Reply of the Government of the State of Bahrain

Document Number
11053
Document Type
Date of the Document
Document File
Document

INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE

CASE CONCERNING MARITIME DELIMITATION

AND TERRITORIAL QUESTIONS

BETWEEN

QATAR AND BAHRAIN

(QATAR v. BAHRAIN)

__________

REPLY

SUBMITTED BY

THE STATE OF BAHRAIN

(Merits)

VOLUME 1

__________

30 May 1999

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

CHAPTER 1 1

INTRODUCTION 1

SECTION 1.1 Bahrain reserves the right to make subsequent observations on Qatar's
arguments, given Qatar's decision to disregard the 82 forged documents 2

SECTION 1.2 Outline of the Reply 3

SECTION 1.3 Bahrain's position on the issues remains unchanged 4

A. The territorial questions 4 B. The maritime delimitation 7

SECTION 1.4 Qatar's decision to disregard the 82 forged documents leaves it with no
evidence to support its territorial claims 8

SECTION 1.5 Qatar appears to question the jurisdiction of the Court in relation to the
Zubarah region 9

PART I 10

THE TERRITORIAL ISSUES 10

CHAPTER 2 11

THE ABANDONMENT OF ARGUMENTS BASED ON THE 82 FORGED DOCUMENTS
MEANS THAT BAHRAIN'S DEMONSTRATION OF SOVEREIGNTY OVER THE
HAWAR ISLANDS IS UNASSAILABLE 11

SECTION 2.1 Introduction 11

SECTION 2.2 Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands has been continuous and
uninterrupted from the eighteenth century to the present 12

SECTION 2.3 Bahrain has submitted evidence of more than 70 examples of Bahrain's
exercise of authority over the Hawar Islands during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries 14

SECTION 2.4 Qatar's attempts to denounce the evidence of Bahrain's sovereignty over the
Hawar Islands are baseless 22

A. Qatar mischaracterises the nature of the Dowasir tribe's relationship
with the Rulers of Bahrain 22

B. The 1878 Ottoman map demonstrates Ottoman recognition of Bahrain's
title to the Hawar Islands 30

C. The Zakhnuniya Island incident confirms Britain's and the Ottoman
Empire's recognition of Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands 31

D. Bahrain's positive evidence in support of its continuous authority over
the Hawar Islands stands unchallenged 32

(i) The Brucks survey 32

(ii) The shipwrecked Ottoman soldiers 33

(iii) Jurisdiction to serve summons 33

(iv) Fishing 34

(v) Pearling 35 (vi) Animal husbandry 36

(vii) Gypsum quarrying 36

SECTION 2.5 Qatar's claim that prior to 1936 Britain considered the Hawar Islands as

belonging to Qatar is false 36

SECTION 2.6 Qatar's claim that Bahrain illegally occupied the Hawar Islands in 1937 is not
supported by the evidence 52

SECTION 2.7 Qatar has presented no facts or arguments that undermine the legal effect of the
British decision of 1938-1939 54

A. Qatar's claim that the British decision of 1938-1939 was not an adjudication is
unsustainable 57

B. Qatar's complaint that the so-called British "provisional decision" of 1936 unfairly
placed the onus of proof on Qatar is both unfounded and irrelevant 57

C. Qatar's claim of British pre-judgement and bias is unfounded 58

D. The Dubai/Sharjah award supports Bahrain's view of the British decision 59

E. Qatar's invocation of the views of Prior and Alban is misplaced 61

F. Qatar's attempted explanation of the Ruler of Qatar's erroneous "description" of the
Hawar Islands is unconvincing 62

G. In support of its 1939 Arbitration Award recognising Bahrain's sovereignty over
the Hawar Islands, Britain noted the overwhelming evidence of Bahrain's sovereignty
in contrast to the absence of any evidence of Qatari activities 63

H. Britain continued to recognise the overwhelming nature of the evidence of
Bahrain's sovereignty and the continuing absence of any evidence of Qatari activities
after the 1939 Award 65

(i) In the period prior to Britain's 1947 letter, Britain continued to consider the Award
as valid and its conclusions as accurate 65

(ii) Britain rejected Qatar's threats in the 1960s to renew its claim to the Hawar Islands
66

I. Qatar protested Britain's Award only on three occasions between 1941 and
1965 67

SECTION 2.8 Qatar's "critical period" argument is fallacious 68

SECTION 2.9 Qatar has not submitted any non-forged evidence that supports its claim of
sovereignty over the Hawar Islands 70 A. The agreements entered into by Britain with the Rulers of Bahrain and Qatar in
1868 do not support Qatar's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands 70

B. Qatar's reliance on Lorimer's description of the Hawar Islands is misplaced 72

C. The unratified Anglo-Ottoman Convention of 1913 does not support Qatar's claim
to sovereignty over the Hawar Islands 73

D. The British Admiralty survey of 1915 does not support Qatar's claim to sovereignty
over the Hawar Islands 74

E. The British Al-Thani agreement of 1916 does not support Qatar's claim to

sovereignty over the Hawar Islands 74

F. Qatar mischaracterises certain British documents 76

G. Qatar's interpretation of Anglo-Persian's 1933 geological survey map is
unsupported 77

H. The RAF reconnaissance mission of 1934 does not support Qatar's claims 78

I. The Anglo-Persian-Qatar Concession Agreement of 1935 is consistent with
Bahrain's description of history 79

SECTION 2.10 Qatar has presented no evidence to justify its claim that Janan is not one of

the Hawar Islands 81

A. Janan Island's proximity to the Qatar peninsula is irrelevant 82

B. Bahrain has always considered Janan Island to be one of the Hawar group of
islands 82

C. Bahrain's sovereignty over Janan Island is res judicata 86

D. Bahrain's ownership of Janan Island is established by acts of sovereignty 88

E. Qatar's partial reliance on Britain's 1947 seabed delimitation is misplaced 88

SECTION 2.11 The Hawar Islands are an integral part of Bahrain's tourist industry, of
Bahrain's regional defence and environmental protection commitments, and of Bahrain's
future land utilisation plans 91

SECTION 2.12 Conclusion 94

CHAPTER 3 96

QATAR HAS OVERSTATED THE EVOLUTION OF AL-THANI INFLUENCE AND
UNDERSTATED THE DOMINANCE OF THE AL-KHALIFA ON THE QATAR
PENINSULA 96SECTION 3.1 Introduction 96

SECTION 3.2 The Rulers of Bahrain exercised authority throughout the entire Qatar
peninsula during the period 1762-1872 99

SECTION 3.3 Qatar's claim that the Al-Thani controlled the entire Qatar peninsula from the
middle of the nineteenth century is contradicted by the historical record 103

SECTION 3.4 The Ottoman Empire expanded into the south-east of the Qatar peninsula
through the Al-Thani chiefs of Doha Town in 1871 110

SECTION 3.5 Qatar's claim that the 1868 personal undertakings, the 1913 Anglo-Ottoman

Convention and the 1916 Anglo-Al-Thani agreement demonstrate that its borders were settled
and included the entire peninsula and all adjacent islands is contradicted by British, Ottoman,
Bahraini, Saudi Arabian and regional
history 114

SECTION 3.6 Qatar's claim that the Rulers of Bahrain were unable to exercise authority over

even the main island of Bahrain during the nineteenth century is not supported by the
evidence 118

CHAPTER 4 123

THE EVIDENCE OF BAHRAIN'S SOVEREIGNTY OVER THE ZUBARAH REGION IS
PREPONDERANT 123

SECTION 4.1 The Rulers of Bahrain exercised authority over the north-west of the Qatar
peninsula and the Zubarah region until 1937 123

SECTION 4.2 Qatar's claim that the Ottoman Empire exercised authority over the Zubarah
region cannot withstand scrutiny and is contradicted by the Ottoman evidence admitting that

they never exercised authority there 127

SECTION 4.3 Qatar's claim that the allegiance of the Naim tribe is irrelevant to
establishing Bahraini sovereignty over the Zubarah region is undermined by Qatar's own
evidence 133

SECTION 4.4 Unlike Bahrain, Qatar has submitted no post-Ottoman evidence of Al-Thani

activities in the Zubarah region until shortly before the 1937 attack 138

SECTION 4.5 Only Qatar's attack on the Zubarah region in 1937 displaced Bahrain 139

SECTION 4.6 Qatar attempts to ignore the 24 officially recorded protests made by Bahrain
between 1937 and 1971 and its own threat to resuscitate Qatar's claim to the Hawar Islands if

Bahrain persisted in its claim to sovereignty over the Zubarah region 140

PART II 144

THE MARITIME ISSUES 144CHAPTER 5 145

BAHRAIN'S MARITIME BOUNDARY 145

INTRODUCTION 145

SECTION 5.1 The geographical archipelagic character of Bahrain is incontrovertible 146

A. Bahrain qualifies for archipelagic status under the Law of the Sea
Convention 148

B. Bahrain is not precluded for any reasons ratione temporis from availing itself of the
options available to archipelagic States under the Law of the Sea Convention 148

C. Archipelagic status is now customary international law and applies erga
omnes 149

D. Because the essential purpose of archipelagic status under the modern law of the

sea is for purposes of maritime boundary delimitation, the contention that the status is
to be ignored in delimitation exercises is absurd on its own terms and wholly without
foundation 150

E. Qatar cannot adduce a single post-1982 example, let alone a trend in State practice,
in which archipelagic boundaries have been ignored in bilaterally negotiated maritime
boundary agreements 150

SECTION 5.2 The mainland-to-mainland fiction 152

A. Qatar's attempt to "dearchipelagise" Bahrain is inconsistent with the facts
and with its own admissions 152

B. Qatar's purported mainland-to-mainland principle has no basis in law and, by its
own terms, does not apply to the geographical situation that exists 153

C. Qatar conflates "coastal opposition" with mainland opposition, by assuming that
they are the same 155

D. The geographical configuration in the southern sector is one of coastal opposition,

but not a "mainland-to-mainland" confrontation 155

E. This case does not require decision by the Court with respect to "countless" islands,
islets and rocks 156

F. Qatar misstates relevant international law in insisting that the self-serving concept

of "simplicity" that it has invented takes priority over the securing of an "equitable
result" 157

G. Qatar's purported mainland-to-mainland principle reverses the mandatory sequence
of first determining territorial sovereignty and only then effecting maritime boundary
delimitations 158 H. Qatar's assertion that security considerations require its mainland-to-mainland
principle does not arise under the facts of the present case 160

SECTION 5.3 The determination of sovereignty over islands and low-tide elevations must
precede the maritime boundary delimitation 160

A. Fasht al Azm is part of Sitrah Island, whose drying line incorporates the entire
length of Fasht al Azm 162

B. The future of Fasht al Azm 165

C. Qit'at Jaradah is an island and pertains to Bahrain 167

D. The historical record and independent scientific studies confirm that Qit'at Jaradah
is a naturally formed island despite Qatar's attempt to eradicate it in the aftermath of
Qatar's 1986 attack 168

E. Qatar's submission that Qit'at Jaradah is not an island is unsupported 170

F. The historical record confirms that Bahrain exercised authority over Qit'at Jaradah
and there is no evidence that Qatar ever exercised authority there 172

G. Fasht ad Dibal is a low-tide elevation within Bahrain's territorial waters 176

H. The future of Qit'at Jaradah and Fasht ad Dibal 180

I. Low-tide elevations are subject to territorial sovereignty whether as a
matter of law or adjudication on an agreed principle 181

J. Qatar's claims to the low-tide elevations are based on alleged proximity, unfounded
in law or in fact 184

K. Bahrain's sovereign title to the insular formations in dispute is firmly based on
continuous and contextually appropriate manifestations of sovereignty as well as on
repute 185

L. Only in the absence of a preponderance of effectivités - not applicable in the present
case - may a tribunal resort to presumptions that take account of the location of the

insular formations in question 186

M. Effectivités have a legal and factual dimension 187

N. Bahrain's effectivités on the insular features establish its title to them 188

O. Qatar's alleged effectivités, their arguable effectiveness notwithstanding, do not
meet the test of the aforementioned legal dimension for manifestations of sovereignty
and hence are devoid of juridical significance 192

SECTION 5.4 Qatar's new allegations with respect to the southern sector 193 A. Qatar's proposed dividing line is inconsistent with law and fact 193

B. Because the co-ordinates from which Qatar has generated its proposed provisional
median line in the southern sector are unfounded in fact and law, the resulting line is
equally unfounded in fact and law 195

C. Qatar's proposed criteria for adjustment of the median line are either incorrect or
misapplied 195

D. There is no disparity between the legal coasts of the two States in the southern
sector 195

E. The British letters of 1947 do not constitute a factor under international law that
calls for an adjustment in a properly described provisional median line 196

SECTION 5.5 Qatar's allegations in the northern sector 196

A. The parties agree on the law that applies 197

B. Qatar misconceives the purpose of sectoralisation, transforming it into an illogical
and often meaningless exercise 197

C. Qatar's contention that Bahrain's maritime boundary encroaches upon Qatar's
"natural prolongation" is incorrect 198

D. Bahrain's historic title to the pearling banks is based on continuous, peaceful
exercise of imperium, through legislative, judicial and administrative action 199

LIST OF ANNEXES 204

CHAPTER 1

INTRODUCTION

1. This Reply of the Government of the State of Bahrain (hereinafter "Bahrain") is
filed pursuant to the Order of the Court of 30 March 1998, as amended by the Order of
the Court of 17 February 1999. It demonstrates that the Counter-Memorial of the State
of Qatar (hereinafter "Qatar") fails to disturb the legal and factual foundations of

Bahrain's title to the territory and maritime areas in dispute. Bahrain's claims are
therefore now reiterated with such further evidence as may be useful to clarify
positions presented by both Parties in their previous pleadings.

2. Bahrain's arguments have always been based on and consistent with the historical
record. Nothing in Qatar's Memorial or Counter-Memorial has displaced them. Since

this phase of the proceedings is a "Reply", Bahrain will follow the order of Qatar's
presentation in order to address with the greatest clarity and economy the positions
and arguments advanced by Qatar. After some introductory comments, Bahrain will
take up the territorial issues in this case, considering the Hawar Islands first, and then
Zubarah, after which it will address the maritime issues.SECTION 1.1 Bahrain reserves the right to make subsequent observations on
Qatar's arguments, given Qatar's decision to disregard the 82 forged documents

3. As the Court will appreciate, the present state of the pleadings is unusual for the
Court and problematic for Bahrain. Bahrain is obliged to reply to a case the contents

of which have been fundamentally altered by Qatar's decision to disregard the 82
forged documents which it had produced in its Memorial (81) and Counter Memorial
(1). As of now, Qatar has not yet indicated how it will reformulate its case.

4. Bahrain has made its best efforts in its Counter-Memorial and in this Reply to
identify and disregard those of Qatar's arguments which are based on the forged
documents. Nevertheless, as recognised implicitly by Qatar in its letter to the Court of

1 February 1999, Bahrain at present has no way of knowing the manner in or
substance with which Qatar will restate its case. Qatar itself underlined that its
previous arguments, particularly those in relation to the Hawar Islands, were
dramatically opposed to the authentic evidence in the public domain on which it must
now rely.1 Bahrain has already made available to the Court by way of highlighted
versions of Qatar's Memorial and Counter-Memorial its preliminary view of the
extensive contamination of Qatar's arguments by the 82 forged documents. Qatar's

letter of 1 February 1999 promised to provide a document with its Reply addressing
the consequences for its previous written pleadings of its decision to disregard the
forged documents. Accordingly, Bahrain must reserve the right to respond fully in
writing to any new arguments that Qatar adduces.

SECTION 1.2 Outline of the Reply

5. Section 1.3 of this introductory chapter recalls in summary form Bahrain's
arguments in relation to the territorial questions and maritime delimitation involved in
the present case. Section 1.4 explains that when the 82 forged documents are
disregarded, no evidence other than unsubstantiated assertions remains to support
Qatar's territorial pretensions, particularly in relation to the Hawar Islands. Section 1.5
refutes Qatar's belated attempt to question the jurisdiction of the Court in relation to

Zubarah.

6. Part I of this Reply is devoted to the territorial issues in dispute.2pter 2
demonstrates that, once the 82 forged documents are disregarded, the evidence of
Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands is unassailable. Chapter 3 exposes how
Qatar has overstated the evolution of Al-Thani influence and understated the
dominance of the Al-Khalifa on the Qatar peninsula. Chapter 4 records that, with

Qatar's abandonment of the 82 forged documents, the evidence demonstrating
Bahrain's sovereignty over the Zubarah region is now clearly preponderant.

7. Part II of Bahrain's Reply addresses the maritime issues. Chapter 5 demonstrates
that historical and scientific evidence confirms Bahrain's sovereignty over the island
of Qit'at Jaradah and over Fasht ad Dibal, and that no allegation of law or fact by

Qatar is able to challenge Bahrain's case relating to either the southern or northern
maritime sectors.

8. To assist the Court, a map of the region showing the areas in dispute follows page 9
of this Reply. A timeline of key historical events in the Bahrain Islands and the Qatarpeninsula follows immediately thereafter, following which is a series of maps
illustrating the evolution of the various spheres of influence in the areas under
consideration.

SECTION 1.3 Bahrain's position on the issues remains unchanged

A. The territorial questions

9. The evidence that Bahrain has submitted in its pleadings demonstrates that it has
better title than Qatar to the territorial areas in dispute. Not only does Bahrain surpass
Qatar's claims, but the evidence before the Court demonstrates that Bahrain easily
meets all the requirements for establishing title to territory with respect to the Hawar

Islands, the Zubarah region and the other territories in dispute.

10. The two principal territorial issues in this case - the Hawar Islands and the Zubarah
region - may seem complicated because of the intricate history of parts of the region
and, in particular, the complexities introduced by the actions and ambitions of empires
that converged and often conflicted there. The facts were further complicated by the

submission by Qatar of 82 forged documents, which, despite their effective
withdrawal, continue to contaminate and confuse, precisely because they were so
central to Qatar's territorial case. Therefore, before Bahrain undertakes a point-for-
point rebuttal of Qatar's contentions, a simple and general statement of the historical
facts may restore a useful and clear context for the Court.

11. Over two centuries ago, the Al-Khalifa expelled the Persians from the Bahrain

archipelago and moved the seat of their kingdom to the islands from Zubarah, on the
Qatar peninsula, while continuing to maintain control over the Qatar peninsula. From
that time, the Al-Khalifa controlled both the Bahrain archipelago and the territories
around the littoral of the Gulf of Bahrain, including the entire Qatar peninsula. The Al-
Thani, from which the dynasty in modern Qatar has emerged, were vassals of the Al-
Khalifa. The Al-Thani were confined to the village of Doha on the south-eastern edge
of the peninsula, over which village they exercised an often uncertain influence from

the mid nineteenth century onwards.

12. The Al-Khalifa lived on the Bahrain Islands, but they summered on the north-
western coast of the Qatar peninsula opposite the islands, where many of their subjects
continued to live. At the end of the last century, the Al-Thani slowly began to expand
their influence over the immediate area around Doha, under the umbrella of the
Ottomans who established themselves within Doha. During this brief period, a

Government of Qatar did not even exist (a fact recognised by Qatar in paragraphs 2.13
and 2.14 of its Counter-Memorial). Al-Thani authority did not even extend in the
Qatar peninsula beyond the confines of Doha and its environs until after 1935. Thus,
from 1783 until 1937, Bahrain's title to the Zubarah region was never successfully
challenged. Bahrain's title was based on effective occupation by reference to the
regional standard of fealty of the inhabitants of Zubarah to the Ruler of Bahrain.

13. In 1937, at a time when conquest was not a valid ground for title, Qatar illegally
attacked and displaced the community of loyal Bahraini subjects in Zubarah. Bahrain's
subjects refused to swear fealty to the Al-Thani and removed themselves to the islands
of Bahrain under the protection of the Ruler of Bahrain. No Al-Thani subjects movedto Zubarah to take their place. From 1937 onward, Bahrain has protested the
aggression against Zubarah and insisted that the region be returned to it. Thus, the
legal questions posed to the Court with respect to the Zubarah region are simply
whether Qatar's aggression and illegal expulsion of Bahrain subjects from that area in
1937 is to be recognised and remedied.

14. With respect to the archipelago of Bahrain, no part of which has ever been
occupied by Qatar, Qatar first lodged a claim to the Hawar Islands in 1938. In
response, from 1938 to 1939, Britain conducted a detailed procedure, in which both
States voluntarily participated, to determine whether there was any substance to
Qatar's pretensions. Both Qatar and Bahrain were given ample opportunity to present
their evidence, whereupon Britain made its decision in favour of Bahrain, thus

confirming Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands, including Janan.

15. Britain referred to the procedure as an arbitration, as has Qatar in its prior
pleadings. After the passage of more than half a century, Qatar now claims that the
arbitration was flawed and its Award invalid.3 Bahrain insists that if the proceeding
was an arbitration, its procedures were consistent with the contemporaneous minimum
standards of fairness, the award is valid and res judicata as between the parties and, in

any case, not open to opportunistic attack after so many decades. If, alternatively, the
procedure was a political act by Britain, based on agreements that it had with Bahrain
and Qatar, Bahrain submits that the decision was a valid intra vires act that is binding
on the Parties.

16. The legal questions posed to the Court with respect to the Hawar Islands are

whether the British decision was an arbitration, in which case it is res judicata, or
whether it was a political decision, in which case it is binding on the Parties because it
was taken intra vires. Either way, Bahrain's sovereignty remains undisturbed. Wholly
aside from the issue of the character of the decision in 1939, the Court must inquire as
to whether reopening the matter after more than half a century will disturb a "settled
state of affairs". With respect to the evidence on which the 1939 decision was taken,
all of it shows Bahrain's continuous control over the Hawar Islands. Qatar was unable

to marshal a single effectivité.

17. Independently of Britain's 1939 arbitral award, Bahrain's title to the Hawar Islands
is established by the evidence of its uninterrupted occupation and administration of
them from at least the early nineteenth century until the present time, to an extent
more than sufficient to establish a valid title in international law. In contrast, Qatar has
exercised no such authority there. With respect to events since 1939, the evidence

shows that Bahrain has been in continuous and exclusive control of the Hawar Islands
and has manifested sovereignty there in manifold ways. In the face of the evidence of
Bahrain's long possession of the Hawar Islands and the complete absence of any
evidence of Qatar's possession, the proximity of the Hawar Islands to the Qatar
peninsula is inconsequential. With the removal of the forged documents from this
case, there remain no serious factual questions about the Hawar Islands.

B. The maritime delimitation

18. Bahrain proposes a maritime delimitation achieved by the construction of a median
line upon the baselines of the territories appertaining to the two States, taking due account of the archipelagic character of Bahrain. Qatar's attempt to ignore the
archipelagic features of Bahrain, including the island of Qit'at Jaradah and Sitrah
Island (of which Fasht Al-Azm is an integral part), is unsupported in fact or law. By
ignoring these features, Qatar attempts to disregard the geographical realities of the
relevant area.

SECTION 1.4 Qatar's decision to disregard the 82 forged documents leaves it
with no evidence to support its territorial claims

19. The importance of the 82 forged documents to Qatar's case is apparent from
Qatar's Counter-Memorial, which was submitted just five weeks after Qatar's Agent
had told the President of the Court (at the meeting of 25 November 1997) that Qatar

"stood behind" the impeached documents. On pages 1 and 2 of its Counter-Memorial,
in the initial paragraph containing a "Summary of the central elements of the case"
(emphasis added), Qatar reviewed what it considered it had proved, as follows:

· "demonstrated" the territorial integrity of Qatar as comprising the whole peninsula
and the Hawar Islands;4

· "showed" that this alleged territorial integrity was recognised "at least" since the mid-
19th century by Britain, the Ottoman Empire, local rulers, and indeed Bahrain;5

· "shown" the worthlessness of Bahrain's evidence in support of its successful defence
of the Hawar Islands in the arbitration that resulted in the British award of 1939;6 and

· "provided evidence" of Qatar's own "acts of sovereignty" on the Hawar Islands.7

20. All the "central elements" of Qatar's case were purportedly "demonstrated" or
"shown" by the use of forgeries. For example, summarising its claims to have
exercised authority over the Hawar Islands in two paragraphs of its Counter-
Memorial,8 Qatar referred to 22 documents, all of which are forgeries, which Qatar
has now agreed to "disregard". With the 82 forgeries removed, not one of the "central

elements" of Qatar's case can be sustained.

SECTION 1.5 Qatar appears to question the jurisdiction of the Court in relation
to the Zubarah region

21. In its Counter-Memorial, Qatar appears to question the jurisdiction of the Court to

decide the issue of sovereignty over the Zubarah region,9 despite the fact that it was
Qatar that commenced the current proceedings and argued successfully in favour of
the Court's jurisdiction, which includes the issue of Zubarah's sovereignty.10Bahrain
rejects Qatar's belated and unfounded attempt to challenge the jurisdiction of the
Court.

MAP 1 : POLITICAL MAP OF THE GULF OF ARABIA (135 KB)

MAP 2 : TIMELINE OF KEY EVENTS (119 KB)

MAP 3 : EVOLUTION OF SPHERES OF INFLUENCE - 1820 (52 KB)MAP 4 : EVOLUTION OF SPHERES OF INFLUENCE - 1868 & 1872 (94 KB)

MAP 5 : EVOLUTION OF SPHERES OF INFLUENCE - 1915 & 1934 (84 KB)

MAP 6 : EVOLUTION OF SPHERES OF INFLUENCE - 1935 & 1938 (107 KB)

__________

PART I

THE TERRITORIAL ISSUES

CHAPTER 2

THE ABANDONMENT OF ARGUMENTS BASED ON THE 82 FORGED
DOCUMENTS MEANS THAT BAHRAIN'S DEMONSTRATION OF

SOVEREIGNTY OVER THE HAWAR ISLANDS IS UNASSAILABLE

SECTION 2.1 Introduction

22. Bahrain's title to the Hawar Islands, including Janan, was finally decided by
reference to international law in 1939, whether one characterises that decision as res

judicata by virtue of the British arbitration of 1938-1939 or as a political and
administrative decision based on the political powers that had been assigned to Britain
by Bahrain and Qatar. There is no question that the British government made a
decision in 1939. Nor is there any question about its content. Nor are there any
obscurities that require interpretation. Qatar seeks to impugn its validity. Yet, however
Britain's 1939 decision is characterised, it is final because, as an award, it is res
judicata and, as a political decision, it is final and binding on the parties as an act intra

vires. Hence, the merits of the case of the Hawar Islands may not be reopened and
considered de novo. Even if a de novo examination were undertaken, Bahrain's valid
title is established, as it was in 1939, by:

· evidence of the exercise of sovereign authority in the Hawar Islands by or on behalf
of the Ruler of Bahrain;

· recognition of Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands by the inhabitants of
those islands; and

· the absence of any competing exercise of authority whatsoever by Qatar.

23. Once the 82 forged documents submitted by Qatar are disregarded, Qatar's claim,

based on its supposed competing exercise of authority, becomes unsustainable. Qatar's
claim based on geographical proximity cannot match Bahrain's effectivités.

24. Ignoring Qatar's arguments based on the forged documents, Bahrain's Counter-
Memorial contains a comprehensive rebuttal of the remaining arguments raised by
Qatar. Accordingly, in the present chapter, Bahrain will reply to only those pointsraised by Qatar that require clarification in view of Qatar's submissions, or that have
not already been addressed by Bahrain in its previous submissions.

