactly what Nicaragua was
asking you to do in its Reply, where the outer edge of Nicaragua’s margin was the other half of the
equation for Nicaragua’s division of margins claim. What is more, Professor Lowe then proceeded
to completely contradict himself because, a little later in his pleading, he said that you should
divide the overlapping continental shelves in two, and that the median line for doing so is measured
so that it is equally distant from the outer limit of Nicaragua’s continental shelf and Colombia’s
112
200-mile limit . So, he is still relying on the outer edge of the shelf.
70. Now, if all of this leaves some of the Members of the Court confused, I can assure you
that you are not alone. Obviously, Nicaragua realizes that its outer edge of the margin claim is
unsustainable, notwithstanding the brave efforts of Dr. Cleverly. So that claim is abandoned too.
11CR 2012/15, p. 16, para. 22 (Cleverly).
111
Ibid., p. 21, para. 24 and p. 22, para. 27 (Lowe).
11Ibid., p. 29, para. 70 (Lowe). - 50 -
71. And how has Nicaragua accomplished this feat? By changing its submissions once
again.
72. Here is Nicaragua’s new submission, read at the end of Tuesday afternoon:
“The appropriate form of delimitatio n, within the geographical and legal
framework constituted by the mainland coast s of Nicaragua and Colombia, is a
continental shelf boundary dividing by e qual parts the overlapping entitlements to a
continental shelf of both Parties.”
73. So, no more outer edge of Nicaragua’s or Colombia’s continental margin; no more
co-ordinates of Nicaragua’s claim line that appeared in the Reply. Instead, Nicaragua is essentially
telling the Members of this Court ⎯ figure it out for yourselves. And, in addition, the proposition
from my colleague was, if you cannot come up with a line, wait for the Commission to do its
work ⎯ notwithstanding the fact that Nicaragua h as not even made a full submission to the
Commission that would be considered in any event. Apart from being inadmissible because this
new submission still relates to the new contin ental shelf claim, Nicaragua’s request is
inappropriate, unsustainable and would not settle the dispute.
74. Now, that being said, abandoning the outer edge of the continental margin does not solve
Nicaragua’s problems. Professor Lowe argued that the question of the existence of a continental
shelf right should not be conflated with the questi on of procedural obligations consequent upon its
exercise 113, and that it is not the line of the outer edge of the margin that generates entitlement to
114
the continental margin .
75. The essence of the argument seems to be that Nicaragua has a continental shelf
entitlement beyond 200 nm even if the outer edge of the margin has not been established. But that
is not what Article 76 says.
76. Paragraph 1 of Article 76 provides that the continental shelf of the coastal State extends
to the outer edge of the margin or to 200 miles. There is no part-way alternative. In other words,
the Convention does not say the continental shelf of a coastal State beyond 200nm extends for
another 5miles, or 10miles or to some undetermined limit short of the edge of the margin. It
113
CR 2012/15, p. 19, para. 14 (Lowe).
11Ibid., p. 18, para. 9 (Lowe). - 51 -
extends to the outer edge of the margin. But a State party to the Convention has to establish that
outer edge under both the substantive and procedural framework of Article 76.
77. And I would suggest that ITLOS made this point clear in its judgment in
Bangladesh/Myanmar, if I can quote from paragraph 437 of that judgment:
“ Entitlement to a continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles should thus be
determined by reference to the outer edge of the continental margin, to be ascertained
in accordance with article 76, paragraph 4. To interpret otherwise is warranted neither
by the text of article 76 nor by its object and purpose.” 115 (Emphasis added.)
Again, there is no half-way measure.
78. Professor Lowe contends that this did not stop the Tribunal in Bangladesh/Myanmar
from delimiting areas beyond 200nm. But the situation in Bangladesh/Myanmar was entirely
different from what we have in our case.
I79. Bangladesh/Myanmar, both parties were parties to the 1982Convention. Here,
obviously, Colombia is not. Moreover, both Bangladesh and Myanmar had made full, and fully
substantiated outer continental shelf submissions to the Commission. Each party claimed that there
was an outer continental shelf and that the outer continental shelf appertained to it, but there was no
dispute over the existence of a physical continental shelf in the Bay of Bengal extending more than
200 nm from the land territory of each of the two parties.
80. That was a critical factor for the Tribunal in deciding whether to exercise its jurisdiction
to determine the boundary beyond 200nm. At several junctures in its judgment, the Tribunal
underscored the fact that “[T]he Parties do not di ffer on the scientific aspec ts of the sea-bed and
116
subsoil of the Bay of Bengal” ; that both parties’ submissions contained data indicating their
entitlement to the continental margin beyond 200 nm 117; that the scientific evidence was what the
Tribunal termed “uncontested” 11, and that the Bay of Bengal itself presents a unique situation with
respect to the existence of an extended c ontinental shelf, as was acknowledged during the
negotiations at the Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea 119.
11Bangladesh/Myanmar, p. 128, para. 437.
11Ibid., p. 121, para. 412.
117
Ibid., p. 130, para. 445.
11Ibid., para. 446.
11Ibid., p. 129, para. 444. - 52 -
81. In other words, both Bangladesh and Myanmar clearly had outer continental shelf
entitlements. The scientific evidence for that was not in dispute. Had that not been the case ⎯ in
other words, again, to quote from the Tribunal’s words from its judgment ⎯ “had it [the Tribunal]
concluded that there was a significant uncertainty as to the existence of a continental margin in the
area in question”, it “would have been hesitant to proceed with the delimitation of the area beyond
200 nautical miles” 120.
82. This case is fundamentally different.
83. Nicaragua has not made a full submission to the Commission. No other State in the
region considers that an extended continental shelf ex ists in this part of the Caribbean given that
neither Panama, nor Costa Rica, nor Jamai ca, nor Honduras has made such a submission ⎯
because there are no areas in this part of the Caribbean that are situated more than 200 nm from the
nearest land territory, unlike the situation in the Bay of Bengal.
84. And as I mentioned last week, in Bangladesh/Myanmar, the Tribunal did not need to
determine the outer limits of either State’s c ontinental shelf or continental shelf entitlements
because the delimitation was between States with adjacent coasts. The Tribunal had already
applied the “equidistance/relevant circumstances” rule to the delimitation of the single maritime
boundary up to the 200-mile limit, and it simply prolonged that delimitation line along the same
azimuth using the same methodology. Conse quently, the Tribunal’s delimitation line in
Bangladesh/Myanmar even beyond the 200-nautical-mile limit had nothing to do with geology and
geomorphology. Once again, Nicaragua’s claim ⎯ in this case, its new claim ⎯ is entirely
different.
85. I also pointed out last week that State practice relating to outer continental shelf claims
overwhelmingly respects the principle that such claims should not encroach on the
200-nautical-mile continental shelf and EEZ entitleme nts generated by another State’s territory.
Now that practice is not limited to 200-mile entitle ments of mainland coasts. It frequently has
involved the entitlements of islands ⎯ and sometimes very small is lands. None of this was
challenged in Nicaragua’s second round.
120
Bangladesh/Myanmar,pp. 129, para. 443. - 53 -
Conclusion
86. Mr. President, I come to the end.
87. I believe I have shown why Nicaragua’s new continental shelf claim is inadmissible, and
how it is flawed both legally and technically. D espite Nicaragua’s efforts to deprive Colombia
completely of an exclusive economic zone, the s ubject-matter of this case remains the delimitation
of a single maritime boundary covering the EEZ a nd the continental shelf underlying that EEZ in
accordance with the well-established principles and ru les of international law: starting with the
provisional equidistance line between the truly relevant coasts, and then taking into account the
relevant circumstances that characterize the area to be delimited.
88. I thank you, Mr. President, and the Court for your attention, and I would now be grateful
if the floor could be given to Professor Crawford. Thank you very much.
The PRESIDENT: Thank you very much, Mr.Bundy, and I call on ProfessorCrawford.
You have the floor, Sir.
CMRA. WFORD:
4.N ICARAGUA ’S EEZ CLAIM (PART 1)
1. Mr. President, Members of the Court, in this rebuttal presentation I will deal with the EEZ
claims of the Parties. Nicaragua’s position is th at although the archipelago contains at least three
features which are entitled to an EEZ, the total EEZ which they generate is zero. Moreover by
virtue of that zero within 200nautical miles of Nicaragua’s mainland coast, the islands of the
archipelago lose some 70,000sqkm of EEZ area beyond 200miles of that coast, EEZ areas to
which only they are entitled. This is said by Prof essor Lowe to be equitable: the enclaving of all
Colombia’s islands entailed ⎯ he cordially accepted ⎯ the loss of Colombian entitlements which
121
Nicaragua itself could not and cannot claim . And this was equitable beyond 200 nautical miles
because enclaving was alleged to be equita ble within 200 nautical miles. Another petitio principii
to add to the pile!