SECTION 2.2 Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands has been continuous
and uninterrupted from the eighteenth century to the present

25. In Chapter 3 of its Memorial and Chapter 2 of its Counter-Memorial, Bahrain has
demonstrated its uninterrupted sovereignty over the Hawar Islands from the eighteenth
century until the present. It has shown how the historical genesis of its title to the
Hawar Islands stems from the Al-Khalifa's dominance and authority over all the
territories in the Gulf of Bahrain and its littoral during this period, including the Qatar
peninsula.11 Furthermore, it has established with reference to unimpeachable primary

source documents the continuing nexus between the Hawar Islands and the Rulers of
Bahrain throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

26. Bahrain has adduced evidence confirming that from the beginning of the twentieth
century, with the increasing development of Bahrain's infrastructure and
administration, the Government of Bahrain's activities on the Hawar Islands, as

elsewhere in the country, increased. Years before Qatar made its first claim to the
Hawar Islands in 1938, the Government of Bahrain was administering and regulating
the mining of gypsum and fishing-related activities there, had a regular police force on
the islands, and was supervising the health of the inhabitants there.12 Records from
British archives from the first decade of the twentieth century onwards provide
evidence of court cases relating to the Hawar Islands, police activities and
commonplace government directives. These abundantly testify to Bahrain's

administration of the Hawar Islands. Bahrain's rule was supported by a population on
the islands that was subject to the Al-Khalifa, survivors of which have given
statements describing their lives on the Hawar Islands during the decades before the
British arbitration.13Thus, by 1938, when Qatar first laid claim to the islands, Bahrain
already had a history of activities on the islands so extensive that it would have been
impossible to deny that its occupation was effective. Indeed Qatar has never once done
so.

27. In stark contrast to the evidence of Bahrain's sovereignty, neither during the 1938-
1939 British arbitration nor at any time subsequently has any genuine evidence been
adduced by Qatar of Al-Thani authority being exercised over the Hawar Islands. This
is not surprising, given that the Al-Thani power-base of Doha was focused
commercially on the Abu Dhabi pearl banks on the far side of the Qatar peninsula.
While there was regular traffic and commerce between the Hawar Islands and the

other islands of the Bahrain archipelago, there is no evidence that there were any
commercial activities between the Hawar Islands and the Qatar peninsula.

SECTION 2.3 Bahrain has submitted evidence of more than 70 examples of
Bahrain's exercise of authority over the Hawar Islands during the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries

28. An abundance of evidence attests to Bahrain's long-standing exercise of authority
over the Hawar Islands. In addition to the recognition in Qatar's Memorial of Bahrain's
assertion of its sovereignty over the Hawar Islands during the nineteenth century,14 in
its Memorial15 and Counter-Memorial16, Bahrain has submitted evidence ofnumerous examples of Bahrain's ownership and control of the Hawar Islands
throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, prior to the time of the 1938-1939
arbitration, a sample of which is summarised below:17

· the Al-Khalifa grant of permission to the Dowasir tribe to settle in the Hawar Islands,

following the Al-Khalifa conquest of the islands of Bahrain in the eighteenth
century;18

· British recognition in the 1820s that the Hawar Islands had "two villages on it, and
belongs to Bahrain";19

· the continued presence of the Dowasir on the Hawar Islands, both before and after

they received permission from the Ruler of Bahrain to settle on the main island of
Bahrain in 1845;20

· the presence of non-Dowasir Bahrainis on the Hawar Islands;21

· the rescue in 1873 by the Ruler of Bahrain of Ottoman soldiers shipwrecked on the

Hawar Islands;22

· Ottoman recognition that the Hawar Islands belonged to Bahrain, as evidenced by an
1878 Ottoman survey;23

· Bahrain court decisions dating from as early as 1909 relating to land rights and
fishing traps in the Hawar Islands;24

· Britain's recognition in 1909, following an on-site inspection of the Hawar Islands by
the British Political Agent, that it was the Al-Khalifa who originally granted the
Dowasir of Bahrain the right to reside on the Hawar Islands;25

· the arrest and compelled attendance in Bahrain courts of Hawar Island residents;26

· the public display of official proclamations by the Ruler of Bahrain and the
Government of Bahrain on the Hawar Islands;27

· Ottoman recognition and British confirmation in 1909 that the Hawar Islands
belonged to Bahrain;28

· British confirmation in 1909 that the Hawar Islands were habitually used by the
Bahraini Dowasir;29

· recognition by the British Political Agent in 1909 that the Dowasir of Bahrain had
two villages on the Hawar Islands;30

· the compelled attendance by the Ruler of Bahrain of a Hawar Island resident in a
civil court case at the request of Britain in 1911;31

· recognition in a 1915 British Admiralty survey of the Gulf that the Hawar Islands
were occupied by the Dowasir of Bahrain;32· recognition in 1916 by the War Staff Intelligence Division of the British Admiralty
that the Hawar Islands were occupied by the Dowasir of Bahrain;33

· the continued allegiance of the Bahrain Dowasir, who resided in the Hawar Islands,
to the Rulers of Bahrain, including being subject to Bahrain's laws and regulations;34

· the testimony of former Hawar Islands residents, currently living in other parts of
Bahrain, of their lives on the Hawar Islands and of the political and economic links
between the Hawar Islands and the rest of Bahrain;35

· a 1932 case before the Bahrain courts in which Hawar Islands residents were
subpoenaed;36

· a 1932 case before the Bahrain courts between two Hawar Islands residents;37

· the granting and protection of fishing rights off the Hawar Islands' shores by the
Ruler of Bahrain;38

· the exercise of those fishing rights by Hawar Islands residents, including in Janan
Island;39

· trade and movement of livestock between the Hawar Islands and Manama and
Muharraq and other locations in Bahrain;40

· the integration of the Hawar Island settlements in the Bahrain pearling industry,

regulated by the Government of Bahrain;41

· the registration of pearling and fishing boats moored at the Hawar Islands by the
Government of Bahrain;42

· payment to the Government of Bahrain of registration fees and diving licences by

Hawar Islanders engaged in the pearling industry;43

· confirmation by British officials during the 1930s that the Bahrain Dowasir who
lived in the two villages on the Hawar Islands were permanent residents of the
islands,44 noting the presence there of six cemeteries including a children's
cemetery;45

· construction and maintenance of dams and water cisterns by Hawar Island residents
and the Government of Bahrain;46

· surveying of the Hawar Islands by the Government of Bahrain;47

· quarrying of gypsum on the Hawar Islands during the nineteenth and twentieth

centuries;48

· licensing of the gypsum industry on the Hawar Islands by the Government of Bahrain
at the request of the Hawar Islands residents;49· regulation of the trade in gypsum between the Hawar Islands and other Bahraini
islands during the 1930s by the Government of Bahrain;50

· regulation of other natural resources, including fishing, on the Hawar Islands by the
Government of Bahrain;51

· the consistent inclusion of the Hawar Islands in oil concession discussions during the
1930's between Bahrain, Britain and prospective oil concessionaires;52

· communications by the Ruler of Bahrain to Britain in the context of oil concession
negotiations in 1933 to the effect that the Hawar Islands belonged to Bahrain;53

· recognition by Britain that the Hawar Islands were claimed by Bahrain from the first
occasion that they arose as an issue during oil concession negotiations in 1933 (and
the lack of any competing claim by Qatar);54

· reiteration in 1936 by the Ruler of Bahrain to Britain that any oil concession reflect
the fact that the Hawar Islands belonged to Bahrain;55

· recognition in 1936 by the British Political Agent that any claim by Qatar to contest
Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands would be made at the instigation of the
Qatar oil concessionaire as it attempted to expand the area included in its
concession;56

· a written confirmation by the Government of Bahrain in 1936 regarding its

sovereignty over the Hawar Islands, setting out details of Bahrain's acts of
administration there;57

· a report by the British Political Agent in 1936 that Bahrain's sovereignty over the
Hawar Islands had real substance and that Qatar had never remarked upon, let alone
protested, the activities of Bahrain's subjects there;58

· recognition by Britain in 1936 of the legitimacy of Bahrain's sovereignty over the
Hawar Islands, based on the available evidence;59

· the inclusion by Britain and oil companies of the Hawar Islands (including Janan) in
the concession territory to be ceded by the Ruler of Bahrain during the negotiations
that took place in the period 1936 to 1939;60

· geological mapping of the Hawar Islands by the Bahrain oil concessionaire acting
under the authority of the Government of Bahrain;61

· drilling for water on the Hawar Islands as sanctioned by Bahrain during the 1930s;62

· presence of Bahrain police on the Hawar Islands63 even before the 1930s;64

· regular visits to the Hawar Islands by the Bahrain Chief of Police;65

· the existence of an old Bahrain fort on the main island of Hawar66 and the
construction of a new Bahrain fort in 1937;67· construction of a government pier on the main island of Hawar in 1937;68

· visits by the Rulers of Bahrain to the Hawar Islands, including annual visits by H.H.
Sheikh Isa bin Ali Al-Khalifa, Ruler of Bahrain from 1869 to 1932;69

· ceremonial display of the Bahrain flag on the Hawar Islands;70

· the existence of an old mosque (now ruined) on the main island of Hawar and the
construction of a modern mosque built by the Government of Bahrain in 1939;71

· issuing of Bahrain passports to Hawar Island residents;72

· regulation by Bahrain of immigration into the Hawar Islands;73

· recognition of Bahrain's jurisdiction and authority over the Hawar Islands by the
Ruler of Qatar on several occasions;74

· the agreement of the Ruler of Bahrain to a request by the Ruler of Qatar made in

1938 - during the arbitration - to permit a Qatari citizen "to land [on Jazirat Hawar] for
the purpose of removing [a boat that he claimed], provided that he is in possession of
some paper proving his identity and that he gives a receipt for the boat";75 and

· erection and maintenance of maritime markers on the Hawar Islands.76

29. All of the foregoing manifestations of Bahrain's effectivité are supported by

evidence from the public record and by the testimony of Bahraini citizens who are still
alive and who were born, grew up and lived on the Hawar Islands prior to the 1938-
1939 arbitration.

30. There is no dispute that Bahrain - and no other authority - has exercised
sovereignty over the Hawar Islands since the British arbitration. In its previous

pleadings, Bahrain has also submitted evidence of its exercise of authority over the
Hawar Islands subsequently to the Award in the 1938-1939 arbitration, to wit:

· introduction of native Arabian fauna to the islands under a wildlife preservation
programme;77

· creation of an animal wildlife preserve on part of the main Hawar Island in 1996;78

· regular patrolling of the Hawar Islands, including Janan Island, by the Bahrain Coast
Guard;79

· erection and maintenance of maritime markers on the Hawar Islands;80

· presence of a defensive military capability on the Hawar Islands and maintenance,
since 1941, of a full defensive military complex on the Hawar Islands;81

· reinforcement of Bahrain's military presence on the Islands following Qatar's last
armed attack on Bahraini territory in 1986;82· construction and maintenance of a transportation infrastructure on the Hawar
Islands;83

· construction and maintenance of fresh-water infrastructure on the Hawar Islands,
including a desalinisation plant;84

· construction and maintenance of electricity infrastructure on the Hawar Islands
integrated with the rest of the Bahrain power grid;85

· construction and maintenance of a telecommunications system on the Hawar Islands
fully integrated with the rest of Bahrain's BATELCO system;86

· licensing of a tourist complex in the north of the main Hawar Island beside the
original North Village;87

· licensing of an extensive tourist hotel and resort complex in the south of the main
Hawar Island not far from the original South Village;88

· establishment of a twice-daily passenger shuttle-boat service between Manama and
the Hawar Islands;89

· oil prospecting and concession activities;90

· construction of residences by the Bahrain Ruling Family;91

· regular visits to the islands by the Bahrain Ruling Family;92

· production of maps by Britain and the USA showing the Hawar Islands to be part of
Bahrain;93 and

· the inclusion of Hawar Island residents in Bahrain censuses.94

SECTION 2.4 Qatar's attempts to denounce the evidence of Bahrain's
sovereignty over the Hawar Islands are baseless

31. Bahrain has demonstrated how the historical genesis of its title to the Hawar
Islands lies in its original dominance and authority over all the territories in the Gulf of
Bahrain and the Qatar peninsula throughout the nineteenth and well into the first half

of the twentieth century. Bahrain has further demonstrated that the Al-Thani had only
a restricted area of influence on the south-east coast of the Qatar peninsula in and
around Doha and that the land and the waters as well as islands to the west of that area
were under Bahrain's authority and control.95 Qatar's attempt to challenge these
established historical facts is addressed in Chapter 2 of Bahrain's Counter-Memorial96
and is also discussed in Chapter 3 of this Reply.97 The present section focuses on

issues specific to the Hawar Islands.

A. Qatar mischaracterises the nature of the Dowasir tribe's relationship with the
Rulers of Bahrain32. In its Memorial98 and Counter-Memorial,99 Qatar mischaracterises the true nature
of the relationship between the Dowasir tribe and the Ruler of Bahrain as well as the
significance of that relationship as a basis for Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar
Islands. Qatar claims that the Dowasir were not in fact permanent residents of the
Hawar Islands, and, in any event, could not be considered to have been subjects of the

Ruler of Bahrain.100 Qatar also complains that Bahrain has cited no evidence at all of
any exercise of Bahrain's political authority over, or its acceptance by, the
Dowasir.101

33. None of Qatar's assertions is true. Furthermore, regardless of their merits, which
Bahrain contends are negligible, all of Qatar's assertions are based on events prior to
1927. It bears remembering that in 1927 those discontented Bahraini Dowasir who had

left Bahrain in 1923 returned and expressly affirmed their allegiance to and the
authority of the Ruler of Bahrain. Thus, any question as to the relationship of some of
the Bahraini Dowasir and the Ruler of Bahrain was put to rest more than 11 years
before Qatar made its first claim to the Hawar Islands in 1938. Qatar has adduced no
evidence to support its allegations about the Dowasir. This is to be contrasted with the
wealth of evidence in Sections 3.5 and 3.6 of Bahrain's Memorial and Section 2.3 of
its Counter-Memorial of the long standing relationship of the Bahraini Dowasir to the

Ruler of Bahrain and the Hawar Islands, as well as Britain's recognition of the same.

34. For example, Bahrain's evidence demonstrates that, although the presence of some
Hawar Islanders was seasonal, the settlement was nevertheless permanent. Bahrain has
provided:

· Evidence showing how the Hawar Islands supported a population of Bahraini
Dowasir engaged in their traditional livelihoods of fishing,102 pearling,103 animal
husbandry104 and gypsum quarrying;105

· Descriptions of physical evidence, which can still be seen on the Hawar Islands
today, attesting to the existence of a settled and stable population with a pattern of
regular habitation, such as water cisterns, cemeteries, the remains of two villages, an

old mosque and a replacement mosque built by the Bahrain Government in 1939;106

· Evidence from the public record of regular habitation of the Hawar Islands by the
Bahrain Dowasir dating back to 1821;107

· Testimony by former residents of the Hawar Islands about their lives there;108

· British records from 1909, including a trip report by the British Political Agent
(Prideaux) describing a recent visit to the Hawar Islands, in which he records having
observed "a collection of 40 large huts under the authority of a cousin of the tribal
principal Shaikh. This individual is ... related by marriage to Shaikh Isa bin Ali", who
at the time was the Ruler of Bahrain;109

· British records from 1939, including a report of the findings of another British
Political Agent (Weightman) following a visit to the Hawar Islands, in which multiple
examples are given not only of the continuous occupation of the Hawar Islands by
Bahraini subjects and, in particular the Dowasir, but also of Bahraini acts of
administration there;110· Extracts from Lorimer's Gazetteer in which, in recording the Dowasir occupation of
the Hawar Islands, it is noted "[t]here are no wells but there is a cistern to hold
rainwater built by the Dawasir of Zellaq in Bahrain who have houses at two places on
the island...."111 In this connection, Bahrain has also provided the testimony of
former Hawar Islanders describing how cisterns for collecting water were built on the

Islands by the Dowasir and how water was brought to the islands from Muharraq in
times of shortage;112

· The Dowasir were first granted permission to settle in the Hawar Islands by the Al-
Khalifa in the late eighteenth century. They settled there around 1800 under the
authority of the Ruler of Bahrain;113

· The political relationship between the Hawar Dowasir and the Ruler of Bahrain was
affirmed and reinforced in 1845 when they settled on the main island of Bahrain at the
invitation of the Ruler of Bahrain, following which the links between the main island
of Bahrain, Muharraq Island and the Hawar Islands were further strengthened;114

· In 1869, the British Political resident ordered "the Chief and Members of the

Dowasir Tribe" in Budaiya and Zellaq to conform to an interdiction on smuggling
from Bahrain;115

· In 1909, Britain acknowledged the allegiance of the Bahrain Dowasir to the Ruler of
Bahrain in the context of the Ottoman claim to Zakhnuniya Island;116

· In 1917, the Gazetteer of Arabia described the Bahrain Dowasir as "the second of all

the Bahrain tribes";117

· In 1922, the British Political Agent noted that "[t]he Dowasir have been settled so
long in Bahrain that they are recognised as Bahrain subjects";118 and

· Numerous other records of the Bahraini Dowasir consistently recognising the
authority of the Ruler of Bahrain, including using the Ruler's flag,119 accepting the

jurisdiction of Bahrain's courts and holding positions of influence in the Bahrain
Government.120

35. Examples such as these amply demonstrate that the Dowasir's relations with the
Rulers of Bahrain were far from "uncertain and fluctuating",121 as Qatar would have
the Court believe.122

36. Qatar refers to the Administration Report for the Bahrain Political Agency for the
year 1911, in which the Political Agent gives his personal view that "the only
generally hostile feeling in the island is, I think, to be sought among the Dosiris
...".123However, the same report cited by Qatar also records that the Dowasir flew
the Ruler of Bahrain's flag.124 Rather than being of any unusual significance, the
Report simply shows that in 1911 the Dowasir were loyal Bharaini subjects, some of

whom were to some degree discontent.125

37. Qatar invokes the Dowasir's absence from Bahrain from 1923 to 1927, referred to
at the beginning of this Section, to support its contention that the Dowasir were not
subject to the authority of the Ruler of Bahrain, and to buttress its allegations that theAl-Khalifa had limited authority over Bahrain itself.126 The incident demonstrates
nothing of the sort, as the circumstances surrounding that event, recounted in Chapter
3 of Bahrain's Memorial and Section 2.3 of its Counter-Memorial, demonstrate.

38. First, Qatar fails to mention that not all of the Dowasir departed from Bahrain.

Second, those Dowasir who left had, prior to their departure, lived under the authority
of the Ruler of Bahrain for over a hundred years. Third, they returned to Bahrain, three
and a half years later, after requesting permission to do so from the Ruler of Bahrain.

39. Far from proving Qatar's proposition that the Bahrain Dowasir were not subject to
the authority of the Ruler of Bahrain, the departure from and return to Bahrain of
certain of the Dowasir tribe proves exactly the opposite.127 British records confirm

the following:

· When the Dowasir threatened to remove themselves from Bahrain as part of an
attempt to resist government administrative reforms, the Ruler of Bahrain "called their
bluff" and permitted them to leave. As punishment for their intransigence and
insubordination, their properties were confiscated;128

· While initially the Dowasir had been attracted by the conditions offered by Ibn Saud,
they soon found themselves subject to taxation and deprived of the privileged status
they had been accorded when they first arrived.129 As a result, almost immediately
after departing from Bahrain, as Qatar acknowledges in its Memorial,130 the Dowasir
began supplicating the Ruler of Bahrain to be allowed to return to Bahrain. Qatar's
claim that even though the Dowasir returned to Bahrain, they nevertheless remained

"highly reluctant to accept the Ruler of Bahrain's authority over them,"131 therefore,
is without substance;

· Even during their absence from Bahrain, those Dowasir who left continued to
acknowledge their allegiance to the Ruler of Bahrain. Furthermore, influential
Dowasir, such as the brother of one of the chiefs of the Dowasir, remained in Bahrain
as close advisors to the Ruler;132

· The Dowasir who left accepted all of the conditions imposed by the Ruler of Bahrain
for their return, including not claiming to be internally autonomous from the Ruler of
Bahrain, paying taxes, submitting to the jurisdiction of the local courts, accepting a
police post which had been established in one of their chief towns, and accepting that
their official headmen would be nominated and could be changed, if necessary, by the
Ruler. The Ruler of Bahrain reinstated all of the property rights of the Dowasir who

returned, in recognition of their willingness once again to accept his authority as their
sovereign.133 There is absolutely no evidence to support Qatar's contention that the
Dowasir returned in straitened circumstances;134

· When the Dowasir returned to Bahrain in 1927, the British Political Resident:

"informed them categorically that the whole matter rested with their
acceptance of the laws of the country, that as long as they realised that they
were as subject to law as any other person in Bahrain and had no privileged
position Shaikh Hamad would naturally be glad to see them back in Bahrain. They accepted the condition without reserve and the interview ended
amicably";135 and

· When the Bahraini Dowasir absented themselves from Bahrain, they went to
Damman in Saudi Arabia and not to the Hawar Islands, in order not to be subject to

the authority of the Ruler of Bahrain. This demonstrates their belief that the Hawar
Islands were under the authority of the Ruler of Bahrain.

40. Qatar also seeks to rebut Bahrain's claim that the Dowasir owed generally
uninterrupted and unswerving allegiance to successive Rulers of Bahrain by stressing
the ties between Ibn Saud and those of the Dowasir who left Bahrain.136 Bahrain does
not deny that, for a short time, the Ruler of Saudi Arabia did enjoy a degree of

influence over the Dowasir and sought to use them as a way of interfering in the
internal affairs of

Bahrain. However, what is of signal importance is that the matter was resolved
definitively in 1927, when the Dowasir once again voluntarily and unequivocally
subjected themselves to the authority and control of the Ruler of Bahrain. Also

significant is the fact that there is no suggestion that the Al-Thani ever had a claim to
influence the Dowasir.

41. Qatar has provided no evidence for its claim that the Dowasir did not pay the taxes
upon which their return in 1927 had been partially conditioned.137 In fact, the
evidence shows that, following their return, the Dowasir fully accepted the authority
and administration of the Bahrain Government. It is difficult to follow Qatar's

attempt138 to construct an argument on the basis of a letter from the Political Resident
sent to the Rulers of Kuwait and Qatar in April 1923, following the Dowasir's
departure from Bahrain, that refers to the Ruler of Qatar's dominions on the Qatar
peninsula. The fact that the Dowasir did not remove themselves to nor visit the Hawar
Islands during the period 1923 to 1928 had nothing to do with Qatar but, rather, in fact
shows that they recognised that the islands were part of the dominions of the Ruler of
Bahrain, from which they were displaced.

42. More to the point, Qatar has provided no genuine evidence showing that tribes or
persons loyal to Qatar's rulers maintained any sort of presence on the islands at all. In
sum, Bahrain has provided incontrovertible evidence showing the strong links between
the Rulers of Bahrain, the Dowasir and the Hawar Islands. In contrast, Qatar

has not provided a shred of evidence showing any contact between the Dowasir, the

Hawar Islanders or the islands themselves and the Qatar peninsula or of acts of
administration by the Rulers of Qatar. Equally significant, Qatar has offered no
comment on the fact that for 200 years the Dowasir's social, economic and political
orientation was towards the Bahrain archipelago and never towards the Qatar
peninsula.

B. The 1878 Ottoman map demonstrates Ottoman recognition of Bahrain's title
to the Hawar Islands

43. Bahrain has adduced evidence establishing that the Ottoman Empire recognised
that the Hawar Islands belonged to Bahrain, as shown, inter alia, by an 1878 OttomanArmy Survey map.139 As discussed in Sections 2.4.C and 2.9.C, infra., other
evidence of Ottoman recognition of Bahrain's title to the Hawar Islands is provided by
the unratified Anglo-Ottoman Convention of 1913, in which a special provision was
included concerning the sale of Zakhnuniya Island by the Ruler of Bahrain to the
Ottomans. No mention was made of the Hawar Islands in that Convention whose

status as Bahraini was therefore recognised to be unchanged.140

44. Apart from invoking its Ottoman forgeries, Qatar's sole response to the 1878
Ottoman map is to state the obvious fact that it shows the Hawar Islands as being
closer to the Qatar peninsula than to the larger Bahrain islands. That is a geodetic fact
that Bahrain has never denied, but which has no legal significance in this case.

45. Significantly, the map shows "Qatar", i.e., the area of Al-Thani influence, as being
confined to a small area on the south-eastern coast of the peninsula - a point which
Qatar has entirely disregarded.

C. The Zakhnuniya Island incident confirms Britain's and the Ottoman Empire's
recognition of Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands

46. In the face of facts to the contrary, Qatar surprisingly refers to the Zakhnuniya
incident of 1909 as evidence of Qatar's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands and to
support its allegation that neither Britain nor the Ruler of Bahrain viewed the islands
as belonging to Bahrain.141

47. The conclusions that are revealed by the evidence related to the Zakhnuniya

incident are discussed in Section 3.5 of Bahrain's Memorial and Section 2.3 of its
Counter-Memorial. They can be summarised as follows:

· the British Political Agent noted that Zakhnuniya Island was similar to the Hawar
Islands in terms of Bahraini sovereignty, and that Britain had to prevent the former's
annexation by the Ottomans because otherwise the Ottomans "will then naturally be
encouraged to go on to Hawar...";142

· a secret declaration annexed to the unratified treaty of 1913 between Britain and
Turkey referred to an agreement between the Parties pursuant to which the Ottoman
Government was to pay compensation to the Sheikh of Bahrain for the renunciation of
his rights to Zakhnuniya; this acknowledgement of Bahrain's rights in Zakhnuniya
serves also as an acknowledgement of Bahrain's rights in the Hawar Islands, which

were not ceded;143

· the Bahrain Dowasir, who also include the Hawar Islanders, clearly recognised the
authority of the Ruler of Bahrain;144

· the Bahrain Dowasir reported foreign interference on the Hawar Islands and
Zakhnuniya Island to the Ruler of Bahrain;145

· the Ruler of Bahrain protested foreign interference on the islands;146

· Britain acknowledged the allegiance of the Bahrain Dowasir to the Ruler of
Bahrain;147 and· Britain acknowledged that the relationship supported Bahrain's territorial sovereignty
in relation to Zakhnuniya and the Hawar Islands.148

In sum, despite well-recorded attempts to establish itself on a number of islands in the
Gulf of Bahrain and Zubarah, the Ottoman Empire made no attempt to extend its

challenge to the Ruler of Bahrain's authority over the Hawar Islands.149 Qatar's
reliance on the Zakhnuniya incident is entirely misplaced.

D. Bahrain's positive evidence in support of its continuous authority over the
Hawar Islands stands unchallenged

(i) The Brucks survey

48. On the basis of a detailed and comprehensive official survey conducted between
1821 and 1829, Captain George Brucks, a British Indian Navy officer, described the
Hawar Islands (referred to as the Warden Islands in Brucks' report) as belonging to
Bahrain.150

49. The principal "evidence" offered by Qatar to rebut the evidence from the Brucks
survey are its forged Ottoman maps, which warrant no comment. However, Qatar also
attempts to impugn the validity of the Brucks survey on the basis of its claim that
"many of the British surveys (including those in the `Gulf Pilot') carried out at the time
have been shown to be imprecise if not inaccurate."151 Qatar, however, provides no
evidence to substantiate its allegation that the Brucks survey suffered from any
inaccuracy. Indeed, given Britain's interest in maintaining the maritime peace during

the period in question, it is hardly likely that the surveys being carried out by the
British Navy would have been anything but the products of considerable diligence. In
fact, Captain Brucks survey report shows the thoroughness of his approach, which
involved personal interviews with tribal chiefs and cross-checking for accuracy the
information obtained in this manner.152

(ii) The shipwrecked Ottoman soldiers

50. Bahrain has presented evidence showing that in 1873, while on a visit to the
Hawar Islands, the Ruler of Bahrain assisted Ottoman soldiers shipwrecked on the
Hawar Islands by transferring them to the main island of Bahrain and then onwards to
their intended destination.153 Qatar's only response to the evidence in support of this
episode is its now discredited attempt, based on the forged documents, to impugn the

character, motivations and actions of Sir Charles Belgrave, the Bahrain Government
Adviser. The evidence presented by Bahrain of this event thus remains unchallenged.

(iii) Jurisdiction to serve summons

51. Bahrain has produced a mass of evidence to support its contention that the Ruler of
Bahrain exercised his jurisdiction to serve summons on inhabitants of the Hawar

Islands and to show that, as far back as 1909, the Hawar Islanders readily accepted the
jurisdiction of the courts located on Muharraq Island (just north of Manama) and on
the main island of Bahrain.154 Qatar has submitted nothing to rebut Bahrain's
evidence. (iv) Fishing

52. Bahrain has adduced substantial evidence regarding the use of the Hawar Islands
by Bahraini fishermen. Qatar has only commented on two marginal facts: that, in the
context of the 1938-1939 British arbitration, Bahrain may not have forwarded

documentation confirming the fact that fishing rights off the shores of the Hawar
Islands were originally granted to the people of the Hawar Islands by the Ruler of
Bahrain and also that Bahrain eventually withdrew a preliminary statement to the
effect that Hawar fish traps were registered in its Land Department.155

53. Qatar, however, provides no comment on the other evidence submitted by Bahrain,
including:

· the fact that fishing rights around the Hawar Islands were originally granted to the
inhabitants of the Hawar Islands by the Ruler of Bahrain and thereafter actively
protected by the Ruler of Bahrain;156

· a protest lodged in 1938 by the Ruler of Bahrain with PCL regarding the theft of fish

from the fish traps of Hawar Islanders;157

· a sworn affidavit from 1938 by inhabitants of the Hawar Islands regarding their
longstanding use of the islands as a permanent and seasonal base for fishing and for
mending their fish nets;158

· a wealth of evidence rebutting Qatar's allegation that the fishermen who used the

Hawar Islands were not itinerant and did not just use the islands as a temporary
base;159 and

· testimony by former inhabitants of the Hawar Islands describing the patterns of
fishing life there.160

(v) Pearling

54. With respect to the evidence submitted by Bahrain regarding pearling activities,
Qatar's response is equally inadequate. In its Memorial, Bahrain has provided
considerable evidence showing how the pearling industry also linked the Hawar
Islands with the main islands of Bahrain; the role of the Dowasir in forging that link;
and how the Government of Bahrain regulated the pearling industry in the Hawar

Islands in the same way that it did in other parts of Bahrain (e.g., by distributing
diving books to pearl divers and log books to pearl boat captains, and requiring the
registration of pearling boats).161

55. While asserting boldly that the picture conveyed by Bahrain of the pearling
industry and of the Dowasir's involvement in it is false, Qatar has provided no
evidence to suggest that the situation was anything other than as Bahrain has described

it.162 Qatar does not challenge, because it cannot, any of the acts evidencing Bahrain's
sovereignty over the Hawar Islands. Instead, Qatar confines itself largely to
questioning abstractly whether a pearling fleet could be moored at the Hawar Islands
and by such speculation trying to refute the first hand observation of the British
Political Agent that he had observed pearling boats beached on the Hawar Islands.163 (vi) Animal husbandry

56. As further proof of the permanent nature of the Dowasir presence on the Hawar
Islands, Bahrain has provided evidence that the Hawar Islanders grazed their flocks on
Jazirat Hawar, which also led them to build dams to create cisterns in order to improve

the grass yield, as well as their water supply.164 Qatar acknowledges that such animal
husbandry did take place, but argues that it could only have been temporary in nature.
Again, Qatar provides no evidence to substantiate its assertion.165

(vii) Gypsum quarrying

57. Bahrain has provided considerable evidence of the regulation of gypsum quarrying

by the Bahrain Government on the Hawar Islands. As the quarrying of gypsum
increased during the period between 1916 and 1939, so did the Bahrain Government's
regulation of the industry, including the imposition of a licensing scheme.166 Qatar
has offered no response to this.

SECTION 2.5 Qatar's claim that prior to 1936 Britain considered the Hawar

Islands as belonging to Qatar is false

58. In its Counter-Memorial, Qatar makes much of the fact that Bahrain's Memorial
does not focus on the events preceding what Qatar has chosen to characterise as a
"provisional decision" by Britain in 1936, as a result of which it claims that the Hawar
Islands were awarded to Bahrain.167 Qatar also criticises what it views as Bahrain's
omission to focus on the so-called "provisional decision" itself.168 Qatar goes on to

speculate that this supposed omission was deliberate, because allegedly that decision
is not only inconsistent with the Bahrain thesis to the effect that Qatar was the
claimant state in the 1938-39 proceedings, but indeed contradicts Bahrain's position on
the merits.169

59. Once again, Qatar's description of Bahrain's pleadings is misleading. In view of the
res judicata effect of Britain's decision in 1939, in which it awarded the Hawar Islands

to Bahrain, and the overwhelming additional evidence Bahrain has adduced in support
of its sovereignty over those islands, the events of 1936 hold little relevance and,
therefore, were not treated in detail in Bahrain's Memorial. However, given the extent
to which Qatar has sought to inflate and then rely on the events occurring in that and
the immediately preceding years in its Memorial, and its gross misrepresentation of
those events, Bahrain provided the Court in Section 2.3 of its Counter-Memorial with
a true and complete record of the relevant historical facts in the years concerned.170

That discussion establishes that from the early 1930s, when issues regarding the
ownership of the Hawar Islands first arose in the context of the negotiations for oil
concessions in Bahrain, until the British decision awarding the islands to Bahrain in
1939:

(1) the Ruler of Bahrain was steadfast in maintaining his historical claim of

sovereignty over the Hawar Islands;

(2) Britain could not deny or minimise the strength of the Ruler of Bahrain's
claim, although to have done so would have served Britain's economic
interests; and (3) Britain was careful not to pre-judge the matter and was mindful to protect
the interests of the Ruler of Qatar, speculative and undefined as they turned out
to be.

60. Qatar is wrong when it claims that, prior to 1936, Britain held the view that the

Hawar Islands did not belong to Bahrain, thereby implicitly acknowledging that they
must have belonged to Qatar. As Bahrain has shown, Britain first undertook to
investigate the issue of the ownership of the Hawar Islands in 1933, in the context of
the application of Bahrain Petroleum Company (BAPCO) for an extension of the oil
concession it had been awarded by the Ruler of Bahrain.171 These early investigations
were not conducted in adversarial form and were not pursued to a definitive answer.

61. Qatar seeks to rely on a letter dated 3 May 1933 from J.G. Laithwaite of the India
Office to F.C. Starling at the Petroleum Department to support its contention that
Britain did not in 1933 accept that the Hawar Islands were part of the Bahrain
archipelago.172 Far from proving Qatar's thesis, however, Laithwaite's letter shows
that, until 1933, Britain had never fully investigated the matter of the extent of the
Ruler of Bahrain's territorial sovereignty, especially concerning the Hawar Islands.
The reason for this was largely because there had never been any reason for Britain to

do so. In view of an American oil company's application for an additional oil
concession in Bahrain, however, the situation had changed and such an investigation
was required. Moreover, the letter shows that, even at this early stage, Britain was
aware that the Ruler of Bahrain's territorial claims extended beyond the centre of the
Bahrain archipelago (the main island of Bahrain, Muharraq, Umm Na'assan, Sitrah
and Nabi Salih). In addition, and most significantly, the letter establishes that Britain

did not recognise any countervailing claim to the Hawar Islands by the Ruler of Qatar;
undoubtedly had there been any prior evidence or current indications that such a claim
may have existed, it would have been mentioned by Laithwaite, even in the context of
these early investigations.

62. As Britain's investigations continued, the fact that the Ruler of Bahrain considered
the Hawar Islands to be among his territories became increasingly clear to the British

Government and, as a consequence, so also the implications of the broad terms in
which the unallotted concession area had been defined by BAPCO. Because the
proposed concession was to cover "the whole of that portion of [the Ruler of
Bahrain's] Territories - including all the islands and all the Territorial Waters -
remaining after excluding and apart from that area already covered" under the 1925
Bahrain concession, Britain was of the view that BAPCO would be in a position to
claim that its concession territory extended to areas beyond the main island of Bahrain

and the immediately adjoining islands, largely because it was recognised (including by
the Al-Thani, see the following paragraph) that the Ruler of Bahrain's dominions
extended "to other islands and to areas on the Qatar coast."173

63. The continuing investigations also confirmed to Britain that the Ruler of Qatar in
all likelihood did not have any rights in connection with the Hawar Islands. Why else
would the Political Agent have reported that "the explorers of the Anglo-Persian Oil

Company Limited in Qatar have examined places to which the Ruler of Qatar had no
right to allow them to go, and which people of Bahrain frequent to this day as a
summer resort...", or furthermore, that "indeed, it is said that as late as last year (1932)
the Ruler of Qatar admitted in public that certain areas on the Qatar coast pertain toBahrain."?174 In this connection it is important to recall that at this time Britain was
also undertaking investigations to determine finally what could be considered the
boundaries of Qatar in the context of supervising the concession negotiations between
the Ruler of Qatar and Britain's Anglo-Persian Oil Company (Anglo-Persian).175

64. In June 1933, Anglo-Persian joined the competition for the Bahrain unallotted area
concession. This development magnified Britain's interest in ensuring that additional
concession rights awarded, if at all, to the American-owned BAPCO be confined to as
small an area as possible.176 Britain thus proposed to the Ruler of Bahrain that any
agreement with BAPCO regarding the unallotted area specifically refer to certain of
the islands in the Bahrain group, but not including the Hawar Islands.177

65. The Ruler of Bahrain, however, refused to accept the proposal, precisely because it
might have impliedly compromised Bahrain's long-standing sovereignty over the
Hawar Islands. The Acting British Political Agent, Capt. K.H. Gastrell, reported:

"As regards the designation of the area, the Shaikh and his son immediately
objected to the 'islands' being shown by name. They explained that the islands

off Qatar were the cause of this hesitancy (here the Shaikh added that the
Foreign Office knew that these islands are the dependencies of Bahrain and
that there is a ninety year old agreement somewhere to this effect) and,
therefore, to avoid any misunderstanding by the omission of these islands, they
would like the area to be called 'Bahrain Islands'."178

66. The Ruler of Bahrain's counter-proposal was made to ensure that the conclusion of

the additional area concession agreement was not delayed and likewise the resulting
income stream from the royalties. At the same time, he was confident that by this time
the British Government were clear about his position in relation to the Hawar Islands
and other areas on the Qatar coast. Accordingly, his counter-proposal was in no way
an acknowledgement that the Hawar Islands were not his, as Qatar contends.179
Rather, it provides further evidence of the strength of the Ruler of Bahrain's conviction
concerning Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands.

67. The British Government accepted the Ruler of Bahrain's proposal and in so doing
implicitly recognised Bahrain's sovereignty over the "islands off Qatar" (i.e., the
Hawar Islands). In his report to the Secretary of State for India, Loch, the Acting
British Political Resident at the time, described the situation as follows:

"[Shaikh] desires that area be called Bahrain Islands without specifically

naming any so that the question of Hawar Island and Qatar will not be made
prominent by their omission. I think we may accept this as Hawar Island is
clearly not one of the Bahrain group."180

68. Qatar relies on the last sentence of the above-quoted passage to support its
contention that in 1933 Britain was clearly of the opinion that the Hawar Islands were

recognised as not belonging to Bahrain; the implication, Qatar finds, is that they were
recognised as part of Qatar.181

69. Qatar yet again attempts to present the evidence out of its context. Loch's
statement must be understood in the light of the fact that Britain's main concern at thisjuncture was with the extent of the concession territory that could be ceded to
BAPCO. The Ruler of Bahrain's main interest, on the other hand, was to ensure that
his sovereign rights were protected. Thus, for the purpose of the additional area
concession that was under consideration, the term "Bahrain Islands" was to be
understood to mean the area on the main island of Bahrain apart from the 100,000

acres already covered by the 1925 BAPCO concession, and the islands of Muharraq,
Umm Na'assan, Sitrah and Nabi Salih. Read in the light of the Ruler of Bahrain's very
clear statement of his rights concerning the "islands off Qatar" and Britain's
acceptance of the Ruler's insistence that the islands that were to be included in the
concession territory should not be specifically identified by name, it is clear that the
Political Resident could not have been opining on the Ruler of Bahrain's claim of
sovereignty over the Islands. As shown by the evidence adduced by Bahrain, the more

plausible view is that he was simply noting a fact of physical geography.182

70. Qatar's reliance on a letter dated 4 August 1933, from the Political Resident to the
India Office, forwarding a map (untraceable in British archives) purporting to show
what were considered to constitute the Bahrain Islands, provides no support for Qatar's
position.183 First, the map had been prepared in 1906, even before the Zakhnuniya
incident, which, as the Court will recall, had led to Britain's confirmation of the Ruler

of Bahrain's rights with respect to the Hawar Islands. Second, based on the Political
Resident's description of the map, it appears it did not even include all of the islands
that were undisputably considered to belong to the Ruler of Bahrain. Third, even at the
time, Britain was aware that there were more current and complete maps showing the
Ruler of Bahrain's dominions.

71. It is significant that at no time during the entire discussion in 1933 regarding the
definition of the Bahrain unallotted area concession did Britain mention any rights or
claim of the Ruler of Qatar to the Hawar Islands. 184 This is all the more significant in
view of the fact that Britain was at this time promoting and participating in the
negotiations between the Ruler of Qatar and Anglo-Persian for the Qatar oil
concession. Had there been any basis for a claim by the Ruler of Qatar, it would surely
have been actively supported by Anglo-Persian, and at least some indication of it

would have been found in British records. Qatar, however, has produced no evidence
to this effect. As discussed below, what the evidence does show is that Britain did not
consider the Ruler of Qatar to have any rights with respect to the islands.

72. In November 1933, the negotiations between the Ruler of Bahrain and BAPCO
were effectively terminated. While the issue of how to define the Bahrain unallotted
concession area was not finally resolved, the episode did have the effect of clarifying

the Ruler of Bahrain's position concerning Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar
Islands insofar as Britain, BAPCO and Anglo-Persian were concerned.

73. In 1936, the issue of the ownership of the Hawar Islands arose for a second time,
again in the context of an application for the Bahrain unallotted concession area, this
time by Petroleum Concessions Ltd. (PCL).185 Only three years earlier, in the context
of the first round of negotiations for the Bahrain unallotted area concession, the Ruler

of Bahrain had sought to ensure that Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands
could not in any way be compromised as a result of how the concession area was
defined. Accordingly, on 28 April 1936, acting on the Ruler's instructions, Charles
Belgrave, the Adviser to the Bahrain Government, wrote to the British Political Agentto confirm Bahrain's position that "the Hawar group of islands lying between the
southern extremity of Bahrain island and the coast of Qatar" were "indisputably part of
Bahrain." In that letter, the Ruler of Bahrain also confirmed that he had expressed his
views concerning his sovereignty over the Hawar Islands to the British Government
on previous occasions.186 The letter set out numerous details establishing the Ruler of

Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands, including the fact that the islands were
permanently occupied by subjects of the Ruler of Bahrain, that the Ruler of Bahrain
regulated and administered fishing activities there, that the inhabitants of the islands
recognised and subjected themselves to the jurisdiction of Bahrain's courts and
described Bahraini law enforcement activities on the islands.

74. Undoubtedly the Ruler of Bahrain's position was already known to PCL when it

first expressed an interest, in April 1936, in negotiating for the unallotted area
concession. In all likelihood PCL was aware that BAPCO had been advised of PCL's
objective. The stakes were quite clear: if, on the one hand, the Hawar Islands were
considered to be part of Qatar, then the concession rights for the islands would
automatically fall to PCL by virtue of its Qatar Concession. If, on the other hand, they
were considered to be part of Bahrain, PCL would find itself confronted with stiff
competition from BAPCO.187 PCL's Managing Director, Mr. J. Skliros, therefore,

requested the British Government to advise on the question of sovereignty over the
Hawar Islands, making it clear that PCL considered the islands to be part of Qatar.188

75. The contents of the two letters effectively mirror the Parties' current positions.
While on the one hand, the Ruler of Bahrain described numerous acts of
administration to confirm the substantive bases of his sovereign rights over the Hawar

Islands, PCL, the Ruler of Qatar's oil concessionaire, could only cite to geographical
proximity to support what was, in effect, the basis of the Ruler of Qatar's claim to the
islands. Qatar alleges that Bahrain fails to cite the following extract from Skliros'
letter, supposedly because it puts forward a number of facts which are "wholly at
variance with the Bahrain thesis":189

"The island [Hawar] is about 10 miles long, about 2 miles wide at its widest

and is believed to be uninhabited. It is said to be sometimes visited in the
winter and to have had in the past some degree of connection with Bahrain
subjects, if not, (as the Shaikh of Bahrain now claims) with the Khalifa family
itself."

However, far from proving any aspect of Qatar's position, Skliros' letter confirms the
facts - however minimised by Skliros in his own interest - that the Hawar Islands were

used by subjects of the Ruler of Bahrain and that those connections were widely
known.

76. On 6 May 1936, the British Political Agent (Loch), forwarded the Bahrain
Adviser's letter to Sir Trenchard Fowle, the British Political Resident, under cover of a
letter in which he expressed his views in the following terms:

"Subject to any past correspondence, which is not available to me, I am
inclined to think there is real substance in Sheikh Sir Hamad bin `Isa's claim
and also that it might in certain circumstances suit us politically to have as
large an area as possible included under Bahrain."19077. Citing Loch's earlier statement that "Hawar Island is clearly not one of the Bahrain
group", Qatar states that it "must remain somewhat of a mystery in the absence of any
clear explanation in the British archives" why Loch seems to have changed his
views.191 As Bahrain has shown, the British archives, in fact, provide a very clear
explanation. In his earlier statement, Loch was expressing nothing more than a view

about geography in the context of opining on the extent of the area that was to be
ceded as part of the Bahrain unallotted area concession. In 1936, having looked into
the matter, even if only cursorily, Loch was setting out his opinion on the legal
question of the ownership of the islands raised by the Qatar concessionaire.

78. The British Political Agent went on to clarify that he had not made any efforts to
solicit the views of the Ruler of Qatar, principally, it would appear, because there

seemed to have been no record of the Ruler of Qatar having ever asserted any sort of
claim to the Hawar Islands:

"I do not know what Sheikh Abdullah bin Jasim of Qatar's views about the
Islands are, but I have never heard any protest from him against the activities
of Bahrain's subjects there."192

79. Bahrain cannot understand how Qatar purports to find any support in the above
statement for its contention that the British authorities in the Gulf and the relevant oil
company executives were aware of Qatar's title to the Hawar Islands.193 The above
statement proves quite the opposite, namely, that the relevant British authorities had
never heard of any Qatari claims to the islands. Thus, in stark contrast to the Ruler of
Bahrain's insistence on his rights concerning the Hawar Islands, the Ruler of Qatar

apparently had never voiced any views concerning Qatari sovereignty over the islands,
more likely than not because he was not even aware that they existed. In any event, the
Political Agent's caveat explains the proviso conveyed by the British Government in
advising the Ruler of Bahrain and PCL that no final decision concerning the
ownership of the Hawar Islands would be possible until the Ruler of Qatar's views had
been ascertained.

80. In support of its view that the Hawar Islands belonged to Qatar, PCL submitted
additional evidence for the British Political Resident's consideration. It made no
mention of any views held by the Ruler of Qatar on the subject of the sovereignty over
the Hawar Islands. It is not conceivable that PCL would not have consulted the Ruler
of Qatar, who would have been the beneficiary of payments by PCL if the islands
belonged to him and contained oil. The absence of any mention of the Ruler's views
can only be explained by the fact that the Ruler of Qatar had nothing to contribute to

the subject, which is confirmed by the total lack of evidence submitted by him just two
years later in the context of Britain's formal arbitration of the matter. Given this
reality, PCL's failure to mention any consultations it may have had with the Ruler of
Qatar is understandable: to do so would have had a prejudicial and not a positive
effect.

81. The British Political Resident now had before him a detailed statement of the
evidence on which the Ruler of Bahrain based his claims of sovereignty over the
Hawar Islands, the PCL Managing Director's letter and a separate report submitted by
PCL. Qatar's contention that the British Political Resident had "relied heavily"194 in
reaching his conclusions on the Bahrain Adviser's letter and its complaint that therespective claims of Qatar and Bahrain were given only the most "superficial
examination" by the Political Agent and the Political Resident are simply without
basis.195 Not only has Qatar provided no support for its assertions but the record
shows that, far from being cavalier in his consideration of the matter, the Political
Resident carefully considered all of the information that had been submitted to him

before finalising his views,196 including evaluating the relevance of the evidence
produced by PCL (i.e., a map attached to the 1935 Qatar Oil concession, which he
concluded provided no proof of Qatari ownership), reviewing past British records on
the subject (e.g., Prideaux's letter of 1909 and the Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf, on the
basis of which he observed that it is "beyond doubt" that the Hawar Islands had "long
been occupied by the Dowasir tribe of Bahrain") and assessing that successive Rulers
of Bahrain had "exercised active jurisdiction in Hawar down to the present day". On

the basis of his enquiries, he concluded that there was no record of any claim to the
islands by the Ruler of Qatar.

82. In a letter dated 25 May 1936, to the Secretary of State for India, the Political
Resident set out his analysis of the available evidence and on that basis endorsed the
view that the Ruler of Bahrain was entitled to sovereignty over the Hawar Islands.197

83. On 9 July 1936, an inter-departmental meeting was held at the India Office in
London, involving representatives of the Foreign Office, the Petroleum Department,
the Admiralty and the India Office, to consider, inter alia, the issue of the ownership
of the Hawar Islands. Despite Britain's incentive to find in favour of the Ruler of Qatar
in view of the fact that the American-owned BAPCO had again expressed its interest
in the unallotted area, the British Political Resident's conclusions were adopted as the

official view of the British Government. 198

84. The Ruler of Bahrain was informed of the British Government's opinion through
his Adviser, Charles Belgrave. Britain, however, was very careful to point out that the
opinion being expressed was only provisional, and that no "final ruling" on the matter
of sovereignty over the Hawar Islands would be possible until the views of the Ruler
of Qatar had been heard.199 The same proviso was conveyed to PCL.200

85. Qatar submits that once PCL's inquiry had been answered, it took the "hard
commercial decision" to pursue directly with the Ruler of Bahrain its negotiations for
an oil concession covering the Hawar Islands, on the assumption that, in due course, a
formal decision would be forthcoming which would have definitively awarded Hawar
to Bahrain.201 The logic of Qatar's statement is hard to follow, for, following Britain's
"limited" decision, it would have made no sense for PCL to continue to negotiate the

prospective concession agreement with anyone else other than the Ruler of Bahrain.
Britain had been very careful to ensure that both Bahrain and PCL clearly understood
that no final decision could be given concerning the ownership of the Hawar Islands
"without knowing whether the Sheikh of Qatar has a claim, and hearing it if he has
one."202 The more logical conclusion to be drawn, if, in fact, PCL continued its
negotiations with the Ruler of Bahrain on the understanding that a formal decision,
following the Ruler of Qatar's submission of any available evidence in support of his

claim, would be in Bahrain's favour, is that PCL must have known that the Ruler of
Qatar had no evidence to produce.86. Qatar goes on to state that it "would have been unwise (and indeed contrary to
their interests as Qatar's exclusive oil concessionaire) for PCL to inform the Ruler of
Qatar that the Ruler of Bahrain had laid formal claim to the Hawar islands and that the
British Government had provisionally decided in favour of the Bahrain claim."203 On
the contrary, there was every reason and incentive for PCL to have brought the matter

to the Ruler of Qatar's attention: PCL was now competing with BAPCO for an oil
concession over territory which, if found to belong to the Ruler of Qatar, would
automatically have fallen within PCL's existing Qatar concession. Given the stakes,
the most commercially prudent course of action for PCL to have adopted would have
been promptly to apprise the Ruler of Qatar of Britain's views and urge him to put
forward a claim to the Islands.

87. Finally, Qatar complains that the Ruler of Qatar was "deliberately kept in
ignorance" of the events in 1936 by the British Government and the oil companies
concerned.204 Qatar has provided no evidence, because there is none, of any
deliberate policy by the British Government, the Qatar oil concessionaire and BAPCO
to conceal information from the Ruler of Qatar. It fails to provide any credible
explanation as to what interests any of these parties might have had in doing so.
Rather, as discussed below, British records show clearly that Britain was careful to

ensure that the Ruler of Qatar's interests were safeguarded.

88. In May 1937, the Ruler of Bahrain decided to postpone negotiations for the
unallotted area concession in order to focus his attention on the crisis developing in
Zubarah. Negotiations recommenced in January 1938, setting in motion the events that
would ultimately lead to the British arbitration concerning the sovereignty of the

Hawar Islands.

89. As discussed above, in 1936 Britain had been careful to point out that a final ruling
on the question of the ownership of the Hawar Islands would not be possible until it
had been ascertained whether the Ruler of Qatar had a claim, and hearing it if he did.
Contrary to Qatar's claims, the record leading up to the arbitration also establishes that
Britain had on no previous occasion made a formal ruling concerning the ownership of

the Hawar Islands. In addition, it confirms that Britain was also concerned to ensure
that the Ruler of Qatar be given a full and fair opportunity to air his views. Finally, it
confirms that any views that Britain had expressed previously in 1936 concerning the
ownership of the Hawar Islands did not have any significance when it undertook to
resolve the matter finally in 1938 and 1939.205

90. In view of the foregoing, Qatar's allegation that British officials in the Gulf and in

London, and interested oil company executives, had conspired to create the illusion
that Bahrain had an incontrovertible title to the Hawar Islands and to keep the Ruler of
Qatar in the dark, is simply unsupported innuendo and cannot be taken seriously.

SECTION 2.6 Qatar's claim that Bahrain illegally occupied the Hawar Islands in
1937 is not supported by the evidence

91. Qatar's allegation that Bahrain illegally occupied the Hawar Islands in 1937 is not
supported by the evidence.206 Qatar asserts that following Bahrain's "sudden" claim
and Britain's "provisional" decision in 1936, Bahrain "illegally" occupied the Hawar
Islands by force sometime following Qatar's armed attack on Zubarah in July 1937,the primary motive being to increase the territories over which Bahrain could grant an
oil concession. Arguing that Bahrain's occupation of the "main Hawar Island" was
allegedly "illegal", Qatar also argues that Bahrain's claim to sovereignty over the
Islands cannot be sustained.207

92. Qatar cites the following in an attempt to buttress its allegation:

· the establishment of a Bahrain police garrison on the main Hawar Island;208

· a statement made by Charles Belgrave on 19 August 1937 to the effect that the
Bahrain Government had distributed arms and ammunition to villages on the south
coast of Bahrain's main island and to guards who garrisoned the Hawar Islands "when

the disturbances in Qatar began",209 and the arresting of persons pursuant to those
orders;210

· a letter from Belgrave to the Head Natur at Hawar ordering that "On no account are
any people, European or Arab, from Qattar coast to be allowed on any of the Hawar
Islands";211

· a Police Order issued by the Bahrain Government Adviserate dated 1 February 1938
that anyone cutting wood or pulling grass on Hawar and taking it to Bahrain would be
arrested;212

· a report from a PCL official dated 19 February 1938 describing the firing of shots by
the Bahraini police on a dhow from Zekrit that had sailed too close to the Hawar

Islands;213

· the Government of Bahrain's Annual Report for 1937-1938, in which Qatar's attack
on Zubarah is described as one of the outstanding events of the year, and in which it is
recorded that a decision was made to strengthen the police post on the Hawar Islands
"in case of any emergency";214 and

· orders from the Adviser to the Bahrain Government concerning the issuing of
signalling devices, such as a mirror, to the police post in the Hawar Islands.215

93. The most striking aspect of the evidence adduced by Qatar is that none of it shows
anything other than legitimate acts of the continuing administration by a sovereign in
its own territory. In 1936 Britain expressed the view that the Hawar Islands were part

of the concession territories to be ceded by the Ruler of Bahrain. It was therefore
natural that the Bahrain Government should increase its administrative activities there
in light of the fact that it fully anticipated at the time granting a concession for the
territory that included the islands. Furthermore, following Qatar's armed attack on
Zubarah, the Bahrain Government was fully justified in increasing its defensive
capabilities in the islands in the event of further Qatari aggression. The exodus of
many of the inhabitants of Doha and its environs at this time because of the excesses

of the Al-Thani rulers would have been sufficient on its own to warrant Bahrain
stepping-up the security of its border regions.94. It is Bahrain's view that Qatar's arguments here are but a transparent attempt to
distract attention from the abundant evidence in the record of acts of authority by
Bahrain on the Hawar Islands prior to the 1930s.