121
CR 2012/15, pp. 24-5, paras. 41-3 (Lowe). - 54 -
RMeic. ler ⎯ whose job it was to defend the equi ty of a zero EEZ allocation to the
archipelago ⎯ did not in fact address this important aspect of the matter. In a way that was a
relief, because the sight of yet another Nicara guan counsel being cheerfully complacent at the
gratuitous loss of significant Colombian rights would have been altogether too much.
3. Nor did Mr. Reichler show you again the graphic on the screen, which he showed you in
the first round and which confessed to the truth. Well, to part of the truth, because it attributes EEZ
only to the three named islands, whereas, Serrana and Roncador are not rocks and are also entitled
to the EEZ. We have amended the pink area which shows the EEZ to which only the islands of the
archipelago are entitled, so as to include EEZ area s to which Serrana and Roncador are entitled.
The total area in which water column rights are lost to Colombia because of the alleged equitable
enclaving of these islands is 69,780 sq km.
4. It is worthwhile taking a moment to assess the equities here, since Mr. Reichler declined
to do so. I am going to Roncador as an example. And, in a thought experiment, I am going to ask
you to think that the only delimitation issue that arises is the delimitation issue for the EEZ as
between the mainland coast and Roncador. You can see Roncador on the screen ⎯ it is clearly not
a mere rock. And let us give it, as you gave equivalent Honduran cays, a 12-nautical-mile
territorial sea. Roncador itself is 186.7nautical miles from the Nicaraguan mainland, rather less
from the offshore islands of Nicaragua. You can see the distances on the screen. That means that
the easternmost point of the territorial sea around Roncador is 200.4nautical miles from the
Nicaraguan mainland coast using the easternmost ava ilable base point of Roncador. That means,
inevitably, ineluctably, that the mainland coast is irrelevant to enclaving Roncador: there is no
room for any enclave because 200nautical miles from the mainland coast has been reached. So
Nicaragua would have you give full EEZ effect to its cays in order to give zero effect to
Roncador ⎯ an obviously unbalanced and inequitable solution.
5. To summarize, Nicaragua is determined at all costs to enclave all of our features,
including Roncador. If Roncador gets full eastward effect, the cat is out of the bag so far as
Nicaragua’s zero effect aspirations are concerned. In the collegial spirit which Professor Lowe so - 55 -
122
celebrated , it is thus necessary to give full effect to the Nicaraguan cays ⎯ the mainland is
irrelevant ⎯ to give them a full 12-mile territorial sea, a full 200-mile EEZ ⎯ and none to the
Colombian cays ⎯ a mere 3-mile territorial sea and no EEZ at all. In order to give Nicaragua a
narrow strip of EEZ on the far side of Roncador, which means that Colombia loses 67,780 sq km
of otherwise uncontested EEZ, it is necessary to di scriminate between one cay and another. To
give their cays full effect and ours none. Members of the Court may feel they have had enough of
ratios but let me give you one more. Area of EEZ gained by Nicaragua if Roncador is enclaved by
virtue of the Nicaraguan cays: 12.030 sq km; area of otherwise uncontested EEZ lost by Colombia
if Roncador is enclaved: 69,720 sq km; in other words a ratio of 1:5.6. As the Roncador example
shows, Nicaragua regards it as apparently equitable that Colombia should lose tens of thousands of
square kilometres of EEZ to which no other State has any entitlement, in order to give Nicaragua a
much smaller area of EEZ at the extreme limit of its range. No wonder Mr.Reichler did not talk
about the equities of that point.
6. Mr. President, Members of the Court, if there was an EEZ delimitation between Nicaragua
and Colombia over Roncador ⎯ if Roncador stood alone ⎯ can there be any doubt that you would
not enclave Roncador at 12miles? If it stood alone and not behind the three named islands, you
might possibly give it half effect on the western si de, but that would be the most you would do to
favour Nicaragua at this distance. And as with R oncador, so with Serrana: it is inequitable to
deprive these islands ⎯ not rocks ⎯ of east-facing EEZ entitlements by reason of a wholly remote
Nicaraguan coast by reason of wholly remote Nicaraguan cays. Mr.Reichler may cry “cut-off,
cut-off” 123as the little boy cried “wolf” in Aesop’s Fables 124⎯ I hope that is a classical enough
allusion for him. But it is Mr. Reichler who should be cut off. For this case before you is precisely
that EEZ delimitation between Nicaragua and Colomb ia over Roncador, over Serrana, and so on.