SECTION 2.7 Qatar has presented no facts or arguments that undermine the

legal effect of the British decision of 1938-1939

95. During 1938 and 1939, Britain arbitrated the issue of title over the Hawar Islands.
An analysis of the circumstances leading up to the arbitration and of the arbitration
itself shows the following:

· Qatar had showed little interest in the Hawar Islands prior to the time it made its

formal claim to the islands in May 1938, which came only following its hostile
occupation of Zubarah and soon after it was informed that Bahrain had begun
discussions with oil companies about expanding Bahrain's oil industry to the Hawar
Islands;216

· the Ruler of Qatar's principal motivations for commencing the proceedings were

financial and economic,217 as well as in order to alleviate domestic problems;218

· the arbitration was commenced by the Ruler of Qatar, following an invitation by the
British Government for him to submit a "formal claim";219

· both Bahrain and Qatar consented without reservation to and participated in the
proceedings;220

· both Bahrain and Qatar submitted to Britain what they expressly considered to be
their full and complete claims to the Hawar Islands;221

· the arbitration adhered to fundamental procedural requirements. The various stages in
the arbitration are laid out in paragraph 356 of Bahrain's Memorial and in Chapter 3 of

Bahrain's Counter-Memorial;222

· Britain made its own independent investigations of the claims and evaluated the
Parties' submissions during the course of more than one year;223

· British officials visited the Ruler of Qatar on at least two occasions to consult with
him about his claim and to advise him on his submissions;224

· the basis and substance of Qatar's claim was revealed as nothing more than
geographical proximity;225

· certain of Qatar's erroneous affirmations about the physical characteristics of the
Hawar Islands showed that the Ruler of Qatar did not understand which islands he was
purporting to claim;226

· the record of the arbitration comprises a wealth of evidence of continuous occupation
of the Hawar Islands by Bahraini subjects and of Bahraini acts of administration;227· the record reveals no evidence of Qatari subjects ever having dwelt on the Hawar
Islands or of Qatari acts of administration;228

· the arbitration involved adversarial submissions by the Parties. The competing
contentions and evidence were analysed in detail by the British Political Agent;229

· a comprehensive report, including a record of the proceedings and an analysis of the
evidence, was prepared by the Political Agent before the decision was handed down.
This analysis was confirmed by two site visits to the Hawar Islands;230

· the Political Agent's report was considered and approved by the Political Resident,
prior to further consideration by and the decision of His Majesty's Government and the

yet further assent thereto by the British Government of India;231

· the result of the arbitration - that Bahrain had sovereignty over the Hawar Islands -
was formally communicated to the two Rulers by the Political Resident as a decision
of "His Majesty's Government";232

· the British decision encompassed Janan;233

· after the adjudication was complete, Qatar sought to adduce no further argument or
evidence in support of its claim. It merely questioned the merits of the British
decision;234 and

· Qatar's contention that the 1938-39 arbitration was unfair and substantially wrong,

and quickly recognised as such by British officials, is flatly contradicted by the record,
which shows, inter alia, that the British Government's 1947 maritime delimitation was
in part explicitly based on the 1938-39 arbitration.235

Thus, as Bahrain has already described in its Counter-Memorial, Qatar's criticisms of
the 1939 Award are unfounded.236

A. Qatar's claim that the British decision of 1938-1939 was not an adjudication is
unsustainable

96. Bahrain has described in detail the procedures implemented by the British in the
1938-1939 arbitration and has established why the decision resulting therefrom must
be considered res judicata.237 Moreover, Bahrain has demonstrated the clearly

adjudicatory nature of the British process,238 to which Qatar consented both explicitly
and implicitly by its participation.239 The decision was the result of a careful and
impartial legal process embodying all necessary guarantees against bias, pre-judgment
and other procedural irregularities and defects on the part of the decision maker.240

B. Qatar's complaint that the so-called British "provisional decision" of 1936
unfairly placed the onus of proof on Qatar is both unfounded and irrelevant

97. Qatar has claimed that in 1936 Britain reached a "provisional decision" that
Bahrain owned the Hawar Islands and, as a result, placed Qatar unfairly in the position
of being the claimant in the 1938-1939 arbitration.241 However, given that Bahrain
was in occupation of the Hawar Islands and that the historical records even thenshowed that Bahrain had long manifested its sovereignty over them, Qatar could not
have been anything other than the nominal claimant.

98. Leaving aside the debate as to whether Britain made a "provisional decision", the
fact that Bahrain submitted a wealth of evidence to support its claim and Qatar

submitted none means that the issue of the burden of proof would have been moot in
any event. The balance of evidence was so disproportionately in Bahrain's favour that
there was no basis upon which Britain could have concluded that the Hawar Islands
belonged to Qatar regardless of which Ruler bore the burden of proof.

C. Qatar's claim of British pre-judgement and bias is unfounded

99. In its Counter-Memorial, Qatar maintains its allegation that Britain, British
officials and oil company executives were biased and conspired to ensure Bahrain's
ownership of the Hawar Islands.242 Qatar's argument in this respect rests on the
forged documents, coupled with misleadingly incomplete extracts from Sir Charles
Belgrave's diaries.243 Bahrain has already demonstrated the completely spurious
nature of Qatar's allegation of British bias in favour of Bahrain and its attempts to

impeach the motivation and actions of the Adviser to the Bahrain Government.244

100. Aside from the lack of any genuine evidence, Qatar's bias theory is inherently
implausible. Qatar had awarded an oil concession to a British company, whereas
Bahrain had awarded an oil concession to an American company.245 If the Hawar
Islands had been given to Qatar, Britain would have automatically benefited from the
Qatar oil concession extending to the islands. Therefore, any pre-disposition on the

part of Britain logically would have been towards Qatar, not Bahrain.246

D. The Dubai/Sharjah award supports Bahrain's view of the British decision

101. The Qatar Counter-Memorial attempts to deny that the 1939 Award is res
judicata.247 Of course, Qatar must do so or risk that its present claims to the Hawar
Islands be immediately dismissed as frivolous and vexatious. Qatar presents two

arguments to support its contention that the Award has no effect.

102. Qatar asserts that Bahrain must lack confidence in the res judicata argument
because Bahrain remains confident that its title to the Hawar Islands is supported by
the genuine historical evidence regardless of the 1939 Award.248 Bahrain fails to
understand the logic of Qatar's assertion. Bahrain's confidence in its continuing ability

to demonstrate title to the Hawar Islands is clearly irrelevant to the issue of res
judicata. The 1939 decision was correct because it confirmed the manifold
demonstrations of Bahrain's sovereignty. Even if one ignored the res judicata, one
would have to reach the same conclusion as Britain did in 1939 because of the
evidence on which it was based.

103. Qatar also asserts that the 1938-1939 procedure was flawed.249 Bahrain has

described above that Qatar's claims in this respect are contradicted by the genuine
historical evidence. Qatar's assertions on this issue once again are predicated on
arguments based on the forged documents.250104. Qatar attempts to characterise the 1939 Award as an administrative, rather than a
judicial, decision comparable to the Tripp decisions discussed in the Sharjah/Dubai
case.251 But in this instance, that alternative characterisation would in no way affect
the binding character of the decision. For, as shown in Bahrain's Counter-Memorial,
even if the 1939 decision was a political decision, it was taken intra vires of

international agreements to which Bahrain and Qatar were party. Regardless of how it
is viewed by Qatar, the 1939 Award, whether an adjudication or a political decision, is
still binding on the Parties.

105. Qatar quotes from the Sharjah/Dubai Award that the Tripp decisions in that case
did not constitute arbitral awards because of:

"the lack of opportunity for the Parties to present their arguments and the
absence of reasoning for the decisions".252

106. In invoking this aspect of the Sharjah/Dubai Award, Qatar evidently accepts that
an award is binding where there was an opportunity for the Parties to present their
arguments and reasons were given for the award.

107. Bahrain has previously described in detail the procedures adopted by Britain to
resolve the dispute over the Hawar Islands: the Ruler of Qatar was visited by the
Political Agent no less than three times in relation to the preparation of Qatar's claims;

Qatar had the opportunity to submit a Claim and a Rejoinder to Bahrain's Counter-
Claim; and Qatar was repeatedly urged by Britain to submit all of the evidence that it

had to support its claim. Bahrain notes that despite Qatar's vague statements about a
lack of opportunity to present its arguments, Qatar has never once addressed the
details of the procedures adopted by Britain. Presumably this is because the genuine
historical evidence shows that Qatar was not denied a full opportunity to present its
arguments. It simply had no probative arguments to present in 1939, as remains the
case today.

108. Thus, the 1939 Award fits the description, given with approval in the
Sharjah/Dubai Award, of:

"an arbitral or judicial proceeding, in which independent interested Parties
have had a full opportunity to present their arguments ... [In such a case],
except in a case of nullity, the principles of ... res judicata could be invoked to

prevent the boundary so settled being called again into question."

109. Bahrain has also previously refuted Qatar's argument in relation to the alleged
lack of reasoning in the 1939 Award.253 So too has it disproved Qatar's claims in
relation to the consent of the parties to participate in the adjudication.254

110. Unless arguments based on the forged documents are given credence, the

Sharjah/Dubai case therefore does not support Qatar's arguments but rather the
conclusion that the 1939 Award is res judicata.

E. Qatar's invocation of the views of Prior and Alban is misplaced111. Qatar's Counter-Memorial repeated Qatar's reference to the views expressed
about the 1939 Award by Lt. Col. Geoffrey Prior and Major R.G.E. Alban, British
Political Resident and British Political Agent, respectively, in the years immediately
following the 1938-1939 arbitration.255 Qatar has relied on the views of those two
British officials in its attempt to find support for the substance of many of Qatar's

allegations in relation to the Hawar Islands that were based on the forged documents.
Bahrain's Counter-Memorial has already demonstrated that the views of Prior and
Alban, when read in the context from which they were extracted by Qatar, were
tentative and personal. They were also made on the basis of unverified, inaccurate and
incomplete information.0

112. Prior and Alban's views were immediately discredited and properly ignored by

senior British officials and by the British and Indian Governments.1 They were thus
deprived of any official quality and do not merit being attributed any evidentiary
weight.

F. Qatar's attempted explanation of the Ruler of Qatar's erroneous "description"
of the Hawar Islands is unconvincing

113. As discussed in Bahrain's Memorial, Qatar's Rejoinder to Bahrain's Counter-
claim in the 1938-39 arbitration showed that the Ruler of Qatar was quite ignorant of

the Hawar Islands, and probably confused them with another group of islands.2 The
Ruler of Qatar was wrong about their size, he did not know their location and he was
unable to describe their physical features. Indeed, the observations made by the British

Political Agent following a visit to the main island of Hawar not only contradict the
Ruler of Qatar's description, but are entirely consistent with the one given by the Ruler
of Bahrain. Qatar attempts to explain away this error, and at the same to show that the
Ruler of Qatar was in fact well-aware of the location of the Hawar Islands, by relying
on yet another misstatement: namely, that it is possible to wade from the mainland of
Qatar to the main island of Hawar.3

G. In support of its 1939 Arbitration Award recognising Bahrain's sovereignty
over the Hawar Islands, Britain noted the overwhelming evidence of Bahrain's
sovereignty in contrast to the absence of any evidence of Qatari activities

114. During the Hawar Islands arbitration of 1938-1939, British officials repeatedly
recognised that Qatar had submitted no evidence to support its claim and instead relied

entirely on geographical proximity:

"The Sheikh of Qatar has been able to produce no evidence whatsoever in
support of his claim. He relies solely on an assertion of sovereignty and on
geographical proximity."4

115. This, despite at least two fact-finding visits to the Ruler of Qatar by the British

official conducting the principal examination of the issues. Indeed, after receiving his
claim, the Political Agent met directly with the Ruler of Qatar in Doha and "discussed
the matter at considerable length with him" and his advisers.5 He noted after the
meeting that: "I enquired repeatedly whether [the submissions of the Ruler of Qatar] set out
his claim in all the detail which he wished to place before His Majesty's
Government or whether he had any other evidence, documentary or otherwise,
which he would wish to submit. He replied that he had set out all that he
wished to say in these two letters, that he had no other evidence to offer (and

saw no need for it) ... No evidence is offered of formal occupation by Qatar, no
mention is made of collection of taxes, of sale of fishing rights, of the exercise
of judicial authority, or indeed of the performance of any function which might
denote sovereign rights."6 (Emphasis added.)

116. In contrast, British officials repeatedly recognised that Bahrain had submitted
abundant evidence attesting to its long-standing exercise of sovereignty over the

Hawar Islands. On 22 April 1939, the British Political Agent submitted his final
analysis and evaluation of the evidence that had been submitted by the respective
Rulers of Qatar and Bahrain. He summarised his findings as follows:

"The Shaikh of Qatar has produced no evidence whatsoever. He relies solely
on an uncorroborated assertion of sovereignty, on geographical propinquity
and on the alleged statements of unidentified persons. On the Bahrain side

there is evidence that the original occupation of Hawar by the Dawasir was
effected under the authority of the Al-Khalifa, that the Zellaq Dawasir have
frequented these islands for a great number of years, that the courts established
by the Shaikhs of Bahrain have promulgated decisions in regard to disputes
over property there, that questions of ownership of fish traps have been
submitted to the decision of the Bahrain Shara Court, that seven years ago

Bahrain processes were served in Hawar, that the boats owned by the Dawasir
of Hawar are registered in Bahrain and that gypsum or juss is excavated from
Hawar under licence from the Bahrain Government."7

117. Much of this evidence was independently confirmed by Britain, by, inter alia,
two on-site visits to the Hawar Islands.

H. Britain continued to recognise the overwhelming nature of the evidence of
Bahrain's sovereignty and the continuing absence of any evidence of Qatari
activities after the 1939 Award

(i) In the period prior to Britain's 1947 letter, Britain continued to
consider the Award as valid and its conclusions as accurate

118. Subsequent to its 1939 Award, Britain consistently affirmed the authority of the
arbitration and the strength of Bahrain's sovereign rights over the Hawar Islands:

· in 1941, Sir Olaf Caroe of the Government of India's External Affairs Department,
remarking on the 1939 Award, noted that the weight of the evidence was then and
remained overwhelmingly in favour of Bahrain;8

· in 1941, Sir Olaf Caroe's views were endorsed by other high-ranking officials in the
Government of India;9· in 1946, Sir Rupert Hay, the British Political Resident, once again confirmed the
definitive nature of the 1938-1939 arbitration, noting that "the ownership of the Hawar
Islands was definitively decided in 1939";10

· from 1946, in the context of considering the division of the seabed between Bahrain

and Qatar, the record shows that Britain and British officials recognised Bahrain's
sovereignty over the Hawar Islands and the validity of the 1939 Award;11 and

· in 1947, in the letters informing the Rulers of Bahrain and Qatar of Britain's views
regarding the division of the seabed between the two States, the British Political Agent
confirmed Britain's view that the Hawar Islands were part of the territory of
Bahrain.12

(ii) Britain rejected Qatar's threats in the 1960s to renew its claim to the
Hawar Islands

119. In 1961, Qatar threatened to renew its claim to the Hawar Islands unless Bahrain
desisted from asserting its claim to sovereignty over the Zubarah region.13 Bahrain,

however, refused to be influenced by this threat.14 Britain maintained the view that its
1939 Award was final and binding and recognised Bahrain's sovereignty over the
Hawar Islands.15 Qatar's own Counter-Memorial quotes Britain's view, as stated
succinctly by the British Political Agent in 1961, that the issue of sovereignty over the
Hawar Islands was "at least one problem we managed to get settled".16

120. As late as June 1964, apparently in anticipation of Qatar's revival of its claim, one

of the legal advisers of the British Foreign Office requested an investigation into the
issue of the sovereignty of the Hawar Islands. His response to the results of the inquiry
sums up Britain's view concisely:

"Thank you for the above excellent summary of the history of the affair. It
appears from it that Bahrain can rely for their claim on tribal affiliations of the
residents as well as acts of administration of the Bahrain Government ...

whereas Qatar can rely on no argument except geographical contiguity ...
which is on the whole not a very strong argument. Bahrain therefore wins
easily."17

I. Qatar protested Britain's Award only on three occasions between 1941 and
1965

121. As Bahrain has described in greater detail elsewhere,18 and as is confirmed in
Qatar's own pleadings,19 Qatar only protested against Britain's 1939 Award three
times between 1941 and 1965.20 Contrary to Qatar's bold assertions, these three
protests clearly do not constitute "continuous protests"21 against the Award that
"repeatedly asked for its reconsideration".22

122. Qatar's 1965 claim - which led directly to the present dispute between the Parties
over the Hawar Islands - was nothing more than a tactical counter to Bahrain's
continuing claim to the Zubarah Region. This is shown by the statements of the Ruler
of Qatar himself:· in February 1961, shortly before the revival of Qatar's claim, the Ruler of Qatar
informed the British Political Resident that "he did not contest (the British) decision
on Hawar";23 and

· later in 1961, the Ruler of Qatar changed his position and told the British Political

Agent that "if the (Ruler of Bahrain) persisted in pursuing his claim to Zubarah he for
his part would raise the question of Hawar Island."24

123. Thus, Qatar's current claim to the Hawar Islands must properly be understood as
essentially a tactical response to Bahrain's genuine and continuous claim to the
Zubarah Region.25

SECTION 2.8 Qatar's "critical period" argument is fallacious

124. Qatar asserts that activities of Bahrain in or in relation to the Hawar Islands
cannot be invoked to establish title if they were motivated by an intent to deceive or
occurred after the dispute between Bahrain and Qatar became apparent, i.e., following
Britain's so-called "provisional decision" in 1936.26

125. Bahrain repudiates the innuendo that its actions with respect to any feature of this
case were motivated by an intent to deceive. Bahrain also notes the irony that such an
intimation should be made by the Party that submitted and then was obliged to
withdraw 82 forged documents.

126. With respect to the issue of critical date, Qatar has misstated the law in a number

of ways. First, as Judge McNair said in the Argentine/Chile Frontier case of 1966, "the
critical date is not necessarily the same for all purposes." When the dispute turns on an
arbitral award, the critical date is the date of the issue of the award. As Judge McNair
said:

"[i]n so far as the Court is asked to interpret and fulfil the Award of 1902, there
is obviously a sense in which the critical date is 1902 itself - or at least the

latest 1903, the date of the demarcation. Neither Party is free to put forward a
claim that flies in the face of the Award."27 (Emphasis added.)

Judge McNair's dictum is an expression of the more general principle of the
presumptio in favorem validitatis sententiae.

127. In any event, Bahrain is entitled to adduce facts subsequent to any critical date
that demonstrate its continued and exclusive manifestation of sovereignty in the
Hawar Islands after 1939. As the Tribunal in the Taba arbitration concluded:

"Events subsequent to the critical period can in principle also be relevant, not
in terms of a change of the situation, but only to the extent that they may reveal
or illustrate the understanding of the situation as it was during the critical

period."28

128. Indeed, the late Professor Goldie expressed the point: "Events occurring before the "critical date" have substantive value. They are
right-creating facts. Events occurring after the "critical date" have only an
evidentiary and probative value, and that of a narrow and dependent category.
Their admissibility is dependent on whether they are continuous of, or may
effectively throw light on, the substantive events anterior to the "critical date."

And subsequent facts are admissible - but only in a subordinate capacity. They
do not create or perfect titles; nor may they be adduced directly in proof of
title, but only indirectly and to corroborate and explain the probative events
occurring before the "critical date."29

Procedural devices are designed to facilitate the search for the truth, not to impede it.
Bahrain submits that that is how the critical date doctrine should be applied in the

present case.

SECTION 2.9 Qatar has not submitted any non-forged evidence that supports its
claim of sovereignty over the Hawar Islands

129. Just as it failed to do during the 1938-1939 British arbitration, Qatar has failed in

its Memorial and Counter-Memorial to produce any authentic evidence that it ever
exercised authority in the Hawar Islands.30 Aside from the legally specious claim of
geographical proximity, Qatar's case on the Hawar Islands is based on nothing more
than criticisms of the evidence adduced by Bahrain.

130. Having responded in earlier sections of this submission to Qatar's attempts to
impugn the evidence Bahrain has proffered, in this section Bahrain will address the

relevance of and the weight to be accorded to the various items of evidence submitted
by Qatar, all of which consist of little more than variations on Qatar's main theme of
geographical proximity.

A. The agreements entered into by Britain with the Rulers of Bahrain and Qatar
in 1868 do not support Qatar's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands

131. As discussed in further detail in Section 3.5, 1868 agreements (and the
undertaking by the Al-Thani chief to continue to pay tribute to the Ruler of Bahrain)
provide no support for Qatar's contentions concerning the extent of the Al-Thani's

authority in the Qatar peninsula. Qatar's reliance on those agreements to support its
claim of sovereignty over the Hawar Islands is discussed below.

132. Once Qatar's convoluted interpretation of the 1868 agreements is disentangled, its
thesis appears to be that by virtue of the engagements exacted from the Ruler of
Bahrain and the Al-Thani leader in 1868 not to commit any breaches of the maritime
peace, Britain, in effect, recognised the separate identities and integrity of the
territories of Qatar and Bahrain. Because what was at stake was maintenance of the
maritime peace, this necessarily implied Britain's recognition that the territory of Qatar

encompassed "the coasts and the islands adjoining mainland Qatar and therefore the
Hawar islands, most of which lie within Qatar's territorial waters."31

133. Nothing in the text of the 1868 agreements (or the undertaking) provides any
support for the surmise proffered by Qatar. Furthermore, there is not one Britishrecord (nor a single reputed commentator) that provides any support for Qatar's
singular construction of the agreements. Even the evidentiary support apparently
offered by Qatar to support its position - Lorimer's description of Qatar's boundaries in
1908 and a report prepared by the British Political Agent (Prideaux) in 1905 - requires
a stretch of imagination, establishing nothing more than the fact that the Qatar

peninsula is surrounded by sea.32 Qatar's submissions in respect of the 1868
agreements are thus revealed as nothing more than a disguised variant of its unavailing
claim of geographical proximity.

134. The actual relevance of the 1868 agreements lies in showing that the Al-Thani's
sphere of influence in the mid-nineteenth century was limited to the area around Doha,
a fact amply confirmed by the mass of evidence Bahrain has presented.33

135. The interpretation Qatar seeks to give to the 1868 agreements runs contrary to
known historical facts. By the time the agreements were concluded in 1868, the
Dowasir tribe, which owed allegiance to the Ruler of Bahrain, had been settled on the
Hawar Islands for almost 70 years. Moreover, based on Captain Brucks' official
survey of the Arabian Gulf from 1821 to 1829, Bahrain's ownership of the Hawar
Islands was already recognised.

B. Qatar's reliance on Lorimer's description of the Hawar Islands is misplaced

136. The descriptions of Bahrain and Qatar contained in Lorimer's "geographical
dictionary" provide no support for Qatar's contention that Britain recognised Qatari
sovereignty over the Hawar Islands. Rather, information recorded in Lorimer confirms

Bahrain's position regarding the Ruler of Bahrain's territory on the Qatar peninsula
(e.g., Zubarah) and shows that Lorimer was aware in 1908 that the Ruler of Bahrain
had dominions extending beyond the largest islands of the Bahrain archipelago.34

C. The unratified Anglo-Ottoman Convention of 1913 does not support Qatar's
claim to sovereignty over the Hawar Islands

137. Qatar cites the unratified Anglo-Ottoman Convention of 1913 to support its claim
that the British and the Ottomans recognised Qatar's sovereignty over the Hawar
Islands.35 First, Qatar argues that the references in the Convention to "the peninsula
of Qatar" make it quite clear that "what was at stake here was the whole peninsula,
without excluding the adjoining Hawar islands."36 The plain language of the text,
however, makes no such thing clear at all. On the contrary, the text refers to several
islands, but not to the Hawar Islands. Qatar provides no support or reasoning to

substantiate its contention, which is manifestly inconsistent with the language it
invokes.

138. Second, citing the Zakhnuniya incident,37 Qatar submits that the inclusion in the
Convention of special provisions concerning certain islands claimed by Bahrain and
the absence of any specific reference to the Hawar Islands in that connection "was

obviously because the Hawar islands were recognised and treated as being part of the
territories of Qatar...."38gain, how it is that the omission of the Hawar Islands
translates "obviously" into their inclusion is not evident. Nor is Qatar's conclusion
supported by any analysis or evidence.139. In Section 3.4 of its Memorial, Section 2.3(D) of its Counter-Memorial, and
Sections 3.5 and 2.4(C) respectively of its Reply, Bahrain has addressed Qatar's
submissions regarding the 1913 Convention and the Zakhnuniya incident and has
shown how neither provides any support for Qatar's claims.

D. The British Admiralty survey of 1915 does not support Qatar's claim to
sovereignty over the Hawar Islands

140. Qatar's reliance on the British Admiralty's survey in 1915 as support for its
position is also misplaced. Bahrain has shown that the survey was exclusively devoted
to geographical description39 and makes no reference to the Hawar Islands as being
part of the territory of Qatar as a political entity. It does, however, confirm the use of

the Hawar Islands by subjects of the Ruler of Bahrain.40

141. Thus Qatar's contention on the basis of the 1915 survey that "the British at the
time of signature of the 1913 Anglo-Ottoman Convention and the British-Qatar Treaty
of 1916 recognised the Hawar islands as included in the territories of Qatar"41 is also
unfounded.