122
CR 2012/15, p. 26, para. 53 (Lowe).
123CR 2012/14, p.51 para.44; pp.54-5, para.57; p.55, para.58, p.55; para.60; p.56, para.68; p.57,
para. 73 (Reichler).
12L. Gibbs, Aesop’s Fables: A New Translation (OUP, 2002, p. 78):
“There was a boy tending the sheep who would c ontinually go up the emba nkment and shout, ‘Help,
there’s a wolf!’ The farmers would all come running only to find out that what the boy said was not true. Then
one day there really was a wolf, but when the boy shout ed they didn’t believe him and no-one came to his aid.
The whole flock was eaten by the wolf.” - 56 -
Colombia’s islands are not entitled to any less by way of maritime zones because there are a
considerable number of them.
The issue of entitlement
7. That brings me to the issue of entitlement. Nicaragua made little or no attempt on
Tuesday to rebut what I have said about the maritime zones of islands. What little there was fell to
Mr.Elferink, who professed that he could not “f igure out what [I] meant” when I recalled the
125
international law definition of islands . This is rather surprising, as there is not much to “figure
out” about the definition. It is a plain definition and a clear-cut definition. Mr. Elferink, however,
would make it a matter of many shades of gray, a definition that requires exercises in appreciation,
subjective judgments, even aesthetic judgments, even the company of friends. This is what he said:
“Now, there is of course a huge difference between a coral island and a piece of
coral debris. On the screen you have tw o photographs. Over the weekend, I asked
some people to tell me which of these two in their view was a coral island, and the
choice unanimously was for the figure on the left.” 126 [which is a place where one
might go for a holiday]
Now, I assume these were Mr.Elferink’s friends : he is evidently too nice a man to have any
enemies ⎯ except, very recently, Dr.Smith. But he did not bother to tell us the names of his
friends or whether they had expertise in the law of the sea. Perhaps they were members of the
drafting committee of the Montego Bay Convention, come to him in The Hague to affirm belatedly
what the text really means.
8. The reason that the bright-line rule now contained in Article121 gained such a wide
reception, from its inclusion in Article 10 of the 1958 Convention onwards, is that it affords clarity.
An island is not a matter for appreciation, even between friends on a long and sunny Hague
weekend. An island is a geographical fact. If a feature is a naturally-formed area of land,
surrounded by water and above water at high tide, it is an island. If not, it is not. Mr. Elferink says
127
he does not understand my theory of poor white coral trash . But it is his theory, a theory with no
basis in international law whatever; I gave it a label ⎯ which he could not figure out either. It
12CR 2012/14, p. 40, para. 20 (Oude Elferink).
126
Ibid.
12Ibid., quoting Crawford (CR 2012/12, pp. 27-30, paras. 3-11). - 57 -
does not matter in the least whether the island is a small coral feature. What matters is whether it is
naturally formed, surrounded by water, above water at high tide. If it meets these criteria, that is all
that is necessary. Mr. Elferink’s friends have nothing to do with it.
9. What Mr. Elferink really proposes is that you create, by your judgment in this case, a new
category; perhaps we can call it the island in statu nascendi. Lord, make me an island but not yet,
says Colombia about Quitasueño ⎯ because you can be confident if it gets its hands on
Quitasueño, Nicaragua will call it an island ⎯ the elevated truth will then be made available!
Certainly, geographers understand that islands grow. Coral islands grow through a gradual process
of accretion. DerekBowett acknowledged this process, which he called one of “gradual
accretion” 128⎯ he is a great one for calling a spade a spade. Beazley acknowledged it as well,
129
when he noted that, from coral, “any associated island may gradually rise” . But the observations
by Bowett and Beazley, which Mr.Elferink seizes upon, were not directed towards limiting the
effects of existing islands under the law of the sea. They were not directed to prove the existence
of a new juridical category. Incidentally I coul d not detect any inconsistency between the passage
of Bowett I quoted and the preceding lines which I did not quote, for want of time.