E. The British Al-Thani agreement of 1916 does not support Qatar's claim to
sovereignty over the Hawar Islands

142. Qatar argues that the British Al-Thani agreement of 1916 serves as additional
proof that Britain recognised Qatar's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands.42 The
foundation of Qatar's thesis is its claim that the agreement was based on Britain's

understanding that the Al-Thani ruled the entire peninsula and its "adjoining islands".
In support of its submission Qatar cites the following provisions of the agreement,
which it claims "obviously" establish that it was designed to cover the whole peninsula
and the adjoining islands:

· Article 3, placing an obligation on the Ruler of Qatar to forbid the import and sales of
arms "into my territories and port of Qatar";

· Article 4, prohibiting the Ruler without British consent from ceding to any other
power or its subjects "land either on lease, sale, transfer, gift, or in any other way
whatsoever";

· Article 5, containing a prohibition against the grant of pearl fishery concessions or

other monopolies, concessions or cable landing rights;

· Article 6, requiring the Ruler to not charge customs duty on British goods at a rate
higher than on Qatari subjects; and

· Article 10, setting forth Britain's obligation to protect the Ruler and his subjects and
territory "from all aggression at sea".43

143. Bahrain fails to see how any of the foregoing articles of the agreement, which do
nothing more than enumerate the parties' respective obligations, "obviously" provide
any support for Qatar's position. Qatar argues that "[m]ost significantly, the obligation
of the British Government under Article 10 to protect the Ruler and his subjects andterritory `from all aggression by sea' must necessarily cover the whole peninsula and
the adjoining islands including the Hawar islands just as much as did the Agreements
of 1868."44 As with the 1868 agreements, Qatar bases its conclusion on a presumption
that the Hawar Islands were already considered to be under the authority of the Ruler
of Qatar; which is the very proposition Qatar seeks to establish by invoking these

instruments.45

144. What is "obvious" is that there is no mention of the Hawar Islands anywhere in
the Treaty. Qatar asserts that there was no need for the islands to be mentioned
because the British Government was already of the view that they belonged to
Qatar,46 but provides no support for its submission. Qatar's purported interpretation of
the Treaty is manifestly contrary to the historical record, which evidences that, in the

relevant period before the Treaty was concluded, Britain had already acknowledged
the Ruler of Bahrain's relationship with the Hawar Islands in the context of the
Zakhnuniya incident in 1909, but had not once recognised any such relationship
insofar as Qatar's Al-Thani chiefs were concerned. It also bears noting that the Al-
Khalifa's rights in respect of the Hawar Islands were again confirmed by Britain in
1915 following a British Admiralty survey of the region.

145. As with the 1868 agreements and the unratified Anglo-Ottoman Convention,
Qatar has thus attempted to read into the 1916 Anglo Al-Thani agreement an
implication that is neither supported by the text of the Treaty nor the historical
circumstances in which it was realised.

F. Qatar mischaracterises certain British documents

146. Bahrain refers the Court to the sections of its Counter-Memorial and Reply where
Bahrain has rebutted Qatar's submissions based on the various British documents cited
by Qatar.47 Those documents, all from 1933, show that when Britain first

undertook to investigate the Ruler of Bahrain's ownership of the Hawar Islands, the
evidence available to Britain at that juncture was not dispositive. More significantly,

they also show the absence of even the remotest suggestion of a competing claim by
the Ruler of Qatar. However, as shown above, when a more detailed enquiry was
conducted, the Ruler of Bahrain's rights to the islands became clear.

G. Qatar's interpretation of Anglo-Persian's 1933 geological survey map is
unsupported

147. Nor does the 1933 Anglo-Persian geological survey of Qatar cited by Qatar
provide any support for its position.48 First, the map (which, in any event, only
purported to be a sketch) was prepared by Qatar's oil concessionaire, who would have
been interested in obtaining as large a concession area as possible. Second, Qatar has
provided no evidence to show that the map was accepted by Britain as a definition of
the areas over which the Ruler of Qatar would be entitled to grant a concession. Third,

the map appears to have been submitted to the British Government because of
concerns at the time regarding the proper definition of Qatar's southern boundary with
Saudi Arabia. Fourth, the Court will recall that in May 1933, one month after the
survey was conducted, the British Political Agent reported that: "... the explorers of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company Limited in Qatar have
examined places to which the Ruler of Qatar had no right to allow them to go,
and which people of Bahrain frequent to this day as a summer resort; indeed it
is said that as late as last year (1932) the Ruler of Qatar admitted in public that
certain areas on the Qatar coast pertain to Bahrain."49

148. Accordingly, far from supporting Qatar's position, the Anglo-Persian survey
demonstrates that Britain was well-aware in 1933 of the Ruler of Bahrain's rights vis-
à-vis the Hawar Islands and the fact that the Ruler of Qatar had no rights there.

H. The RAF reconnaissance mission of 1934 does not support Qatar's claims

149. Qatar's reliance on an aerial reconnaissance by the RAF in 1934 is equally
misplaced. Qatar seeks to find significance in the fact that only the Ruler of Qatar's
consent was apparently sought for the reconnaissance, which was to proceed "over his
territory", and the fact that the survey plane's flight path was over the Hawar
Islands.50 Thus, Qatar concludes:

"This is eloquent testimony to the fact that, as late as May 1934, Loch was
clearly of the view that Hawar was an integral part of the territories of the
Ruler of Qatar since only his permission (and not that of the Ruler of Bahrain)
had been sought for overflight of the island."51 (Emphasis in the original.)

150. The most obvious response to this is to note that the reconnaissance flight's path
also included parts of Saudi Arabia, the main island of Bahrain, and, in all likelihood

also, Muharraq and Sitrah Islands, for none of which, presumably, Qatar supposes its
Ruler would have been in a position to give permission. In fact, however, the British
Political Agent's report referred to by Qatar indicates very clearly that the Ruler of
Qatar was simply "informed" that the reconnaissance was to take place.52 Qatar has
presented no evidence to show that the Ruler of Qatar was specifically asked to permit
the mission to proceed over the Hawar Islands any more than he was asked permission
regarding the other territories over which the flight path was to cross. Nor has Qatar

presented any evidence that the Ruler of Bahrain was not informed of the mission or
that his permission was not requested. Given that the reconnaissance mission departed
from and returned to Bahrain, this assumption by Qatar is suspect.

151. It bears noting that the reconnaissance was conducted in connection with Britain's
consideration of the idea of offering the Ruler of Qatar a guarantee of protection
against an armed land attack by Saudi Arabia, in return for his granting an oil

concession to Anglo-Persian and, in this connection, of defining the southern
boundary of Qatar. Its purpose was not to identify territory under the sovereignty of
the Ruler of Qatar in sectors not contested by Saudi Arabia, a fact confirmed by the
documents Qatar itself has submitted.53

I. The Anglo-Persian-Qatar Concession Agreement of 1935 is consistent with

Bahrain's description of history

152. Bahrain has fully responded to Qatar's attempts to rely on the 1935 Anglo-
Persian-Qatar Oil Concession Agreement to support its claim that Britain recognisedthe Hawar Islands to be among the territories belonging to the Ruler of Qatar.54 For
present purposes, therefore, it is sufficient to recall the following:

· When PCL, in April 1936, requested the British Government to clarify whether the
Hawar Islands were considered to belong to the Ruler of Qatar or to the Ruler of

Bahrain in the context of applying for a concession to the Bahrain unallotted area, it
cited the 1935 Concession Agreement, which had been approved by Britain, to support
its claim that the Hawar Islands were included in the concession it had been granted by
the Ruler of Qatar;55

· As a matter of geography, the Hawar Islands were included on the map attached to
the agreement north of the line - but so was all of Bahrain. If the map indicated

territory Qatar purported to subject to concession, its claim to the Hawar Islands was
obviously as baseless as its claim to the other Bahrain islands shown on the map. The
only conclusion that can be drawn from the text of the Agreement and the map that
would not import that Qatar was engaged in a massive misrepresentation is that the
Qatar concession was to operate on such territory north of the line over which the
Sheikh of Qatar did in fact rule;56 and

· In dismissing PCL's argument, the British Government took the opportunity to
explain (as Qatar itself notes) that the purpose of the map attached to the Qatar
concession was to define the southern boundary of the Concession and that it in no
way constituted proof of the Ruler of Qatar's ownership of the islands.57 The fact that
Britain made this clarification unequivocally confirms that, contrary to Qatar's
allegation, Britain never accepted that the Hawar Islands were part of the territory

covered by the 1935 Qatar oil concession.

153. Qatar's sole response to the foregoing has been to invoke the marginal notes of a
British official to the record of an informal meeting between India Office officials and
PCL representatives held on 12 April 1938 in which that official observes that if
enquiries showed that the Hawar Islands belonged to the Ruler of Qatar, they would be
included in the Qatar concession which PCL already held by virtue of Article 2 of that

concession. Bahrain does not dispute that, had the Hawar Islands been awarded to
Qatar following the 1938-1939 arbitration, they would have fallen under PCL's Qatar
Concession. However, the fact remains that the Hawar Islands were awarded to
Bahrain.

154. In sum, the innuendo, surmise and conjecture proffered by Qatar cannot displace
the mass of clear and convincing documentary proof adduced by Bahrain. Stripped to

their essence, each of the authentic items of evidence relied upon by Qatar establishes
little more than the readily recognisable fact that the Hawar Islands are located closer
to the Qatar peninsula than to the main islands of Bahrain - the mainstay of Qatar's
claim to sovereignty over the Hawar Islands. Bahrain has already pointed out in
Section 4.3 of its Memorial and Section 2.3 of its Counter-Memorial that geographical
proximity cannot override evidence of physical possession and administration of a

disputed territory by the other party.

SECTION 2.10 Qatar has presented no evidence to justify its claim that Janan is
not one of the Hawar Islands155. Qatar has presented no evidence to challenge Bahrain's sovereignty over Janan
Island. Chapter IV of Qatar's Counter-Memorial sets out the bases of Qatar's claim to
Janan Island (including Hadd Janan), which can be summarised as follows:

· Bahrain has not shown why, geographically speaking, Janan Island should be

considered part of Bahrain. Janan Island is close to the Qatar mainland coast and is a
component of the offshore topography and nearshore dynamic system associated with
the Qatar coast;58

· The history of the matter shows the extent of Bahrain's uncertainty about the
composition of the Hawar Islands, as demonstrated by the various lists prepared by
Bahrain setting out the islands comprising the Hawar "group of islands";59

· There is no substance to Bahrain's contention that Janan Island should be regarded as
one of the Hawar Islands falling within the scope of Britain's 1939 decision;60 and

· The foregoing is confirmed by Britain's 1947 "decision" concerning the division of
the seabed between Bahrain and Qatar, which expressly excluded Janan Island from

the Hawar Islands.61

A. Janan Island's proximity to the Qatar peninsula is irrelevant

156. Bahrain has never contested the facts of the physical shape and location of the
Hawar Islands, which, as Bahrain has shown in Section 2.3.1 of its Counter-Memorial,
include Janan.62 However, as discussed in Section 4.3 of Bahrain's Memorial and in

Section 2.3.B of its Counter-Memorial, geographical proximity is not determinative in
international law.

B. Bahrain has always considered Janan Island to be one of the Hawar group of
islands

157. Contrary to Qatar's assertion, the various lists submitted by Bahrain concerning
the composition of the Hawar Islands are neither inconsistent nor do they evidence any
uncertainty on Bahrain's part as to the integrality of Janan to the Hawar Islands.

158. As discussed in Bahrain's Counter-Memorial, Bahrain submitted four lists to the
British Government. The composition of each of those lists is best understood in the
light of the underlying circumstances in which they were submitted.

159. The first list was submitted at the end of April 1936, in the context of the
negotiations for an oil concession over the Bahrain unallotted area.63 In order to avoid
any confusion concerning the areas under the sovereignty of the Ruler of Bahrain and
thus subject to the prospective concession, the Adviser to the Bahrain Government
submitted to the British Government a written statement formally confirming the
Ruler of Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands.64 The statement contained a

list of the islands considered by the Ruler at that time to be part of the Hawar Islands.
It did not in any way purport to be an exhaustive listing.65

160. The significance of the 1936 list lies in the fact that Janan Island was included in
what appears to be the first formal written statement by Bahrain of its sovereignty overthe Hawar Islands.66 When PCL sought the British Government's opinion as to
whether the islands belonged to the Ruler of Bahrain or Qatar, Britain did not object to
the Ruler's definition of the Hawar Islands. Moreover, during its evaluation of the
evidence presented, Britain never considered Janan Island to be separate from the rest
of the Hawar Islands, and did not exclude the island from the scope of the opinion it

issued. (The Court will recall that if Janan Island had been considered separate from
the Hawar Islands, it would automatically have fallen to PCL under its 1935 Qatar
Concession.) As discussed below, the 1936 list was ignored by the British Political
Agent when making his recommendation in 1947 regarding the seabed delimitation
between Bahrain and Qatar.

161. The second list was submitted in August 1937 in response to a request by the

British Government for a list setting out the islands the Ruler of Bahrain considered to
be among his dominions.67 No mention is made specifically of Janan Island in that
list. However, neither is any mention made of the other islands that were identified in
the previous list, including the main island of Hawar. This obviously cannot be
interpreted to mean that the Bahrain Government no longer considered Hawar Island
to be among those of the "Howar archipelago". By the same token, it cannot be taken
to mean that the Bahrain Government had suddenly decided some 14 months later that

Janan Island was also to be excluded from the group. To the contrary, in the light of
the clearly demarcated concession area that Bahrain was offering to PCL at the time,
with Britain's acquiescence, it is abundantly clear that Janan Island was understood to
be one of the "nine" considered to constitute the "Howar archipelago".68 Thus, there
was no greater need for Bahrain to mention Janan Island than any of the other islands
in the Hawar group.

162. The third list was submitted by the Bahrain Government in May 1938, as an
attachment to a preliminary statement of evidence submitted in connection with the
Hawar Islands arbitration.69 In the attachment, the Hawar "group of islands" is said to
"consist of one large island ... which is known as Hawar island and also a number of
islands and rocky islets which are adjacent to Hawar island."70

163. The attachment goes on to provide a listing of those islands or rocks which had
been marked with a Bahraini beacon, as of the date the list was submitted. This is
made clear by the text that introduces the list ("the beacons are numbered as
follows").71 The Bahraini beacon on Janan was not constructed until sometime after
21 February 1939 (corresponding to 1358 A.H.).72 It is also to be recalled that the
Bahrain Government

had in the course of approximately 24 months already submitted two lists to the
British Government identifying the islands it considered to be under Baharaini
sovereignty. Finally, that the list was intended simply to identify those rocks and
islands that had been beaconed is borne out by the fact that within days of submitting
the "preliminary statement", to which the list of beaconed islands was attached,
Belgrave forwarded to the British Political Agent a concession map clearly showing
Janan Island as part of the Hawar Islands concession area being offered by the Ruler

of Bahrain to PCL.73

164. The last of the four lists was submitted in July 1946. It was described as a
complete list of "the cairns which were erected on the various reefs and islands ... builtduring 1357 and 1358 [i.e., 1938 and 1939]." All of the islands numbered 1 through 18
on the list were considered to be part of the Hawar Islands. Janan Island was included
on the list as number 15. (This confirms the fact that the 1938 list was only a limited
listing of Bahraini beaconed islands.74)

165. In short, of the four lists submitted by Bahrain, two (the 1936 and 1946 lists)
explicitly refer to Janan Island as among the islands belonging to Bahrain; a third
(1937 list), viewed in proper context, also included Janan Island within its purview.
The only list (the 1938 list) arguably not containing any references to Janan Island was
never intended to be a list of all of the islands considered by Bahrain to be among its
sovereign territories, but rather was a list identifying islands and rocks that had been
beaconed by Bahrain as of May 1938.

C. Bahrain's sovereignty over Janan Island is res judicata

166. Bahrain has demonstrated in Section 2.3(I) of its Counter-Memorial that
Bahrain's sovereignty over Janan Island was recognised by Britain in 1936 and
confirmed in 1939. Despite Qatar's submissions concerning the views expressed by

Britain in the context of proposing a seabed delimitation between Bahrain and Qatar in
1947, Britain's 1939 Award is the only legally binding ruling concerning the
ownership of the Hawar Islands. The record of the concession negotiations for the
Bahrain unallotted area confirms that when Britain considered and ruled upon the
ownership of the Hawar Islands, Janan Island was undoubtedly considered to be one
of the islands in the Hawar group. For example:

· The concession area offered to PCL in April 1937, and illustrated by a map, in
respect of the "Hawar group of islands" included Janan as among the islands in the
group;75

· In April 1938, just before the commencement of the Hawar Islands arbitration, the
India Office endorsed a draft concession agreement in respect of the Ruler of
Bahrain's "dominions", which were defined as including "the whole of the Hawar

Group of Islands". A map attached to the draft lease showed Janan Island as included
within the demarcated concession area, and thus one of the islands making up the
"Hawar Group of Islands". Janan Island was thus expressly recognised as falling
within the Ruler of Bahrain's dominions;76

· Even after the Ruler of Qatar had formally submitted his claim to the Hawar Islands
on 10 May 1938, Britain continued to acknowledge that the "Hawar group of islands"

included Janan Island. Thus on 22 May 1938, in describing the proposed concession
area to the Secretary of State for India, the British Political Agent expressly referred to
"JENAN island in the Hawar Group of Islands";77

· A few days after Bahrain had submitted its "preliminary statement" in support of its
claim, in a report to the British Political Agent regarding a meeting with PCL to

discuss the proposed concession area, the Bahrain Adviser attached a description of
the "Hawar group of islands", which clearly included Janan Island;78 and

· A 1939 draft of the concession agreement between PCL and the Ruler of Bahrain, to
which the British Government does not appear to have voiced any objection, confirmsthat Bahrain and Britain continued to view Janan Island as part of the Hawar Islands in
1939.79

167. The foregoing establishes unequivocally that all (the British authorities, PCL
(Qatar's oil concessionaire), BAPCO and the Bahrain Government) understood Janan

to be part of the Hawar Islands. The terms "Hawar Islands Group", "Hawar group of
islands", "Hawar group" and "Hawar Islands" were used synonymously by all
concerned. Their draft concession agreements, concession maps and related
correspondence unquestionably and consistently included Janan as one of the Hawar
Islands. Accordingly, when Britain undertook in 1938 to determine finally the
question of the ownership of the Hawar Islands, it was clearly understood that the
enquiry included Janan within its purview.

168. British records from before the start of the arbitral proceedings in 1938 confirm
that the responsible British officials in India, Bahrain and London were aware that
they had to determine the ownership, as between the Rulers of Qatar and Bahrain, of
the "Hawar group of islands".80 When Britain finally issued its decision awarding the
Hawar Islands to Bahrain in July 1939, no reservations were made with respect to
Janan Island.81 Qatar has provided no evidence whatsoever to show that by the time

Britain

issued its Award in the Hawar Islands arbitration in 1939, it had resiled from the views
it had expressed only three years earlier concerning the composition of the Hawar
Islands.

D. Bahrain's ownership of Janan Island is established by acts of sovereignty

169. Bahrain has also established, independently of the 1939 British Award, its
sovereignty over Janan Island on the basis of that island's use by Bahraini subjects and
the Ruler of Bahrain's exercise of authority over the Island.82 Thus for example:

· In 1947, when requesting the British Government to reconsider its position regarding

the proposed seabed delimitation, the Ruler of Bahrain proffered evidence
demonstrating Bahrain's ownership of Janan Island, including the fact that the island
was regularly used by Bahraini fishermen, that they were required to obtain the Ruler
of Bahrain's permission before they could erect huts on the island and that the island
had been beaconed by Bahrain in 1939, following the British decision awarding the
Hawar Islands to Bahrain.83 These acts, evidencing as they do Bahrain's sovereignty
over Janan Island, were acknowledged in the British Political Agent's report to the

British Political Resident of 31 December 1946;84 and

· Former Hawar Island residents have testified to the manner and frequency with
which they used Janan Island and the fact that they always considered Janan to be
among the territories belonging to the Ruler of Bahrain.85

E. Qatar's partial reliance on Britain's 1947 seabed delimitation is misplaced

170. Bahrain has demonstrated in Section 2.3(I) of its Counter-Memorial that Britain
never decided, whether in 1947 or at any other time, that Janan Island belonged to
Qatar. The evidence shows Qatar's reliance on the letters sent by the British PoliticalAgent in December 1947 to the Rulers of Qatar and Bahrain, informing them of the
British Government's views regarding the division of the seabed between the two
States, to be grossly misplaced. The purpose of the 1947 letters was not to notify the
Rulers of a "decision" which they would be bound to respect. It was merely to inform
them that the British authorities would henceforth consider the seabed as being

divided by the line described in the letters, particularly in the course of their dealings
with the two oil companies, PCL and BAPCO. Qatar conveniently relies on only one
part of Britain's so-called 1947 "decision" - the part purportedly awarding Janan Island
to Qatar - yet rejects the rest of that "decision" - the part confirming Bahrain's
sovereignty over the Hawar Islands, Fasht ad Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah. Qatar's reliance
on the 1947 letters is thus not only misplaced, but internally inconsistent. Bahrain has
never accepted the 1947 letters as legally binding.

171. As far as Janan Island is concerned, the views expressed by the British
Government merit no weight because none of the British Political Agent's reasons for
recommending that Janan Island should not be considered part of Bahrain's territories
constitutes a valid international legal basis for denying Bahrain's sovereignty over the
Island. This conclusion is established by the following facts:

· The British Political Agent failed to take into account the list submitted by the Ruler
of Bahrain in 1936, which specifically identified Janan Island and was the first list
submitted by Bahrain as part of a formal claim to the Hawar Islands, and instead
arbitrarily and mistakenly relied on the list of beaconed islands and rocks submitted in
1938. The 1938 list did not represent Bahrain's, Britain's, or the oil companies'
understanding of what islands were included in the Hawar group. In addition, the

Political Agent inexplicably interpreted the general reference to the Hawar archipelago
in the 1937 list as excluding Janan Island. And he gave no weight to the 1946 list,
which was the most recent and complete statement of the islands that Bahrain
considered to be part of the Hawar Islands group. The British Political Agent's only
justification for choosing the 1938 list appears to be that the Bahrain Government had
never explained why the three lists he considered varied from each other. British
records, however, contain no indication that he ever made any effort to clarify the

matter with Bahrain. Most of all, the 1938 list on its face shows that it was not
intended to define the Hawar Islands, but to identify islands on which beacons had
been erected;86

· The Political Agent submitted the unverified observations of a "layman" relating to
the geo-morphological features of Janan Island, which the Political Resident and other
British officials subsequently accepted as scientific truths. Those observations were

ultimately used as one of the grounds for refusing the Ruler of Bahrain's request that
the proposed seabed delimitation be re-examined;87

· The Political Agent's recommendation was also influenced by extraneous
considerations, in that he was concerned that if Janan Island were to be considered as
belonging to Bahrain, then the possibility would always be present that PCL's landing

place at Duhat Az Zagreet (Zikrit) could be blocked by Bahrain or BAPCO;88

· Although recognising that Janan Island was used by Bahraini nationals and that the
island had been marked with a cairn sometime in 1938, the Political Agent gave
neither factor any weight;89 and· In confirming Bahrain's sovereignty over Fasht ad Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah, the
Political Agent relied on the following five considerations - (1) acts of sovereignty by
the Ruler of Bahrain, as evidenced by the erection of cairns; (2) use of the territory in
question by Bahrain; (3) failure by Qatar to assert sovereignty over the territory in
question; (4) lack of any protest by the Ruler of Qatar to acts of sovereignty by

Bahrain; and (5) recognition by the British authorities in the context of the oil
concession negotiations that the territory in question was considered part of Bahrain.
The very reasons the Political Agent gave to justify his recommendation with respect
to Qit'at Jaradah and Fasht ad Dibal, apply equally to Janan Island. Yet, without any
justification, he chose to disregard every one of them.90

172. At paragraphs 4.1 and 4.2 of Qatar's Counter-Memorial, Qatar raises and then

"leaves aside," the question of whether Bahrain's "claim" to Hadd Janan - an
appendage of Janan Island - is admissible, but rests its principal objection on what it
calls "the geographical facts."91 If the issue of sovereignty over Hadd Janan were not
admissible, then it would be Qatar's claim to take it from Bahrain based on proximity,
rather than Bahrain's settled title to it based on res judicata and effectivité, that would
be affected. In any event, Bahrain must assume that Qatar's decision to mention and
then explicitly "leave aside" the issue of the admissibility of Bahrain's title to Hadd

Janan - an appendage of Janan Island - means that Qatar is abandoning that issue. To
avoid all misunderstanding, Bahrain rejects the implication that jurisdiction over title
to Janan does not extend, whether directly or incidentally, to Hadd Janan. Qatar's
belated jurisdictional objection at this stage of the case is simply mischievous. Qatar
obviously has no knowledge whatsoever of the island formations in the area and thus
must rely on Bahraini charts. Qatar acknowledges that Hadd Janan is clearly marked

on Bahraini charts. Whether Hadd Janan is an extension of Janan or an island
formation within Janan's territorial waters, the fact remains that it pertains to Bahrain.

MAP 7 : MASTER PLAN FOR HAWAR ISLAND (104 KB)

SECTION 2.11 The Hawar Islands are an integral part of Bahrain's tourist
industry, of Bahrain's regional defence and environmental protection

commitments, and of Bahrain's future land utilisation plans

173. The map on the opposite page is taken from the archives of the Physical Planning
Directorate of the Bahrain Ministry of Housing, Municipalities and Environment. It
represents a cartographic depiction of the Government of Bahrain's development plans
for the Hawar Islands. These plans are designed to preserve the houses and mosque of
the historic North and South Villages on Jazirat Hawar, as well as the existing

cemeteries dotted throughout the islands. The plans, many of which are already being
implemented or have indeed already been completed, include:

· housing projects;92

· bird sanctuaries and environmental preserves;93

· holiday resorts, hotels and campgrounds;94

· a community centre with elementary schools for girls and boys;· a second mosque;

· recreational and commercial fishing marinas;

· commercial and light industry centres;

· markets;

· sewage, water and power plants;

· a network of paved roads extending for over 20 kilometres;

· the Bahrain Defence Force base;

· hospitals;

· a domestic airport; and

· a causeway link between the main island of Bahrain and Jazirat Hawar.

174. The Hawar Islands are the cornerstone of Bahrain's future tourist industry, one of
Bahrain's most significant industries. In its previous pleadings, Bahrain has described
the two tourist resorts on the Hawar Islands.95 Since 1997, the largest of these, the
Hawar Resort Hotel in the south of the main Hawar Island, has attracted over 15,000

visitors.96 In addition, the Hawar Island Resort is fast becoming a highly sought after
location for business conferences,97 weddings,98 and other events.

175. The main Hawar Island is serviced by four jettys. The jettys include the landing
points of the twice-daily ferry shuttle service between the main island of Bahrain and
the main Hawar Island.

176. Bahrain has a series of defence and security commitments of a bilateral, regional
and international character. The Hawar Islands, on which there has been a Bahrain
security presence for more than 70 years, are an integral part of Bahrain's
commitments.

177. Bahrain makes no attempt to hide the fact that its military presence on the Hawar
Islands, some of which has been described in Qatar's submissions to the Court, is

deeply entrenched. It was reinforced in response to Qatar's surprise attack in 1986.
Bahrain's military capability on the Hawar Islands is entirely defensive.

178. There are currently two 1.65 MW diesel electricity generator units on Jazirat
Hawar. A contract to build several more generators to meet the growing demand has
been concluded. The water supply system includes several fresh water wells dug in the

1970s and a desalinisation plant, storage facilities and a distribution system
established in 1982-1983. Plans are underway to meet the growing demand for more
fresh water. Taxes, water and electricity charges are levied at the same rate in the
Hawar Islands as elsewhere in Bahrain.179. The Hawar Islands are served by a telephone exchange, a GSM mobile telephone
station, a paging base station, and digital microwave lines. Public telephones are
available in several locations. All of these facilities are connected to the wider Bahrain
telephone system.

180. The first phase of Bahrain's Hawar Islands housing project is already well past
the design stage. It includes a sub-division of 54 town houses in the north of the main
island, to be completed before the end of 1999 (see drawing on facing page [MAP 8 :
HAWAR HOUSING SITE PHASE 1 (132 KB)]). The Hawar Islands represent a very
substantial portion of Bahrain's small territory, and so they are the logical area for its
future growth. The overcrowding of Bahrain's population has been described in its
previous pleadings.99 Bahrain is already the fifth most densely populated State in the

world.100 The UNDP has recently reported that Bahrain's population will double
within the next 22 years. 101 Having but approximately 6% of its land and yet a
considerably larger population than Qatar, Bahrain requires the use of the Hawar
Islands in the immediate future.

SECTION 2.12 Conclusion

181. Qatar's claim to the Hawar Islands was arbitrated by Britain in 1938-1939 at the
request of Qatar. The arbitration took account of an abundance of evidence, dating
back to the previous century, of Bahrain's occupation and administration of the Hawar
Islands. In stark contrast, and despite the fact that it was Qatar that had initiated the
proceedings, the arbitration explicitly recorded that Qatar was unable to produce any
evidence to support its assertion that the Hawar Islands had always been a part of

Qatar. Britain thus concluded in July 1939 that Bahrain had sovereignty over the
Hawar Islands. Whether the decision was arbitral and is, hence, res judicata or a
political and administrative decision and binding by virtue of Britain's competence, it
is a final and irreversible decision.

182. Aside from the 1939 British arbitration, Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar
Islands is supported by the peaceful presence of a population subject to the continuous

authority and administration of Bahrain. These facts were confirmed by the British
Government in the 1938-1939 arbitration and are now, as they were then, fully
demonstrable.

183. Qatar was unable to produce any evidence of specific acts of administration on
the Hawar Islands during the course of the British arbitration in 1938-1939. During the
intervening 60 years, Qatar has never produced any authentic evidence in support of

its claim of sovereignty over the Hawar Islands. Its claims must be dismissed and
Bahrain's sovereignty confirmed.

CHAPTER 3

QATAR HAS OVERSTATED THE EVOLUTION OF AL-THANI

INFLUENCE AND UNDERSTATED THE DOMINANCE OF THE AL-
KHALIFA ON THE QATAR PENINSULA

SECTION 3.1 Introduction184. In its Memorial, Bahrain described the principal bases for its claim to sovereignty
over the Zubarah region in the following terms:

"a) evidence of the exercise of authority and control by or on behalf of the
Ruler of Bahrain over the people inhabiting the Zubarah region and thus over

the region itself;

b) recognition by the inhabitants of the Zubarah region of the authority of the
Ruler of Bahrain over themselves and over the areas in which they lived; and

c) absence of any competing exercise of authority by Qatar in the Zubarah
region until its armed attack and forcible expulsion of Bahrainis from the

region in 1937."

185. Evidence of items a) and b) have been provided in Bahrain's Memorial102 and
Counter-Memorial.103

186. Item c) remains as valid an observation now as it was at the time that the

Memorial was written. Qatar's pleadings, while critical of Bahrain's evidence, produce
no authentic evidence of Al-Thani or Ottoman exercise of authority in Zubarah.
Qatar's pretensions that the Ottomans and the Al-Thani exercised authority in Zubarah
during the Ottoman period are expressly contradicted by Ottoman records.104 Nor has
Qatar presented any evidence of specific examples of its purported exercise of
authority in the Zubarah region during the period from the end of the Ottoman
presence in Doha in 1915 until shortly before the 1937 attack.

187. Bahrain's historic dominance over the Qatar peninsula was deeply rooted in the
political economy of the region.105 Bahrain, one of the three geo-political entities
forming the Arab littoral of the Gulf, was traditionally a focal point for trade,
agricultural resources and pearling.106 A network of tribal relationships linked the
archipelagic component of the State of Bahrain to its mainland possessions.107

188. In contrast to the Bahrain Islands, the Qatar peninsula is arid desert. The
population in the north-west - the Zubarah region - was an integral part of Bahrain's
political and economic system. The rest of the peninsula was virtually empty: in the
1820s a British survey recorded only 400 people living in Doha on the south-east
coast.108 The south-east of the peninsula began to gain importance only after the
middle of the nineteenth century with the development of the Abu Dhabi pearling

banks to the east of Doha.109

189. As described in Bahrain's previous submissions, the human geography of the
Qatar peninsula from the middle of the nineteenth century to Qatar's attack on Zubarah
in 1937 was increasingly divided into three spheres: the Naim-led tribal confederation
to the north which recognised the authority of the Al-Khalifa Rulers of Bahrain; the
bedouins who seasonally grazed their flocks in the south of the peninsula and were

loyal to the Al-Saud; and the pearl merchant enclave around Doha, the Al-Thani-
influenced Doha confederation, dominated by both the Al-Khalifa and the Al-
Saud.110190. The historic conflict over the Qatar peninsula until 1935 was between the Al-
Khalifa in the north (through the Naim tribal confederation) and the Al-Saud in the
south (through Bedouin tribes loyal to them). The Al-Thani-influenced Doha
confederation was an observer, not a participant, in this struggle.111 Qatar's claims to
the contrary112 are in fact a mixture of unsupported assertion, irrelevant fact, forged

documents and a quotation from a text by Cordesman that is itself fictitious
speculation made entirely without reference to any supporting evidence.

191. In 1935, Britain, in exchange for an oil concession, agreed to guarantee the
southern boundary of the territories of the Al-Thani against the Al-Saud. In this new
political equation, the Doha confederation, led by the Al-Thani, could finally expand
from Doha, extending their authority north along the eastern coastline. In 1936, they

reached the Zubarah region.113

192. The Al-Thani first endeavoured to exercise authority in Zubarah in 1936 by
attempting to establish a customs house there and impose taxes on the Naim tribe and
its confederates. The Naim resisted and appealed for assistance to the Ruler of
Bahrain, their traditional benefactor and suzerain. In 1937, during negotiations
between Bahrain and Qatar over this problem, Al-Thani forces attacked Zubarah and

ejected the Naim and the Al-Khalifa.114 This unlawful act, the legal consequences of
which are considered below, could not even in those days form the basis of a
subsequent claim to sovereignty by Qatar.115

SECTION 3.2 The Rulers of Bahrain exercised authority throughout the entire
Qatar peninsula during the period 1762-1872

193. Both Arab and Western historians agree, and archaeological evidence
confirms,116 that the city of Zubarah was founded around the middle of the eighteenth
century by the Al-Khalifa.117 With the assistance of the Naim and other tribes, the
Al-Khalifa quickly pacified the local tribes. Situated at the crossroads of the Indian
trade routes and beside the Bahrain pearl banks, Zubarah prospered under the
governance and protection of the Al-Khalifa.118 Mohammed Ben Khalifa, Sheikh of

Zubarah, built the Murair Fort in 1768 in order to defend Zubarah.119

194. In response to attacks from the Persian governor of the islands of Bahrain, the Al-
Khalifa and their allies, which now included tribes from throughout the Qatar
peninsula, challenged and defeated the Persian garrison on the main island of Bahrain
in 1783.120 The Al-Khalifa quickly consolidated their control over all the islands of
the Bahrain archipelago121 and appointed a representative to govern them. 122

195. Toward the end of the eighteenth century, the Al-Khalifa decided to establish
their court on the main island of Bahrain, and then on the island of Muharraq.123
They appointed a governor in Zubarah to rule the region and the remainder of the
Qatar peninsula on their behalf. 124 In its Memorial and Counter-Memorial, Bahrain
has submitted evidence of more than a dozen examples of the continued exercise of

authority by the Al-Khalifa Rulers over the Qatar peninsula until 1872, shortly after
the Ottomans placed a garrison in Doha. These examples include the facts that:

· The Naim tribe, which recognised the authority of the Al-Khalifa Rulers, continued
to reside in Zubarah;125· In his 1821-1829 survey of the Gulf, Captain Brucks recorded that the population of
the entire Qatar peninsula - including the settlements at Zubarah and Doha (then called
Bida) - recognised the authority of the Al-Khalifa Rulers;126

· In January 1823, in the course of his voyage of discovery along the Arabian coast,

Lieutenant McLeod, British Political Resident, paid a visit to Doha. Lorimer states that
McLeod found the place to be a dependency of Bahrain and under the administration
of a Shaikh of the Al Bu Ainain;127

· During the 1830s, the Al-Khalifa Ruler encouraged certain of his subjects to settle in
his dominions in the Qatar peninsula;128

· During the 1840s, the Al-Khalifa Ruler planned and oversaw the development and
expansion of Zubarah in order to concentrate and strengthen his resources in the Qatar
peninsula;129

· During the 1840s, Britain welcomed the appointment of the Al-Khalifa Ruler's new
governor in Doha because it considered that this would reduce piracy;130

· During the 1850s, when some of the tribes around Doha defected to the Wahhabi
Emir, the Al-Khalifa Ruler and the Wahhabi Emir reached an agreement that enabled
the defectors once more to become vassals of the Ruler of Bahrain, provided that they
paid tribute for the return of the Al-Khalifa forts;131

· An Indian Navy report noted that after the above-referenced agreement was reached,

the Al-Khalifa representative went to Doha and: "all the (Doha) people came to (the
Al-Khalifa representative) to ask pardon and he pardoned them all except Sheikh
Fuldal, the Sheikh of Wukra";132

· In 1854, the British Political Resident reported to the Government of Bombay that
Bahrain's territory included the Qatar peninsula;133

· In 1859, Britain fined the Ruler of Bahrain two hundred dollars in respect of a piracy
committed by the inhabitants of Doha;134

· During the 1860s, the British Navy's Persian Gulf Pilot noted that the Al-Thani were
"under Bahrain";135

· During the 1860s, the British Political Resident warned the Wahhabi Emir to desist
in his intrigues in the Qatar peninsula amongst: "the tribes subject to Bahrain on the
Gutter coast" because "the quiet of the Chiefs and people of Bahrain [was] being
disturbed". Britain warned that Bahrain would declare war on the Wahhabi Emir in
order to "exercise [its] legitimate rights and prerogatives;"136

· During the 1860s, the Ruler of Bahrain appointed a new governor in the Qatar

peninsula with a mandate to prevent piracy. Britain recorded Bahrain's measures
against piracy on the east coast of the Qatar peninsula around Doha;137

· In 1863, the British Political Resident described his proposed tour of the Gulf as
starting in Bahrain and then proceeding: "to the southward of that Chief's Country andpassing along the coast line to visit the Chiefs of Abotabhee, Dibaye, Sharga, Asjman
Amalajoru and Rasul Khyma."; thus the first chief south of Bahrain was considered to
be the Ruler of Abu Dhabi;138 and

· The Al-Khalifa Rulers imposed taxes and tithes on the inhabitants of the Qatar

peninsula as a matter of course.139

196. The historical record is so compelling that even the Qatar Memorial and Counter-
Memorial cannot avoid recounting numerous examples of the exercise of authority
over the Qatar peninsula by the Rulers of Bahrain during the nineteenth century,
including:

· The Rulers of Bahrain arresting individuals on the Qatar peninsula;140

· Inhabitants of the Qatar peninsula apologising, as subjects of Bahrain, for their
misbehaviour to the Al-Khalifa Ruler;141

· The son of the leader of the Doha merchants supplicating the Ruler of Bahrain in

relation to taxes;142

· The Rulers of Bahrain imposing taxes throughout the Qatar peninsula;143

· The Rulers of Bahrain defeating and punishing rebellion against their authority in
Doha;144

· The Rulers of Bahrain rejecting Wahhabi interference in the punishment of the Doha
rebels;145 and

_ The Rulers of Bahrain appointing a succession of governors in the Qatar peninsula,
including Doha.146

SECTION 3.3 Qatar's claim that the Al-Thani controlled the entire Qatar
peninsula from the middle of the nineteenth century is contradicted by the
historical record

197. The historical record clearly shows that the Al-Thani never exercised control over
the entire Qatar peninsula in the second half of the nineteenth century. Furthermore,
evidence from the historical record that has been submitted by Bahrain does not

support the claim of Al-Thani dominance, as Qatar attempts to suggest.147 To the
contrary, it demonstrates that:

· By the mid-nineteenth century, the Al-Thani family began to exercise influence in
Doha, not as tribal leaders but as pearl merchants and tax collectors (for the Al-
Khalifa);148

· The Ruler of Bahrain received tribute and taxes from all inhabitants of the Qatar
peninsula until local chiefs in the Doha region rebelled in 1866. The rebellion was
quashed with the assistance of the Ruler of Abu Dhabi, who thus recognised the Ruler
of Bahrain's authority over the entirety of the Qatar peninsula. Following the quashingof the rebellion, Mohammed bin Thani undertook to collect taxes and tributes from the
other local chiefs so that payments to the Ruler of Bahrain would be resumed;149

· The 1864 Persian Gulf Pilot described the Al-Thani chief as having some authority
only over the chiefs in the towns of Doha, little Doha and Al-Bida (all located within

one mile of each other);150

· In 1870, Mohammed bin Thani, confronted with troubles from local Qatari tribes,
supplicated the Ruler of Bahrain for assistance. In so doing, he described himself as
"...your [the Ruler of Bahrain's] subject...";151

· Internal Ottoman documents show that the Ottomans considered "Qatar" to be the

area in the south-east of the peninsula around Doha;152

· An 1871 Ottoman report described Mohammed bin Thani as a "tax collector" having
"no rule over the other villages [outside of Doha]";153

· Another 1871 Ottoman report confirmed that the Al-Thani had no control over the

Qatar peninsula outside of Doha;154

· In 1871, when the Ottomans presented the Al-Thani with four Ottoman flags to plant
on Al-Thani territory, the Al-Thani raised them only in and around Doha, indicating
their own recognition of the limited extent of their territory;155

· In 1873, the subservience of the Al-Thani to the Ottomans was such that the Al-

Thani were powerless to prevent Ottoman soldiers committing acts of piracy from
Doha;156

· In 1874, Jasim bin Thani complained to the Ottomans that the Doha merchant
confederation remained subject to the effective exercise of Bahraini authority;157

· Also in 1874, Jasim bin Thani announced publicly the arrival of the Al-Khalifa
pretender (Sheikh Nasir bin Mubarak) in Doha and confirmed that Doha remained
under the authority of the Al-Khalifa;158 even in 1881, Sheikh Nasir informed British
officials that Jasim, as well as Doha and its environs, remained under effective Al-
Khalifa (meaning his own) control;159

· An 1878 Ottoman map described Qatar as a location in the south-east of the Qatar

peninsula around present-day Doha.160

· In 1880, Jasim bin Thani admitted to the British Political Resident that the northern
parts of the Qatar peninsula "belong to ... Bahrain";161

· In 1881, a letter from Jasim bin Thani to the British Political Resident described his
father's authority in 1868 as covering only Doha Town and Al-Wakra and described

his own position as entailing "...no power over [the Katar coast]";162

· In 1886 and 1887, British records noted that dissension over the Al-Thani rule in
Doha had caused "seceders" to leave the jurisdiction of the Al-Thani and settle in thenorth-west of the Qatar peninsula, where they had placed themselves under the
protection of the Naim tribe who were loyal to the Ruler of Bahrain;163

· By 1888, the Al-Thani chief lived in fear of the Ottomans and considered fleeing
Doha;164

· In 1888, Britain described the part of the Qatar peninsula over which the Ottomans
and Al-Thani exercised authority to be confined to Doha, where the "Sheikh of el
Bidaa (Doha), on the eastern side of El Katr Peninsula ... has allowed the Turks to
maintain a small military post ... since 1872"; 165

· In 1893, Jasim bin Thani desired to return to paying tribute to the Ruler of Bahrain in

an attempt to escape from his relationship with the Ottoman Empire, and requested to
be allowed to reside in the northern part of Qatar "within the [Ruler of Bahrain's]
jurisdiction";166

· In 1893, Jasim bin Thani acknowledged to Britain the rights of Bahrain in the Qatar
peninsula and Doha and expressed his willingness to pay tribute as before;167

· An 1893 Ottoman report described the three principal tribes in the Qatar peninsula as
being the Beni Hajir, the al-Munasir and the Naim, of whom the Naim were described
as being Bahraini; the Al-Thani were described as having won over only one of the
lesser subdivisions of the Beni Hajir tribe and part of the al-Munasir tribe;168

· In 1898, an attack by the Chief of Doha on the Ottoman garrison stationed there

resulted in the Ottomans confiscating the Chief's property;169

· In 1900, Britain intervened directly to maintain order within the Doha merchant
confederation, giving no indication of recognising Al-Thani authority within
Doha;170

· In 1903, the Ottomans proposed to establish their administration in Zubarah. Britain
confronted the Ottomans, citing Bahrain's sovereignty over Zubarah, and the Ottomans
backed down.171

· In 1903, the opinion of British officials was that the Al-Thani's already weak
position, even within Doha, was likely to continue to deteriorate;172

· Six attempts by the Ottoman Empire and the Al-Thani to extend their influence to the
Zubarah region, in 1874, 1878, 1888, 1891, 1895 and 1903, were all challenged by the
Ruler of Bahrain, and resulted in unmitigated failure;173

· In 1905 Britain considered re-establishing Bahrain's sovereignty beyond Zubarah and
over the entire Qatar peninsula except Doha, noting that the Al-Thani controlled only
the Doha enclave; and174

· The Ottomans, throughout the period of their presence in Arabia, considered the
"Qatar province" as being the region of Doha, as opposed to the Zubarah and Udaid
territories elsewhere on the peninsula, and repeatedly acknowledged that they neverexercised any effective control over the peninsula other than over Doha and its
immediate environs.175

198. The foregoing also confirms the falsity of Qatar's allegation that while the
Ottomans were "nominally" in control of the whole peninsula, it was the Al-Thani

who wielded the real power in Qatar during the Ottoman period and thus were
instrumental in helping the Ottomans to assert their authority over the whole peninsula
"despite their limited physical presence".176

199. Qatar's claims that the Al-Thani controlled the peninsula from the mid-nineteenth
century are contradicted, not only by the wealth of evidence submitted by Bahrain, of
which the examples cited above and in Bahrain's earlier pleadings are but a sample

taken from a mass of evidence, but also by Qatar's own evidence, which includes:

· The Ruler of Bahrain arresting individuals in the Qatar peninsula in 1867;177

· Inhabitants of the Qatar peninsula apologising to the Ruler of Bahrain for their
behaviour;178

· The son of the leader of the Doha merchants supplicating the Ruler of Bahrain in
relation to taxes;179

· The Ruler of Bahrain imposing taxes throughout the Qatar peninsula;180

· The Ruler of Bahrain defeating and punishing the Doha rebels;181

· The Ruler of Bahrain rejecting Wahhabi interference in the affair;182 and

· Britain preventing the Ottomans from appointing administrators for Zubarah and
Udaid.183

200. Qatar describes Mohammed bin Thani as having risen to the position of
paramount Sheikh in Qatar by the 1850s.184 However, ignoring Qatar's references to
the

forged documents, the only admissible item of evidence cited by Qatar for this
contention in fact shows the limited extent of Al-Thani authority at that time and into
the 1860s.185 Qatar quotes from Palgrave, at paragraph 2.25 of its Counter-Memorial,

who, rather than supporting Qatar's assertion that "even prior to the events of 1867 and
1868, Mohammed bin Thani was acknowledged as head of the entire province of
Qatar",186 describes Mohammed bin Thani in 1862-1863 as:

"...governor of Bedaa' [Doha]...[who] has in matter of fact very little authority
over the other villages [of the surrounding area]..."; and as

"...only a sort of collector-in-chief or general revenue-gatherer, whose
occupation is to look after and bring in the annual tribute on the pearl fishery."

Moreover, Palgrave reported that the Ruler of Bahrain exercised "a sort of control or
presidential authority in Katar".187201. Bahrain has previously described how Doha only began to gain importance from
the mid-nineteenth century when the pearling banks to the east opened.188 Thereafter,
the Al-Thani slowly emerged as the leading family in the Doha merchant
confederacy.189 Nevertheless, even by 1864 the Persian Gulf Pilot recorded that Doha
and the Al-Thani remained subject to the authority of the Al-Khalifa.190

202. Qatar asserts that Britain recognised Al-Thani authority over the peninsula. Yet
Qatar also acknowledges that when Britain sought assurances from Jasim bin Thani
concerning acts of piracy emanating from the east coast of the peninsula, Jasim
expressly disclaimed responsibility, professing that he lacked the power to accede to
Britain's requests.191 Qatar attempts to explain this by quoting at length an extract
from a book by Rosemarie Zahlan - commissioned by the Government of Qatar

entitled The Creation of Qatar - in which the author speculates that this disclaimer may
not have reflected the "true position".192 This hypothesis is advanced by Zahlan
without reference to any primary sources.193 An unsupported hypothesis which
contradicts the genuine historical record provides no support for Qatar's fictive
rendition of the history of the peninsula.194

203. Qatar states that by 1905 it was clear that the Al-Thani had established their

authority in the south-west of the peninsula.195 Yet to substantiate its claim Qatar
refers only to a list of isolated bedouin raids during the nineteenth century. 196 These
provide no evidence of Al-Thani authority over any part of the peninsula. Qatar also
states that it had authority over the tribes of the interior,197t refers only to troops
that were maintained by the Al-Thani who lived in or around Doha.198 Qatar cites an
1881 gathering of warriors from various parts of the Qatar peninsula when Doha was

under threat from Abu Dhabi, yet acknowledges that, other than the inhabitants of
Doha, Jasim bin Thani could only request that certain of the tribes of the peninsula
come to his aid, not demand it.199 This again demonstrates the lack of Al-Thani
authority in the peninsula rather than the exercise of it.

SECTION 3.4 The Ottoman Empire expanded into the south-east of the Qatar
peninsula through the Al-Thani chiefs of Doha Town in 1871

204. In 1871, the Al-Thani invited the Ottomans to occupy Doha, hoping thereby to
use the Ottoman presence to wrest themselves from the authority of the Al-Khalifa in
Doha and eventually to expand the area under their control from Doha and its
environs. Examples of the limited extent of the area under the influence of the Al-
Thani and the Ottoman Empire during this period can be found in paragraph 197,
supra. Furthermore, no less than 10 official Ottoman documents originating from the

highest levels of the Ottoman government and dating from the last decade of the
nineteenth and first two decades of the twentieth centuries acknowledge that the
Ottoman Empire never exercised any effective control over the Qatar peninsula apart
from Doha and its immediate environs.200

205. Qatar asserts that the arrival of the Ottomans did little to alter the political

situation in Qatar, quoting Lorimer (out of context) to that effect.201 However,
Lorimer's conclusion is not as Qatar would imply, i.e., that the unchanged political
situation was one of Al-Thani dominance over the entire Qatar peninsula. As
described above, prior to the Ottoman arrival, the Al-Thani were the leading family in
the environs of Doha but little more.202 They were still subject to overall Al-Khalifaauthority in the Qatar peninsula. Bahrain agrees with Qatar that the extent of Al-Thani
authority did not alter in 1871. The Al-Thani still had no authority over the peninsula
outside of Doha. Lorimer's text supports no argument to the contrary.

206. Qatar refers to Sheikh Jasim's appointment in 1876 as kaimakam of the kaza of

Qatar and asserts that this acknowledged Jasim's position of authority over the entire
peninsula.203 Again, Qatar's assertion is unsupported by the historical record, which
amply demonstrates that, throughout their occupation of Doha, the Ottomans
considered the kaza of Qatar to be restricted to the environs of Doha and never
considered themselves to be in effective authority over the remainder of the
peninsula.204 Furthermore, Qatar is wrong in its assertion that Zubarah and Udaid
were considered part of the kaza of Qatar. This is most vividly established by the 1878

Ottoman Map submitted by Bahrain with its Memorial.205

207. Qatar quotes at length from a variety of internal British correspondence, asserting
that such correspondence supports its claim that the British authorities tacitly
recognised Ottoman and Al-Thani control over the entire peninsula.206 The
correspondence cited in fact demonstrates quite the opposite.207

208. In attempting to show that the Al-Thani exercised authority in Zubarah, Qatar
also cites Saldanha.208 However, the text referred to makes no mention of Zubarah,
merely referring to Mohamed bin Thani as one of the "Gwuttur chiefs" who had an
influence over events on the "Katar coast" (i.e., around Doha).209 A more relevant
extract from that text, included in the same annex to Qatar's Memorial, is an 1874
letter from Colonel Ross made in the context of Ottoman complaints against Bahrain's

activities on the mainland:

"The portion of the Naim tribe residing at Zobarah had not either avowed
allegiance to Turkey nor been reduced to subjection, so that it is impossible
they could be in the position of revolted subjects. As regards Zobarah, that
place has been hitherto considered by the Sheikhs of Bahrain, past and present,
as a dependency of the Island, and used as a summer residence. Without

entering on the Bahrain claim, it is at least certain that the Turkish
Government have never directly or indirectly assumed possession of the place,
or openly claimed it. Their pretensions are put forward for the first time."210
(Emphasis in the original.)

209. The phrase "directly or indirectly" rebuts any Qatari claim that the Al-Thani
exercised any authority in Zubarah. Rather than amounting to tacit acknowledgement

by Britain of Al-Thani or Ottoman authority in Zubarah in the 1870s, this episode
constitutes express denial.

210. Qatar points to the instructions provided to the Ruler of Bahrain by the British
Political Resident in 1895 to abstain from interfering in the affairs of the mainland as
being implicit recognition of Al-Thani rights in Zubarah at that time. As it does so

frequently, Qatar again bases its analysis on Zahlan.211 However, Zahlan's
interpretation of history on this point is yet again unsubstantiated by reference to
primary sources. It hardly could be, because those sources clearly show that the British
policy of non-interference was not a recognition of anything other than the Britishdesire to maintain maritime peace.212 Whenever the Ottomans or the Al-Thani
attempted to act in Zubarah they were prevented by Britain and Bahrain.213

211. Following their 1871 expansion into the Arabian peninsula, including Doha, the
Ottomans showed no immediate interest in exercising authority in the barren and

practically unpopulated Qatar peninsula. Initially, during the 1870s, Britain tolerated
the Ottoman's entry into Doha. British officials hoped that the Ottomans would
thereby assist in preventing piracies in the Gulf. However, Britain's initial position was
quickly reversed when it became evident that the Ottomans were essentially incapable
of exercising authority in Doha, let alone more widely in the Qatar peninsula. By the
end of the 1870s, the Ottomans had not extended their administration beyond Doha
and Britain began its policy - successfully prosecuted until the departure of the

Ottoman garrison from Doha in 1915 - of actively opposing Ottoman and Al-Thani
attempts to expand beyond Doha.214 Indeed, the Ottomans themselves acknowledged
Britain's eventual role in preventing their administration of the peninsula beyond
Doha.215

SECTION 3.5 Qatar's claim that the 1868 personal undertakings, the 1913
Anglo-Ottoman Convention and the 1916 Anglo-Al-Thani agreement

demonstrate that its borders were settled and included the entire peninsula and
all adjacent islands is contradicted by British, Ottoman, Bahraini, Saudi Arabian
and regional history

212. Qatar asserts that the 1868 agreements recognised the separation of Bahrain and
Qatar, the latter's territory being the entirety of the Qatar peninsula. Bahrain has

already shown this to be false.216

213. Qatar acknowledges that the principal object of these agreements was to maintain
the maritime peace. Yet Qatar then leaps from that statement to the conclusion that, as
both Bahrain and the Al-Thani were party to the agreements and both were bound by
the agreements to refrain from acts of maritime aggression, the sea was to act as a
buffer between Bahrain and Qatar, thus evidencing Britain's recognition that the

entirety of the Qatar peninsula constituted the State of Qatar, while Bahrain was
limited to its islands.217The simple fact that both Bahrain and the Al-Thani
undertook to refrain from acts of maritime aggression does not support Qatar's
conclusion. Qatar's analysis rests on the presumption that the Al-Khalifa's authority
extended over only the Bahrain Islands - the very proposition that Qatar is trying
(unsuccessfully) to prove. Qatar cites no historical source to evidence its fanciful
interpretation of these agreements; no such source exists.

214. Neither the agreements of 6 September and 12 September 1868, which Qatar
describes as the "Main Agreements",218 nor the undertaking given by the Al-Thani
leader to continue to pay tribute to the Ruler of Bahrain, make any specific reference
to the extent of Al-Thani territory, thus depriving Qatar of any basis for its assertions
that the 1868 agreements evidenced Al-Thani authority over the entire peninsula.