10. The question is not just one of definition; it is one of entitlement. Even Nicaragua
accepts that the main Colombian islands are entitled to an EEZ ⎯ as a result of which it gives them
no EEZ at all! Nicaragua’s entitlement is sacrosanct, such that Mr.Reichler can cry “cut-off” at
100nm for SanAndrés, or at 180nm for Roncad or. But Colombia’s entitlement is illusory;
nothing at all. After which, Professor Lowe has the nerve to suggest ⎯ in response to our justified
complaint that their claim has changed three or four times ⎯ that this is not a normal adversarial
130
proceeding .
11. Mr. President, Members of the Court, this is as adversarial as it gets. Nicaragua claimed
the lives and homes of 80,000 Colombians without a scintilla of right. These are real people who
understandably view this case with the gravest conc ern. Now Nicaragua claims their living space,
128
D.W. Bowett, The legal regime of islands in international law, Oceana, 1979, pp. 4-5, quoted by Mr. Elferink
(CR 2012/14, p. 41, para. 21).
12P.B. Beazley, “Reefs and the 1982 Conven tion on the Law of the Sea,” (1991) 6 International Journal of
Estuarine and Coastal Law, p. 285, quoted by Mr. Elferink (CR 2012/14, p. 41, para. 21).
13CR 2012/15, p. 26, para. 53 (Lowe). - 58 -
their traditional fishing areas, their reefs and cays, the areas internationally recognized for decades
as within Colombian fisheries jurisdiction. Ca n the Court envisage Colombian fisheries in the
broad area of the archipelago if the future th ere belongs to Nicaragua? If this case is not
adversarial, well, I hope never to be involved agai nst Professor Lowe in proceedings that are! Let
the Court not be deceived by the fact that we have conducted these proceedings in an orderly and
civilized manner that there is not a great deal at stake, matters of vital national interest, the security
of the western Caribbean. When I spoke on Friday about Nicaragua throwing a rock into the placid
treaty-regulated waters of the western Caribbean, I spoke in deadly earnest. And I was right: you
heard Professor Lowe on Tuesday trashing the treaties 131 ⎯ a matter Mr. Bundy will develop.
12. But for the moment, I am discussing maritime entitlement and I simply want to stress
that there is nothing unusual about giving full effect to small islands in the law of the sea. This is
Aves Island, given full effect in the agreemen ts concluded by Venezuela with the Netherlands 132,
133 134
France and the United States . Now you can see Bajo Nuevo and Roncador. There is perhaps
not a lot of difference ⎯ I am not sure what Mr. Elferink’s friends would say, between Aves Island
and Bajo Nuevo, or others of our cays. My own subjective appreciation is that Aves Island is lesser
than ours; but de gustibus non disputandum. As Mr.Bundy has shown, Alburquerque, Serrana,
Roncador and others are not mere rocks within th e meaning of Article 121, paragraph 3. They are
islands and as such entitled to the full suite of maritime zones. This is an entitlement the Court
must ⎯ I say it with all respect ⎯ recognize, even though Nicaragua declines to do so.
13. That brings me to two points ⎯ contiguous zones and Quitasueño.
(a) Contiguous zones in maritime delimitation
14. Mr.Reichler suggests that it is invalid for Colombia to illustrate that the territorial sea
and contiguous zones of the islands of the arch ipelago overlap and thus form a single area of
135
Colombian sovereignty or sovereign authority . But the illustration, for example, in
131
CR 2012/15, pp. 27-28, paras. 59-63 (Lowe).
132
Netherlands Treaty Series, 1978 No. 61, 1979 No. 11.
133Maritime Boundary Agreement between the United States and Venezuela, signed 28 March 1978, entered into
force 24 November 1980 (reprinted in Limits in the Seas, Vol 91).
13417 July 1980, 19 United Nations Treaty Series 220.
135CR 2012/14, pp. 55-56, paras. 61-63 (Reichler). - 59 -
Figure R-8.3 136, is a succinct and accurate representation of the geographic situation, of the law of
the sea as applied to that situation and of the regulatory arrangements. These powers are exercised,
and exercised for a reason. The sea belts, depicted in blue shading, to which Mr. Reichler objected,
are the areas, to paraphrase the Chamber in Gulf of Maine, “conceived as subject to the sovereignty
of the coastal State... subject to the exercise of customs controls and similar measures, [and]
137
intended to prevent violations of [Colombia’s] territorial sovereignty” . The islands of Colombia
which generate the zones are proximate to one anot her in maritime terms. The zones form a single
continuous area. This is not some sort of maritime trompe-l’oeil, it is a regulatory reality. It is the
result one reaches by applying the straightforward rules.
(b) Quitasueño
15. Last Friday, I presented four points in response to Mr.Elferink’s assault against
Colombia’s approach to surveyin g and charting Quitasueño. These were high tides, the use of a
tidal datum, Colombia’s charts, and finally, the “coral trash” theory of island deformation.
Regarding the third point, I said that I was going to return to the charts in more detail this week.
16. As I said, old charts and surveys are not determinative of present-day geographic facts:
your decision in Qatar/Bahrain is directly in point and was not challenged on Tuesday.
Technology constraints years ago prevented the accu rate positioning of small islands on a bank or
cay classified as a hazard to navigation.
17. Mr.President, Members of the Court, let me take a few moments ⎯ while lunch
awaits ⎯ to discuss the practice of hydrographic surveys and the valuable role hydrographers play
in providing for the safety of mariners worldwide. Given the importance of international shipping
to the commerce of virtually every country, it is important to understand that the primary purpose
of nautical charts is to provide for safety in navigation, not necessarily to position each and every
rock. The most recent hydrographic survey cond ucted by the Colombian Hydrographic Service in
Quitasueño bank was done in 1999. The survey was done using a single-beam echo sounder at a
136
Fig. R-8.3, RC, p. 307; Map Vol. II, p. 127.
13Delimitation of the Maritime Boundary in the Gulf of Main Area (Canada/United States of America),
Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1984, p. 302, para. 120. - 60 -
1:50,000 resolution, meaning that the hydrographic lines were 500metres apart 138. Thus, the
Colombian hydrographic vessel sailed back and forth with 500metres separating the lines of
navigation. If the ship had stopped every time a feature ⎯ of the type found in the subsequent
2008 and 2009 surveys ⎯ was seen in order to conduct a separate survey of its geographic
position, the survey would have taken months. The purpose of the 1999 survey was to delimit the
bank as a hazard to navigation, not to document the position of every rock.
18. Colombia’s Hydrographic Service has been producing nautical charts, which have
provided navigation safety in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean, for over 40years. Colombia
has been a member of the International Hydr ographic Organization (IHO) since 1998. Data
collected by the hydrographic services is included in the nautical charts produced by the United
Kingdom Hydrographic Office for the region.
19. As to the surveys, in 2008 and 2009 the Colombian Hydrographic Service returned to
Quitasueño at the request of the Colombian Government to conduct another survey, with the
specific goal of verifying the existence of islands on the bank. For the 2009 survey, the Colombian
Government retained Dr. Smith, as an independent expert, to confirm, or to refute, the 2008 survey.
Dr.Smith is sitting in Court. It should be no ted that at least one feature identified in the
2008survey was not found in 2009 by Dr.Smith and was not included in his list of Quitasueño
features. Given the nature of the hazardous ba nk, both surveys were made under some personal
risk ⎯ and we do not suggest une descente sur les lieux by the entire Court. The detailed results
were reported in Dr. Smith’s report, which you will read for yourselves.
20. Mr. President, Members of the Court, all 54 reported features are inside the danger lines
published in Nautical Chart COL416 [1:100,000], thus verifying danger to navigation. I
understand that since the nautical charts of Qu itasueño were published, no navigation-related
incidents have occurred in the area ⎯ or at least have been reported.
21. I will now identify five t echnical mistakes in Mr.Elferink’s presentation. But I think,
Mr.President, five is a bit too much before l unch. So perhaps we should come back to his
mistakes, with some opportunity for digestion.
138
http://www.nauticalcharts.noaa.gov/mcd/learnnc_surveytechniques.html. - 61 -
The PRESIDENT: Thank you, Professor Crawford . I think the Parties deserve also a lunch
break. The sitting is adjourned. We will meet again at 3o’clock for the continuation of
Colombia’s presentation. The sitting is closed.
The Court rose at 12.55 p.m.
___________
Audience publique tenue le vendredi 4 mai 2012, à 10 heures, au Palais de la Paix, sous la présidence de M. Tomka, président, en l’affaire du Différend territorial et maritime (Nicaragua c. Colombie)