Rather, the 12 September 1868 agreement, signed by Mohamed bin Thani and wherein
he promised, inter alia, to "return to Dawka [Doha] and reside peaceably in that
port",219 provides an indication of the British view of the limited extent of Mohamed
bin Thani's territory. If the agreement contemplated Al-Thani rule over the entire
Qatar peninsula, it would not have sought to restrict Mohamed bin Thani to only onearea of his territory. If anything, the agreements necessarily imply that Al-Thani
territory was viewed by Britain at that time as being limited to the port of Doha.
Furthermore, the fact that Mohammed bin Thani undertook to pay tribute to the Ruler
of Bahrain confirms the former's subservience to the latter.

215. Qatar invokes the work of A. de L. Rush to support its interpretation of the events
of 1868. However, the cited passages are not based on the historical record. A glance
at Rush's book is sufficient to reveal that its analysis of the 1868 events is

essentially unsupported by reference to any authorities. Furthermore, it contradicts the
primary sources, of which examples are referred to above, all of which clearly show
that the Al-Thani and Doha remained subject to Al-Khalifa authority after the 1868

events, as they had been before.220

216. Qatar further asserts that the 1913 Anglo-Ottoman Convention demonstrates that
Qatar's borders were settled at that time and included the entire peninsula and all
adjacent islands.221 Bahrain has already demonstrated that:

· The 1913 Convention was never ratified and is neither legally relevant nor
historically determinative;222

· It was already irrelevant and did not reflect current reality even at the time it was
completed;223

· The negotiations prior to the Convention being drafted evidence Britain's recognition

of the continuation of Bahrain's rights on the peninsula;224

· The final text of the Convention contained decisions not grounded in policy but
based on the personal ideas of the Ottoman Minister in London, designed to save
Ottoman face;225 and

· The Al-Thani hold over Doha itself was already tenuous at that time.226

217. Moreover, the 1913 Convention made no reference to the Hawar Islands
adjoining the peninsula, although it did refer to other unrelated islands. Qatar's
assertion that the Hawar Islands were included within Article 11 of the Convention is
thus without substance.227

218. Qatar in its Counter-Memorial again makes reference to Britain's policy of
advising non-interference by Bahrain in the affairs of the peninsula. As has been
amply demonstrated elsewhere,228 this did not constitute British recognition of a lack
of Al-Khalifa rights on the peninsula, but rather evidenced Britain's intention to
safeguard Bahrain's rights itself.

219. Qatar further asserts that the 1916 Anglo-Al-Thani Treaty demonstrates that its

borders were settled at that time to include the entire peninsula and all adjacent
islands. Qatar's assertions are unsupported by more than its present assertion and are
even contradicted by both the text of the Treaty and its historical context. Bahrain has
already shown that:· The 1916 Treaty did not define the extent of the territory of the Sheikh of Qatar, a
fact acknowledged by Qatar;229

· The text of the 1916 Treaty expressly acknowledged Bahrain's rights over the
peninsula;230

· The Sheikh of Qatar admitted to the British Political Resident in 1934 that the 1916
Treaty "does not include the interior but only the coast...";231

· The British Government shared the Sheikh of Qatar's view;232

· Following 1916, Al-Thani authority was limited even within Doha;233

· Both Britain and Qatar continued to recognise Bahrain's rights over the Qatar
peninsula, in particular over Zubarah, post 1916;234

· Following 1916, the Ruler of Qatar paid an annual tribute to the King of Saudi
Arabia;235

· Following 1916, Saudi Arabia considered Qatar's territory as limited to the inhabited
towns of the peninsula's east coast, the remainder of the peninsula being part of Saudi
Arabia's territories;236 and

· Bahrain continued to exercise authority over the Zubarah region during the period of
1916 to 1937.237

220. It is also worth noting that none of the genuine historical documents submitted by
Qatar support its claim that the 1916 Treaty defined the extent of Qatar's territories in
the manner claimed by Qatar.238 Without the forged documents to provide a
"context" for Qatar's convoluted interpretation of the historical record, Qatar's claims
remain groundless.

SECTION 3.6 Qatar's claim that the Rulers of Bahrain were unable to exercise
authority over even the main island of Bahrain during the nineteenth century is
not supported by the evidence

221. In an attempt to bolster its claims concerning the extent of Al-Thani influence,
Qatar makes various assertions about the Al-Khalifa being in less than full control of

Bahrain's main island in the nineteenth century.239 None of these assertions can
withstand scrutiny. They are contradicted by reliable historical records.

222. The Al-Khalifa have been in control of the islands of Bahrain since their conquest
in 1783. Purportedly relying on Lorimer,240 Qatar claims that, prior to 1923, the Al-
Khalifa controlled only the north and centre of Bahrain's main island. However, the
extract from Lorimer not only contradicts Qatar's own assertion, but supports

Bahrain's continuing rights on the Qatar peninsula. Lorimer states that Sheikh Isa bin
Ali (Ruler of Bahrain, 1869-1932) personally ruled the island of Muharraq and the
environs of Manama "unless when absent on sporting expeditions to the
mainland,"241 while the remainder of Bahrain's main island was primarily ruled by
the Shaikh's "brother, sons, nephews and other near relations",242 that is, othermembers of the Al-Khalifa family as delegated. Thus, Qatar's evidence, rather than
supporting its own assertion, shows that Lorimer understood the entire main island of
Bahrain and at least parts of the Qatar peninsula to be under direct Al-Khalifa rule.

223. Qatar claims that, prior to the 1860s, there were internal struggles amongst the

Al-Khalifa for supremacy over all of Bahrain's territories. Bahrain notes that even
Qatar does not claim that dynastic struggles within the ruling family ever challenged
overall Al-Khalifa control. Qatar's assertions in fact acknowledge that overall Al-
Khalifa authority was never in doubt.243

224. Qatar claims that Bahrain's description of the history of Al-Khalifa control over
the Qatar peninsula ignores various internal dynastic struggles and regional rivalries.

This is incorrect. Bahrain's submissions have fully addressed the few incidents noted
by Qatar.244 Bahrain has never claimed that the rule of the Al-Khalifa was without its
challenges or that there were no isolated internal Al-Khalifa dynastic struggles and
regional rivalries. 245 The critical point, however, is that there is no evidence that the
dominance of the Al-Khalifa over the Qatar peninsula prior to the Ottoman arrival in
Doha in 1871 met with any successful or sustained challenge; certainly none
originating from within the Qatar peninsula itself.246

225. Qatar's comment to the effect that Bahrain makes no mention in its Memorial of
Al-Khalifa control over Dowasir villages on the main island of Bahrain is surprising,
to say the least. It inexplicably ignores the mass of evidence adduced by Bahrain
establishing the loyalty of the Dowasir to the Al-Khalifa from the eighteenth century
onwards.247

226. Persia was never a genuine threat to Bahrain following the Al-Khalifa's
consolidation of their authority over the Bahrain islands in the late eighteenth and
early nineteenth centuries. Qatar states that Persia/Iran maintained a claim to the main
island until 1970,248 but does not explain that this claim was a result of Persia having
occupied the main island only for a brief time until it was expelled by the Al-Khalifa
in 1783; and

that this claim was maintained thereafter for formal reasons of prestige rather than
realistic ambition. Despite occasional verbal reiterations in the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries, the claim was never supported by relevant action, whether
diplomatic or military, and was dismissed out of hand by both Britain and Bahrain
whenever it was made.249

227. The Muscat threats to Bahrain's islands in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
centuries were swiftly repelled. Qatar correctly states that the Rulers of Muscat and
the Al-Khalifa vied for control over the islands.250 However, the fact that the Al-
Khalifa, who continued to use Zubarah as a base for counter-attacks against Muscat
during that period,251 were always able to re-establish their authority is evidence of
the overall supremacy of the Al-Khalifa over the islands of Bahrain at that time.252

228. Qatar is correct in asserting that the Wahhabi's made various threats to Bahrain's
territories in the early nineteenth century.253 However, the fact that the Al-Khalifa
were always ultimately successful in repelling these threats yet again emphasisesrather than detracts from Bahrain's overall supremacy of the region during that
period.254

229. Egypt never exercised any authority over Al-Khalifa territory. Qatar describes
Egyptian activities and what it calls Bahrain's payment of "tribute" to Egypt in

1839.255 Bahrain has already shown that Egypt's foray into the Arabian peninsula
lasted for only one year (from 1839 to 1840), during a brief time when Egypt was
independent from the Ottomans. Bahrain did on one single occasion pay a modest sum
to the Egyptian forces in order that they not approach Bahrain. Rather than
demonstrating Bahrain's subservience or a threat to its authority, however, this sum
was designed to neutralise an ephemeral menace to Bahrain's peaceful enjoyment of
its territory.0

230. Qatar's claim that the Rulers of Bahrain were unable to exercise authority over
even the main island of Bahrain during the nineteenth century can therefore only be
seen as a feeble attempt to distract attention from the Al-Thani's tenuous position
around Doha.

231. Finally, Bahrain notes that Qatar has included a section in its Counter-Memorial
entitled "The myth of Bahrain's maritime supremacy and the failure of its expansionist
policies".1 Bahrain is uncertain how to respond to this gratuitous and rather vitriolic
section. Aside from idle and unsubstantiated speculation in its introduction, it merely
recounts the results of negotiations whereby the Ottoman Empire purchased Bahrain's
sovereignty over Zakhnuniya Island and whereby Saudi Arabia and Bahrain resolved
two conflicting territorial claims and agreed on a joint revenue sharing scheme over

certain maritime areas. The relevance of these matters to the present dispute is not
apparent. Nor is it explained by Qatar.

CHAPTER 4

THE EVIDENCE OF BAHRAIN'S SOVEREIGNTY OVER THE ZUBARAH
REGION IS PREPONDERANT

SECTION 4.1 The Rulers of Bahrain exercised authority over the north-west of
the Qatar peninsula and the Zubarah region until 1937

232. Bahrain has submitted evidence in its Memorial and Counter-Memorial that the
Rulers of Bahrain continued to exercise authority over the north-west of the Qatar

peninsula until 1937.2 This contrasts starkly with the lack of any reference by Qatar to
any Qatari exercise of authority over the Zubarah region.

233. Qatar asserts that the town of Zubarah was empty after 1811.3 Not only is no
evidence provided for that allegation, but some of Qatar's own evidence, such as that
noted in the immediately preceding paragraph, demonstrates the contrary. Moreover,
during the 1820s, British officials encountered a settlement there whose inhabitants

acknowledged that they were subjects of the Ruler of Bahrain.4 The north and west of
the Qatar peninsula continued to be populated by members of the Naim-led tribal
confederation throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a situation
which only changed when they were forced out of the Zubarah region by Qatar's 1937
invasion.5234. The Naim and the Al-Khalifa had a mutually beneficial relationship which
permitted the Al-Khalifa to maintain control over their territories in the Qatar
peninsula and at the same time enabled the Naim to consolidate their leadership of the
confederation of tribes in the north of the peninsula. The system of ikrimiyyah,
whereby benefits were received by important Arab tribes from their rulers, was

integral to the Al-Khalifa-Naim relationship. In return for such support, the Naim paid
taxes and provided services to the Ruler of Bahrain.6 The public record provides
evidence of numerous examples of this relationship, including:7

· The Naim's assistance in the 1848 defeat of a challenger to the Al-Khalifa Ruler;8

· The Naim chief's designation by the Ruler of Bahrain as his tax collector for the

monies agreed to be paid to him in 1868 by the Al-Thani-led Doha confederation;9

· The Naim's entitlement to keep part of the taxes levied from the Doha
confederation;10

· Reports from the period 1869 to 1887 showing the Ruler of Bahrain giving annual

gifts to the Naim tribe;11

· In 1870, British despatches reported that the Naim had defeated the Beni Hajir tribe
that had been plotting against the Ruler of Bahrain;12

· British evidence from 1873 of the original permission given by the Al-Khalifa to the
Naim to live in Zubarah;13

· Subsequent British evidence of affirmations of fealty from the Naim to the Al-
Khalifa;14

· Britain's recognition on several occasions during the last quarter of the nineteenth
century that Zubarah was a feudal dependency of the Al-Khalifa by virtue of their

relationship with the Naim;15

· In 1878, following the Ottoman and Al-Thani attack on Zubarah, many of the Naim
who had been left homeless took refuge on the main island of Bahrain;16

· Britain's recognition on several occasions during the last quarter of the nineteenth
century that the Naim were dependants of the Al-Khalifa;17

· During the last quarter of the nineteenth century, Jasim bin Thani's express
acknowledgement to Britain of the nature of the relationship between the Naim and
the Ruler of Bahrain;18

· British reports of unrest under Al-Thani rule in Doha, noting that dissenters left Al-
Thani jurisdiction and travelled north until they were "under the protection of the

Noeym tribe who maintain intimate friendly relations with the Chief of Bahrain";19

· An 1893 Ottoman report identifying the Naim tribe as one of the principal tribes of
the Qatar peninsula and expressly recognising their allegiance to the Al-Khalifa;20· The Naim sending their cattle to the main island of Bahrain for protection in times of
trouble;21

· The Ruler of Bahrain distributing money, provisions and cattle to the Naim;22

· The Ruler of Bahrain using Naim tribesmen as soldiers;23

· In 1906, Captain Prideaux of the Royal Navy, while investigating a shipwreck off the
north coast of the Zubarah region, reporting to his superiors on the allegiance of the
Naim to the Al-Khalifa;24

· In 1907, the Naim defeating the Beni Hajir tribe, who had been plotting against the

Ruler of Bahrain;25

· The Naim's integration into the political economy of Bahrain. Until the 1937 attack,
the Naim customarily travelled between the Zubarah region and Bahrain's islands and
many Naim families had homes in both places;26

· Bahrain Government civil lists from the 1920s and 1930s showing members of the
Naim tribe, including the chief of the Al-Jabr (dominant) branch;27

· The Al-Khalifa on a number of occasions giving military and material assistance to
the Naim tribe to defend the Zubarah region, including in 1936 and 1937;28

· On a number of occasions the Naim opposing the invasion of the islands of Bahrain

from the Zubarah region by external forces;29

· Britain's recognition of the relationship between the Naim and the Ruler of Bahrain
when Qatar laid claim to the Zubarah region in 1936 and 1937;30 and

· The departure of the majority of the Naim to Bahrain in the aftermath of Qatar's

attack in 1937 on Zubarah, following their refusal to acquiesce in the Ruler of Qatar's
demand that they swear allegiance to him.31

235. Qatar's assertion that there is no evidence, following the Al-Khalifa's removal to
the Bahrain Islands at the turn of the nineteenth century, of any control or authority by
the Al-Khalifa in Zubarah is thus belied by the historical record.

236. International law recognises that the extent of the authority exercised by a
sovereign may vary according to the nature of the territory in question.32 Qatar's own
submissions recognise the existence and validity of traditional tribal patterns of
governance in Bahrain and Qatar into the mid-twentieth century.33 Seen in this
historical context, the evidence submitted by Bahrain amounts perforce to more than a
personal relationship between the Ruler of Bahrain and the Naim tribe, as claimed by
Qatar.34 It constitutes evidence of the exercise of political and public authority over

the Zubarah region by the Rulers of Bahrain. The allegiance of the Naim-led
confederacy of tribes that inhabited the north-west of the Qatar peninsula and who
remained loyal to Bahrain and the Al-Khalifa throughout the relevant time period,
confirms unassailably the legitimacy of Bahrain's sovereign rights over the Zubarah
region.SECTION 4.2 Qatar's claim that the Ottoman Empire exercised authority over
the Zubarah region cannot withstand scrutiny and is contradicted by the
Ottoman evidence admitting that they never exercised authority there

237. The evidence shows that neither the Ottomans nor the Al-Thani ever exercised

authority over Zubarah and the surrounding region. Qatar's unsupported submissions
concerning Ottoman activities in the Qatar peninsula do not dispel this conclusion:

"although the Ottomans did not establish a permanent garrison in Qatar
elsewhere than in Doha, they ... did from time to time go to other parts of the
peninsula".35

238. The events referred to by Qatar as supposed proof of Al-Thani authority over the
Zubarah region are revealed, on closer inspection, to be nothing more than isolated
incidents - acknowledged to be such by Qatar - in which tribes were sent by the
Ottomans and Al-Thani to the Zubarah region during one or other of their
unsuccessful attempts to impose authority there by force.36 It is irrelevant to argue, as
Qatar does, that the tribes that were in such brief transit through Zubarah were acting

under the direction of the Ottomans or the Al-Thani.

239. On each attempt, Bahrain and Britain prevented the Ottomans and the Al-Thani
from realising their plans in Zubarah. This fact is not contested by Qatar.37 Instead,
Qatar attempts to re-characterise the Ottoman and Al-Thani activities in Zubarah as
something other than attempts to exercise authority.38 In effect, therefore, Qatar has
denied that its activities in Zubarah were related to the exercise of authority.39

240. Nonetheless, Qatar has maintained its unsubstantiated claim that the Ottoman
Empire exercised authority over the Zubarah region.40 In doing so, Qatar relies almost
exclusively on British correspondence taken out of context and dating from the
1870s.41 That correspondence reflects an internal British view, held temporarily
during that decade in anticipation of the eventuality that the Ottomans might attempt
to exercise authority outside Doha. Such prognostications of potential future Ottoman

activity are not a reflection of any actual exercise of Ottoman authority. The fact that
the Ottomans had not ventured beyond Doha by 1879, when Britain reversed its view
and subsequently opposed any Ottoman attempt to exercise authority outside Doha, is
reflected in the texts of the 1870s British correspondence quoted in Qatar's own
submissions:

· "... it would beather an advantage than otherwise to establish a firm Turkish rule

along the coast ..." (emphasis added);42

· "... Lord Cranbrook does not see any sufficient reason for objecting to the
establishment of such relations between the Turkish authorities in El Hasa and the
tribes of the Guttur peninsula to the north of Odeid, as may be agreeable to the parties
concerned ..." (emphasis added);43 and

· "The Turkish government may ... argue that their present actual position ... does
involve, constructively, domination over the entire [Qatar peninsula] ... We have, in
fact, rather prepared the way for recognition of the eventual establishment of Turkish
rule [there] ..." (emphasis added).44241. The historical record establishes that Britain quickly adopted a policy of opposing
any attempt to extend Ottoman authority beyond Doha. The evidence from the British
and Ottoman archives demonstrates that Bahrain and Britain rebuffed the Ottomans
and the Al-Thani no less than six times in their attempts to exercise authority over the
Zubarah region, starting in the 1870s.45 Indeed, the Ottomans acknowledged Britain's

role in preventing its administration of the Qatar peninsula and that Britain acted as it
did so as to effect Bahrain's rights.46 This is also expressly recognised - vis-à-vis the
Zubarah region - by Qatar in its Counter-Memorial.47

242. Bahrain has elsewhere described the overwhelming evidence from the Ottoman
archives which confirms the limited authority exercised by the Ottomans.48 The
evidence includes more than 20 documents showing that Ottoman officials and

government bodies at the highest levels recognised that the Ottoman Empire, and thus
the Al-Thani, never exercised authority outside of Doha and its environs during the
Ottoman presence in Doha from 1871 to 1915. It is therefore not surprising that Qatar
has submitted no authentic Ottoman evidence in support of its assertions, for there is
none. Indeed, Qatar contradicts its own arguments on this issue when it admits:

"It is also apparent ... that the British intervened with the Porte and prevented

the implementation of Ottoman plans to rebuild Zubarah in 1891 because they
had declined to admit the claim of Turkey over the Qatar coast where Zubarah
was located."49

243. Qatar has submitted no direct evidence that the Ottomans ever extended their
authority beyond Doha. Rather, Qatar appears to acknowledge the limited extent of

Ottoman influence on the Qatar peninsula when it concludes that they were able "via
the authority personally exercised by Sheikh Jasim, their kaimakam, to claim
jurisdiction over all the areas where he exercised such authority."50 As Bahrain has
established, Al-Thani authority in the period 1871 - 1915 never extended much
beyond the confines of Doha.

244. The Ottoman government and high-level Ottoman officials admitted that they

never exercised authority over the Zubarah region. Bahrain has cited no less than 10
examples, drawn from evidence in the Ottoman archives, of high-level Ottoman
officials or government bodies recognising that the Ottoman Empire never exercised
authority outside of Doha and its environs,51 including:

"[Britain] does not recognise that the Ottoman State has any rights of control
over these shores [Zubarah]" (Ottoman Ministerial Report on Bahrain 1895);52

"England claims that Zubarah is under the control of Bahrain" (Ottoman
Foreign Ministry Report on Zubarah 1897);53

"England insists that the Ottoman State has no rights of sovereignty over
[Zubarah]." (Ottoman Foreign Ministry Report 1897);54

"England will not give up claims on Zubara" (Ottoman Council of Ministers,
the Ottoman Cabinet, 1900);55 and "[I]t is vital to end disagreements (with Britain) by putting an end to fruitless
efforts to impose sovereignty in the Katar peninsula." (Ottoman Council of
Ministers, the Ottoman Cabinet, 1913).56

245. These observations were in fact endorsed by none other than Jasim bin Thani

himself. In 1880, referring to Fuwairat and the northern part of the Qatar peninsula in
a letter to the British Political Resident, he confirmed unambiguously:

"I have nothing to do with ... the northern countries, for they belong to the
parts of Bahrain."57

246. Again, in 1893, Jasim bin Thani, seeking to leave Doha and thus escape from the

Ottomans, appealed to the British Political Resident for protection and asked the Ruler
of Bahrain:

"for permission to reside in the northern part of Qatar within the latter's
jurisdiction."58

247. Contrary to the unfounded assertions by Qatar in its Memorial and Counter-
Memorial,59 the British public archives make it clear that neither Britain nor Bahrain
recognised or consented to any Ottoman or Al-Thani claim to control over the entire
Qatar peninsula.60 Indeed, in its Memorial and Counter-Memorial, Bahrain has
referred to evidence that Bahrain's rights in Zubarah were recognised by Britain during
the Ottoman presence in Doha.61 Bahrain's previous submissions contain no less than
eight examples of Britain recognising and even promoting Bahrain's rights in the

Zubarah region during the first decade of the twentieth century alone.62

248. The final and definitive pronouncement on the subject was an Ottoman
government report on the Qatar peninsula dated 1917. It concluded that there was
never a time when the Ottoman Empire ever exercised genuine control over the Qatar
peninsula.63

SECTION 4.3 Qatar's claim that the allegiance of the Naim tribe is irrelevant to
establishing Bahraini sovereignty over the Zubarah region is undermined by
Qatar's own evidence

249. Qatar insists that Bahrain's explanations about the allegiance of the Naim and the
Naim-led confederation, and its relevance to the issue of sovereignty over the Zubarah

region, have no basis in fact or law.64 Qatar's arguments will be dealt with in turn.

250. Qatar claims that the allegiance of the Naim towards the Ruler of Bahrain is not
proved. However, the historical record of the connection of the Naim to the Al-Khalifa
is clear and unambiguous. Section 4.1 above lists more than 20 examples from the
public archives of the Bahraini-Naim ikrimiyyah during the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries. So clear is the evidence from the public archives - both British and Ottoman

- on the subject of the allegiance of the Naim tribe65 that Qatar has been unable to
avoid referring to and recognising this relationship.66 The Qatar Counter-Memorial
alone contains no less than nine express references to this relationship, based on
evidence from the public archives during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.67 For
example, Qatar unwittingly describes the traditional ikrimiyyah system of reciprocalobligations of Arab rulers and allied tribes when it criticises the nature of the Al-
Khalifa-Naim relationship:

"The so-called "allegiance" of the Naim was "purchased" and nourished with
gifts over a long period, having regard to the same concern for the security of

Bahrain. The Ruler of Bahrain was anxious that the Naim should not aid
anyone in attacking Bahrain. Consistent with this, the British authorities also ...
expressed the view that for the security of Bahrain it was necessary that
Zubarah was either kept uninhabited or peopled only by those friendly to the
Ruler of Bahrain, a view amply exploited by Bahrain."68

Thus, Qatar's own pleadings confirm Bahrain's arguments.

251. Qatar tries to limit the effect of the historical record by arguing that Bahrain
maintained the relationship because the allegiance of the Naim prevented Zubarah
from being used to attack the main island of Bahrain.69 Conjecture about why the
Rulers of Bahrain maintained the relationship is as irrelevant to the issue of
sovereignty over the Zubarah region as conjecture about why Britain maintains

sovereignty over the Channel Islands, or France over Guyana, would be with respect
to issues of title to those territories.

252. Significantly, Qatar does not deny the relationship between Bahrain and the
Naim, although it attempts to defy history in order to mischaracterise the relationship
to suit its purposes. Nor can Qatar deny that for Bahrain the foundation, object and
purpose of the allegiance was the effective control of the Zubarah region. For

example, referring to an 1874 incident, Qatar itself observed:

"The Sheikh of Bahrain sought nevertheless to take advantage of the situation
by seeking leave from the British Resident to reinforce the Naim at Zubarah,
whom he considered to be in great danger. Although he was initially allowed
by the resident to dispatch reinforcements `as a purely defensive measure', the
Government of India disapproved the Resident's action."70

253. And, again, Qatar quotes the following passage from a letter written by the Ruler
of Bahrain in 1875:

"(Bahrain's) connection with Zobarah and the Naeem tribe, whom we have
ordered to dwell there, was, for various reasons, an imperative obligation and

necessity, as you are aware."71

254. The Qatar Counter-Memorial contains a section devoted entirely to an attempt to
show that Bahrain maintained its relationship with the Naim because the latter
controlled Zubarah and thereby enabled Bahrain to protect its island territories from
attack.72 The evidence from that part of its pleadings negates unequivocally the
antithetical assertion made elsewhere in the Qatar Counter-Memorial that there is no

evidence to support what Qatar characterises as Bahrain's "extravagant assertions" that
the Naim ever exercised authority over Zubarah.73

255. At two points in its Counter-Memorial, Qatar attempts to minimise the Bahrain-
Naim relationship by implying that the Naim were mercenaries acting for bothBahrain and Qatar in protecting the Sheikhdoms.74 However, Lorimer (the British
reference work dated 1908 that is quoted at both points as authority for the
proposition) appears merely to be describing, in ignorance of its proper appellation,
the traditional system of ikrimiyyah.75 The reference even fails to distinguish between
the Naim of the north and west of the Qatar peninsula (allied to the Al-Khalifa) and

the smaller group of Naim who moved to Wakra, near Doha, during the mid-
nineteenth century, a confusion that Qatar has seen fit not to clarify.76

256. Qatar also asserts that the Naim did not regularly occupy the Zubarah region.77
To substantiate this claim, Qatar selects evidence of four occasions when the Naim
were present in the Zubarah region and then, with nothing further, concludes that the
Naim were present in Zubarah only on those four occasions.78 Self-evidently, there is

no logical basis for such a conclusion based on that evidence. While Bahrain is not in
a position to demonstrate that the Naim were present in the Zubarah region at every
moment throughout the preceding two centuries, given the nature of the territory and
the historical records kept, the evidence provided by both Bahrain and Qatar is
sufficient to establish a regular and consistent Naim presence in the Zubarah region at
the very least for the eighty years preceding Qatar's 1937 armed attack. Despite Qatar's
wishful speculation, there is no record of these Naim having emigrated from their

tribal territory.

257. Finally, Qatar claims that the relationship between the Naim and the Rulers of
Bahrain was only a personal one and cannot sustain a claim to sovereignty over
territory.79 To support its view, Qatar claims, once more without any substantiating
evidence, that there was no aspect of the relationship that was linked to authority over

territory or people. In response, Bahrain refers again to the list of evidence provided in
Section 4.1 above that contradicts the bald assertion and arguments from Qatar's
pleadings described above.

258. Bahrain reminds the Court of its submissions on the applicable law, included in
Sections 4.2 and 4.4 of its Memorial. International law recognises that in certain
territories that are possessed of exceptional circumstances such as low habitability, of

which the Zubarah region is one, a ruler might establish and maintain title to his
territory by manifestations of dominion or control through tribes who gave him their
allegiance and looked to him for assistance.80 The Rulers of Bahrain did this in
relation to the Zubarah region through the Naim. The Al-Thani never did this.

259. In an attempt to preclude this argument, which is based on the award in the
Dubai-Sharjah arbitration, Qatar tries to distinguish that arbitration from the case at

hand in the following manner:

"The Court will of course appreciate that what is said in the Dubai/Sharjah
arbitration about the allegiance of the Bani Qitab to the Ruler of Sharjah is
wholly dependent upon the facts of that particular case. The region in which
the Bani Qitab lived was largely desert and sparsely populated".81

260. Although it does not complete the thought, apparently Qatar would have the
Court infer that the Zubarah region was not largely desert or sparsely inhabited and
thus the reasoning in the award does not apply in the present case. However, Qatar hasnot even attempted to disprove the plain fact that the Zubarah region, like most of the
Qatar peninsula, is largely desert and was sparsely inhabited.

261. The Naim tribe and the other populations included in the Naim-led tribal
confederation of the north of the Qatar peninsula lived a traditional life until well into

the middle of the twentieth century, based on traditional tribal relationships, concepts
of government and sovereignty. Even Qatar's own pleadings recognise the enduring
primacy of tribal relationships on the political structures of Bahrain and, until recently,
of Qatar. Under the heading "The internal context: existence of a tribal system",
Qatar's Counter-Memorial observes that:

"until 1923 for Bahrain and after World War II for Qatar, the type of

government was "traditional" (tribal), as opposed to the "modern" type." 82

262. Thus, Bahrain's submissions and, ironically, significant parts of Qatar's
submissions confirm the allegiance to Bahrain of the Naim tribe in the Zubarah region
and its relevance to Bahrain's sovereignty there.

SECTION 4.4 Unlike Bahrain, Qatar has submitted no post-Ottoman evidence of
Al-Thani activities in the Zubarah region until shortly before the 1937 attack

263. Qatar has failed to make any comment whatsoever specifically concerning the
Zubarah region in relation to the critical years of 1896-1910.83 This can only be
because the evidence from the public record is so unambiguously and uniformly
consistent with Bahrain's description of history. Qatar compounds this omission by

making no reference to, or providing any evidence of, any specific Ottoman or Al-
Thani activity in the Zubarah region from 1895 until March 1937, shortly before
Qatar's armed attack.84

264. Thus, for the 42 year period between the Al-Thani attack of 1895 and the Al-
Thani attack of 1937, Qatar has been unable to provide any evidence of Al-Thani or
Ottoman activities in the Zubarah region.

265. It is understandable that Qatar has not offered any such genuine evidence: none
exists. To the contrary, for example, as late as 7 June 1932 a report to the Foreign
Secretary of India from the Political Resident discussing negotiations for emergency
aviation landing rights in Al-Thani territory noted of the Al-Thani Ruler that:

"in return for these facilities he hope that the British Government will afford
him their support in the event of these measures bringing upon him the
hostility of his relations or people. I would reply thanking him for the
permission granted and say that in return the British Government undertake to
support his authority within the town of Dohah should his apprehensions prove
true."85

266. Thus, Britain's view was that the authority of the Al-Thani was limited to
Doha and its environs. As further confirmation that the Al-Thani did not
exercise authority over the Zubarah region, British officials concluded in 1932
to 1933 that if they were unable to obtain emergency landing rights from the
Al-Thani Sheikh in his territory around Doha then Britain, which already had such permission from Bahrain within Bahrain's territory, would establish
emergency landing facilities in Zubarah or Dohat Faisakh, some 30 miles to
the south of Zubarah.86 This last evidence highlights sharply the contrast
between the evidence of Bahrain's exercise of authority and the utter lack of
any corresponding evidence of Qatari activities in Zubarah during this period.

SECTION 4.5 Only Qatar's attack on the Zubarah region in 1937 displaced
Bahrain

267. Bahrain's Memorial and Counter-Memorial have already described the details
and effects of the Al-Thani attack on the Naim tribe and the Zubarah region in
1937.87 It was only then that the Al-Thani physically displaced - but did not replace

the authority of - the Al-Khalifa in the Zubarah region. This unlawful dispossession
provides no basis for Qatar's subsequent claims to sovereignty over the Zubarah
region.88

268. Bahrain recalls and repeats its submission that the Court should repair the
illegality that Qatar committed in 1937 by acknowledging Bahrain's title to the

Zubarah region.

SECTION 4.6 Qatar attempts to ignore the 24 officially recorded protests made
by Bahrain between 1937 and 1971 and its own threat to resuscitate Qatar's
claim to the Hawar Islands if Bahrain persisted in its claim to sovereignty over
the Zubarah region

269. In its Counter-Memorial, Qatar repeatedly claims that Bahrain's claim to
sovereignty over the Zubarah region has somehow lapsed following Qatar's 1937
armed attack.89 Bahrain's persistent efforts to have its grievance over the Zubarah
region heard have been described in its Memorial90 and Counter-Memorial.91 In
Section 2.1 of the Bahrain Memorial, the consistent sovereign nature of Bahrain's
claim to the Zubarah region has been detailed by reference to the historical record.

270. The following list summarises the 24 officially recorded protests and claims in
relation to the Zubarah region made by Bahrain to Britain and Qatar from 1937 until
the mid-1960s:

· The 6 July 1937 protest by Bahrain to Britain against the Al-Thani attack on Zubarah
and the Naim-led tribal Confederation;92

· Bahrain's embargo of Qatar from 1937 to 1944 in protest against Qatar's 1937 armed
attack;93

· Further protests and sovereignty claims by Bahrain to Britain during 1939;94

· Bahrain's participation in the mediation of the Zubarah dispute by Britain during

1943 and 1944 following Bahrain's repeated protests and claims;95

· Bahrain's signature of the ultimately unsuccessful 1944 Bahrain-Qatar Agreement on
the Zubarah Region;96· Negotiations with Qatar from 1944 to 1946 regarding the implementation of the 1944
Agreement and the Zubarah dispute itself;97

· Bahrain's repeated sovereignty claims with respect to Zubarah to Britain and Qatar
during 1944 and 1945;98

· Protests and sovereignty claims made by Bahrain in 1946, 1947, and 1948 in relation
to Zubarah;99

· Bahrain's direct overtures to the British Government on the Zubarah issue through its
London lawyer in 1948;100

· Bahrain's direct communications to the British Foreign Minister on the Zubarah issue
in 1948;101

· Britain's effort to mediate another solution with Qatar from 1949 and 1950 prompted
by Bahrain's repeated protests and claims;102

· The unsuccessful 1950 Bahrain-Qatar oral agreement on the status of Zubarah;103

· Bahrain's 1950 protest over Qatar's breach of the 1950 oral agreement;104

· Bahrain's insistence on further British involvement in the dispute in 1952;105

· Bahrain's March 1953 protest against Qatar's activities in Zubarah;106

· The June 1953 claim presented by Bahrain to the British Minister of State for the
Foreign Office;107

· Bahrain's protest and assertion of sovereignty in relation to Zubarah in November
1953;108

· Bahrain's claim to Zubarah in January 1954;109

· Bahrain's participation in May 1954 in a meeting on the Zubarah issue between the
Ruler of Bahrain and the British Political Resident;110

· Bahrain's participation in the unsuccessful British mediation of May 1954;111

· Bahrain's claim to Zubarah in May 1957;112

· Bahrain's continuous reference to and pressing of its claim to Zubarah from 1957 to
1960, as officially recognised by Britain;113

· Bahrain's continued claim against Zubarah in the context of the seabed discussions
that started in 1960;114 and

· Bahrain's claim to Zubarah in 1961.115271. As Bahrain has previously described,116 the issue was joined with Britain and
Qatar after the mid-1960s on a non-confrontational basis. This ample record of
Bahrain's efforts to have its rights to the Zubarah region restored - rights of which it
has never been deprived by any legal process - contrasts sharply with the mere six
objections raised by Qatar in relation to the Hawar Islands Arbitral Award (three of

them in the months immediately following the Award).117

272. Thus, Qatar has failed to undermine the facts of Bahrain's continuous exercise of
sovereignty over the Zubarah region from the eighteenth century until 1937. Similarly,
Qatar has not denied the fact that Bahrain's sovereignty over the Zubarah region was
internationally recognised. Co-ordinately, Qatar has failed to produce any evidence
that it manifested sovereignty over Zubarah during this period or that its pretensions

were internationally recognised. Qatar invaded the Zubarah region in 1937 and
displaced Bahraini authority by forcibly ejecting its Naim inhabitants because they
remained loyal to the Ruler of Bahrain.118 Bahrain submits that the invasion was an
act of aggression and was internationally unlawful and as such cannot be
internationally recognised. Since 1937, Qatar has not manifested sovereignty in the
Zubarah region. Hence the Zubarah region remains Bahrain's and Bahrain prays the
Court to order its return.

PART II

THE MARITIME ISSUES

CHAPTER 5

BAHRAIN'S MARITIME BOUNDARY

INTRODUCTION

273. Bahrain's position with respect to the maritime delimitation has been set out in
detail in Part II of its Memorial. In its Counter-Memorial, Bahrain reaffirmed its

position without burdening the Court by repeating it in detail. Part II of Bahrain's
Counter-Memorial was dedicated to a critical analysis of the position taken by Qatar in
its own Memorial with respect to the maritime delimitation. Qatar, for its part, set out
its position with respect to the maritime delimitation in Part IV of its Memorial and
Part IV of its Counter-Memorial, where it repeated its position, with certain
modifications which will be examined below, and undertook to criticise the position

taken by Bahrain in its Memorial.

274. Qatar's recitation of its arguments on the British letters of 1947 to the Rulers of
Bahrain and Qatar raises no significant new points. In its Memorial, Qatar's maritime
boundary arguments rested principally on the 1947 British letters. Indeed, its entire
argument with respect to the area that it defined as the southern sector119hapters X
and XI, pages 215 to 264) turns on the 1947 letters. In its Counter-Memorial, Bahrain

demonstrated that the 1947 letters were no more than a statement of British policy.
Indeed, even Qatar has acknowledged that the 1947 letters are not binding vis-à-vis the
Parties to this case and has tried to transform the letters into an "important factor"120
a "special circumstance"121 and a "relevant circumstance".122 Qatar's objective in so
doing is to circumvent the fact that the British letters did not and do not bind theParties - and yet still use those parts of the putative British line that it finds congenial
to its case while conveniently ignoring those parts that it finds inimical. In its own
Counter-Memorial, Bahrain demonstrated the impossible contradictions into which
Qatar's argument led it and showed that a letter by a third State is not a "special" or
"relevant" circumstance, both of which are terms of art in international law.

275. Qatar's argument in its Counter-Memorial on the southern sector is based on a
"mainland-to-mainland" theory. The predicate of Qatar's actual delimitation proposal
in its Counter-Memorial is, therefore, the question of the legal validity of this theory.
Bahrain will show that, even assuming that, arguendo, the mainland-to-mainland
theory is valid - which it is not - it does not apply to the geography of the present case.
This part of Bahrain's Reply will focus on the mainland-to-mainland theory. When

that has been exposed as fallacious, the delimitation exercise purporting to base itself
on that theory must also fall.123

SECTION 5.1 The geographical archipelagic character of Bahrain is
incontrovertible

276. The essential and inescapable geographical fact of this case is that an archipelagic
State faces a mainland State. That fact has many important implications. In its
Counter-Memorial, Qatar acknowledges that Bahrain is a de facto archipelago,124 but
insists that the Hawar Islands are not part of the archipelago. Wholly apart from their
physical and socio-political integration within the archipelago, Bahrain's title to the
Hawar Islands is based on long-term manifestation of sovereignty, consistent with the
ecological potentialities of the islands, amply sufficient to establish title jure gentium.

That fact was confirmed by the 1939 Arbitral Award, which constitutes either a res
judicata as between the Parties or a binding administrative and political decision.

277. Thus, Qatar's contention that "from a geographical point of view . . . it is not
possible to include the Hawar Islands in the Bahrain archipelago"125 is not pertinent.
It makes no difference whether the Hawar Islands pertain to Bahrain because they are
part of the Bahrain archipelago (in fact, they are) or that the Hawar Islands are

conceived as another archipelagic system that pertains to Bahrain on other legal
grounds. The Hawar Islands are still part of an archipelagic State, for an archipelagic
State is "a State constituted wholly by one or more archipelagos and may include other
islands,"126 (Emphasis added.) Thus, there can be no dispute over the archipelagic
character of the State of Bahrain. Wholly apart from Part IV of the 1982 Law of the
Sea Convention (hereinafter "1982 Convention"), the geographical or de facto
character of Bahrain cannot be ignored in a maritime boundary delimitation. Wholly

apart from Part IV of that Convention, in the case at hand, a State that is
geographically archipelagic confronts a mainland State.

A. Bahrain qualifies for archipelagic status under the Law of the Sea Convention

278. In its Memorial, Bahrain has shown why it qualifies for archipelagic status under

Part IV of the 1982 Convention, in that it fulfils all the criteria prescribed by the
Convention. In its Counter-Memorial, Qatar simply asserts that: "in Qatar's view Bahrain does not meet the requirements set out in the 1982
Convention on the Law of the Sea, and is thus precluded from validly claiming
archipelagic baselines."127

279. Qatar does not provide any basis whatsoever for its assertion that Bahrain does

not meet the requirements of the 1982 Convention. Legal argument cannot be based
on ipse dixit. Bahrain reaffirms, for the legal reasons already stated in its
Memorial,128 that it meets all the geographical requirements of Part IV that qualify it
as an archipelagic State within the meaning of the 1982 Convention.

B. Bahrain is not precluded for any reasons ratione temporis from availing itself
of the options available to archipelagic States under the Law of the Sea

Convention

280. With respect to the separate question of whether Bahrain may avail itself of the
options available to States qualifying under Article 46 of the 1982 Convention and
exercise such of the baseline privileges of Article 47 that are appropriate to its
situation and its wishes, Qatar implies129 that Bahrain is somehow now estopped

from asserting the options under Part IV of the Convention and that, in any case, Part
IV is not part of "present-day customary international law."130 Once again, Qatar
vouchsafes no authority for either proposition. Both are unfounded. Neither the
language of Part IV of the 1982 Convention nor anything in its legislative history
indicates any time limit whatsoever with respect to exercising the options under Part
IV. It could hardly be otherwise, given that many States must carefully consider all of
the implications of exercising the option before making their decision. States have

exercised the option in the course of negotiating bilateral maritime boundaries,
without it being protested. In fact, Bahrain explained precisely why the matter of the
declaration of its archipelagic status had to be deferred.131

C. Archipelagic status is now customary international law and applies erga omnes

281. Nor is there any authority for Qatar's assertion that Part IV is not expressive of

customary international law, such that Qatar, as a non-party to the 1982 Convention,
would not be bound to accept the archipelagic status of Bahrain. Since the conclusion
of the Montego Bay Convention, it has been accepted that, with the arguable exception
of the original Part XI, the entirety of the Convention is customary, a matter of
international consensus to which Qatar itself hitherto joined. An alternative conclusion
with respect to Part IV of the 1982 Convention is scarcely conceivable. International
law abhors "manifestly absurd or unreasonable interpretations."132 The very chaos

that would ensue if an archipelagic State, party to the 1982 Convention, were not
archipelagic erga omnes itself compels the conclusion that it is part of customary
international law.

D. Because the essential purpose of archipelagic status under the modern law of
the sea is for purposes of maritime boundary delimitation, the contention that the

status is to be ignored in delimitation exercises is absurd on its own terms and
wholly without foundation

282. Having acknowledged that Bahrain is an archipelago, Qatar's Counter-Memorial
nonetheless strains to deprive Bahrain of the legal consequences of its geographicalnature in two ways. First, Qatar purports to establish that archipelagos are not
archipelagos in maritime boundary delimitation. Second, Qatar invents a purportedly
imperative mainland-to-mainland theory under which one of the furthermost islands of
the archipelago may be selected at the discretion of the other party and used as the
"coast", while all the other insular components of the archipelagic State are ignored.

The mainland-to-mainland fiction is taken up in the following section. Qatar's
assertion that archipelagic baselines have been ignored in negotiated settlements
between archipelagic and mainland States is also discussed below.

E. Qatar cannot adduce a single post-1982 example, let alone a trend in State
practice, in which archipelagic boundaries have been ignored in bilaterally
negotiated maritime boundary agreements

283. Unlike reasoned judgments, which must provide an explicit ratio decidendi for
their decision, negotiated settlements do not. Thus, it is difficult to seek to infer a
practice, let alone a transcending principle of law, from the complex packages of
swaps, deals and compromises that constitute each agreement; the smaller the number
of agreements, the more difficult it is to make the inference. It is especially difficult in
the present case because the principle that Qatar seeks to establish is contra legem:

under international law, archipelagic status is centrally a matter of maritime
boundaries. To argue, after 1982, that archipelagos are not archipelagos for boundary
purposes is a contradiction in terms. All of Part IV of the 1982 Convention is about
maritime boundaries and their consequences.

284. Hence, the complete failure of Qatar to sustain this part of its thesis comes as no

surprise. Six of the seven examples that Qatar submits as evidence of State practice
were negotiated before the conclusion, let alone entry into force, of the 1982
Convention. It is not possible that they could be probative of the effects of
archipelagic baselines before archipelagic baselines had become law. Given the
innovation of Part IV of the 1982 Convention, not a single one of the six examples is
on point.

285. The only example submitted by Qatar which was negotiated after the 1982
Convention (though before its entry into force) actually takes account of archipelagic
baselines in a significant way. The Fiji-French agreement of 1983, far from
disregarding archipelagic baselines, adjusted the boundary in one of the three
segments on account of the archipelagic baseline,133 a fact which Qatar itself
acknowledges.

286. Thus, Qatar's effort to "demonstrate the existence of a trend according to which,
in a maritime delimitation involving an archipelagic State and another `mainland'
coastal State, no effect is given to archipelagic baselines in the drawing of the
boundary line",134 is neither logical, plausible, nor based on authority. It must fail.

SECTION 5.2 The mainland-to-mainland fiction

287. Despite its acknowledgement of the archipelagic character of Bahrain, Qatar also
strains to persuade the Court that the "coasts" to be used in fashioning a delimitation in
the southern sector should be the coast of the peninsula which (with the exception ofthe Zubarah region), Qatar lawfully occupies, and the largest (and not coincidentally,
one of the furthest) of the islands that comprise the Bahrain archipelago.

288. It is not easy, on its face, to argue that an archipelagic State, whose territory is
made up of all of its insular components, must be treated as a non-archipelagic State

for purposes of maritime boundary delimitation. Qatar tries to accomplish this feat by
(i) simply revising the facts that it has (and must) acknowledged and (ii) inventing a
legal principle. In Qatar's revisionist version, Bahrain is not an archipelagic system,
but now a single island State off whose shores there are "countless maritime
features";135 all of which the Court is urged to ignore by consigning them to a
juridical limbo and to which the Court is urged to apply an all-purpose mainland-to-
mainland delimitation principle, using a Bahraini coast that Qatar selects for its own

convenience. According to Qatar, Bahrain's insular components are to be ignored,
without regard to geographical reality, prior title, demonstrations of effectivités, or res
judicata. Bahrain will consider each of the postulations of this curious argument
seriatim.

A. Qatar's attempt to "dearchipelagise" Bahrain is inconsistent with the facts

and with its own admissions

289. Bahrain, as was explained in the Memorial, is not a single island State, but is an
archipelago: "a group of islands, including parts of islands, interconnecting waters and
other natural features which are so closely interrelated that such islands, waters and
other natural features form an intrinsic geographical, economic and political entity, or
which historically have been regarded as such."136

290. In rational discourse, one cannot speak of the archipelagic reality of the State and,
at the same time, insist on ignoring it. Archipelagos are recognised by international
law and their legal consequences simply cannot be denied. Yet Qatar tries to deny
them by presenting an artificial image of Bahrain as a single island rather than the
integrated network of islands, which is the essential nature of an archipelago, that it is.
The absurdity of the position may be grasped if one were to insist on conceiving of

Indonesia, for purposes of maritime boundary delimitation, as Java or Sumatra and
nothing else, or the Philippines as Luzon and nothing else.

B. Qatar's purported mainland-to-mainland principle has no basis in law and, by
its own terms, does not apply to the geographical situation that exists

291. Having conceived a caricature of the State of Bahrain, Qatar's second step is to

invent an all purpose mainland-to-mainland delimitation line. Qatar tries to
accomplish this by a nominalistic and a purportedly geographical argument. In its
nominalistic argument, Qatar quotes Professor Weil to the effect that coastal
geography "is the leading factor" in maritime delimitation. Bahrain does not dispute
this. The question in the present case, however, is what constitutes the "coast". Qatar
says it is always the "actual coast",137 by which it means not at all Bahrain's "actual

coast" but only the coast that Qatar wishes to select, in this case of the second-furthest
island of the Bahrain archipelago.

292. Qatar's only purported authority for this proposition, which is not even on point,
is a definition by the International Hydrographic Organisation, which speaks of the"sea shore". The question, however, is what the term "coast" means in international
law. Since 1951, when the International Court held in the Anglo-Norwegian Fisheries
case, with respect to Norway, that "what really constitutes the Norwegian coast line, is
the outer line of the "skjærgaard"",138 determination of the international legal
concept of the coast has always been sensitive to case and context, as well as informed

by history and by patterns of human usage. Wholly aside from these developments
that have been at the very heart of the evolution of the modern law of the sea, the
hydrographers' definition, were it governing, would prevent a tribunal from even using
a closing line as part of the coast for maritime boundary delimitation. Qatar's
nominalistic argument thus fails.

293. Nor is Qatar's geographical argument any more successful. In this argument,

Qatar takes a relatively unremarkable proposition and tries to attach to it one that
contradicts it entirely. In its Counter-Memorial, Qatar says that there are "probably
two situations where the delimitation between two opposite coasts should prima facie
be a median line calculated from mainland-to-mainland".139 The first situation is
when the maritime area to be delimited does not include any island or any other
similar feature, a situation which Qatar says "speaks for itself and is self-explanatory".
This tautologous

statement is unexceptionable, precisely because it is a tautology: where the two
opposite coasts are, in fact, mainlands and where no insular formations occur between
them, the median line is prima facie the boundary and is, moreover, the first
provisional step in delimitation. The second situation that Qatar tries to marry to this
"self-explanatory" proposition is the exact opposite: when the maritime area between

two opposite States is "dotted with a great number of small islands, islets, rocks, reefs
and shoals".140

C. Qatar conflates "coastal opposition" with mainland opposition, by assuming
that they are the same

294. Qatar's confusion here, intentional or otherwise, is a conflation of two quite

separate propositions. The first is the unremarkable proposition that, in circumstances
of coastal opposition, a preliminary step in maritime boundary delimitation is the
determination of a provisional median line, every point of which is equidistant from
the opposite coasts. The second is the fallacious proposition that coastal opposition
always imports two opposite mainlands and that if one does not exist, the law seeks a
facsimile. That second proposition ignores all the developments since Anglo-
Norwegian Fisheries, the 1958 Convention on the Law of the Sea and the 1982

Convention.

D. The geographical configuration in the southern sector is one of coastal
opposition, but not a "mainland-to-mainland" confrontation

295. There are a number of glaring problems with Qatar's submission. First, and most

obvious, this case does not present two opposite mainlands, but rather a mainland and
an archipelagic system. Thus, Qatar's assertion that "[i]n no case has a small islet been
given the same effect as the mainland coast in drawing a median line vis-à-vis an
opposite mainland coast",141 is irrelevant when one is not dealing with opposite
mainlands, but rather with a State manifesting an archipelagic formation confronting aland-based State and the question is: what is, as a legal and factual matter, the
international legal coast of the archipelagic State?

E. This case does not require decision by the Court with respect to "countless"
islands, islets and rocks

296. Second, and just as obvious, this case does not present to the Court a requirement
to make decisions about "countless maritime features"142 (all of which, one may add,
pertain to Bahrain). While Bahrain is, like many other archipelagos, "dotted with a
great number of small islands, islets, rocks, reefs and shoals",143 the principal smaller
insular formations that require consideration for purposes of the maritime boundary in
the present case are Fasht al Azm, Fasht ad Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah; the only

questions that fall to be decided are whether they are islands, parts of islands or low-
tide elevations, and to whom they pertain.

297. Thus, even were Qatar's alleged mainland-to-mainland principle the norm of
international law, which it is not, it could not, by the terms Qatar itself specifies, apply
to the geographical configuration presented in this case. Indeed, Qatar immediately

concedes, by necessary implication, that its second situation is not the one which
obtains in the area between Bahrain and Qatar. For, Qatar continues:

"[t]he second one [geographical situation] renders it impossible to rely on
countless maritime features for the drawing of a boundary line which would
satisfy both the requirement of simplicity and the aim of arriving at an
equitable result."144

It is transparent that Qatar's suggestion that the geography of the Gulf of Bahrain other
than the main island of Bahrain should be ignored is based on its own recognition of
its inability, in contrast to Bahrain's, to establish that the "countless maritime features"
belong to it.

F. Qatar misstates relevant international law in insisting that the self-serving

concept of "simplicity" that it has invented takes priority over the securing of an
"equitable result"

298. Bahrain would draw the Court's attention to the curiously inverted priorities in
the preceding quotation. Qatar's proposed conception of "simplicity", a term to which
Qatar assigns its own preferred meaning, has become a "requirement" in this formula,

while "arriving at an equitable result" has been reduced to a mere "aim". Bahrain has
no objection to a simplifying decision and, indeed, the method developed by the
International Court since 1969, i.e., emphasising the securing of an equitable result by
reference to a consideration of all relevant factors, has gone a long way toward
simplifying its decision calculus. But the essential position of the International Court
has been, since the North Sea Continental Shelf Cases , that:

"Delimitation is to be effected by agreement in accordance with equitable
principles and taking account of all the relevant circumstances, in such a way
as to leave as much as possible to each Party all those parts of the Continental
Shelf that constitute a natural prolongation of its land territory into and under the sea, without encroachment on the natural prolongation of the land territory
of the other."145

299. Article 74 of the 1982 Convention, which the Parties accept as expressive of
customary international law, provides in paragraph 1:

"The delimitation of the Exclusive Economic Zone between States with
opposite or adjacent coasts shall be effected by agreement on the basis of
international law, as referred to in Article 38 of the Statute of the International
Court of Justice, in order to achieve an equitable solution."

300. Article 83, paragraph 1 of the 1982 Convention provides

"the delimitation of the continental shelf between States with opposite or
adjacent coasts shall be effected by agreement on the basis of international law,
as referred to in Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice,
in order to achieve an equitable solution."

301. It is notable that, in these legal formulae, the requirement is to secure an equitable
result. The mainland-to-mainland delimitation, which Qatar has presented as an
imperative principle, is in fact only a technique which is used when it will achieve an
equitable result. Moreover, in the circumstances in which it is appropriate to use it,
this technique is used after determinations of territorial sovereignty have been made,
i.e., after the coast has been authoritatively determined.

G. Qatar's purported mainland-to-mainland principle reverses the mandatory
sequence of first determining territorial sovereignty and only then effecting
maritime boundary delimitations

302. As elaborated in its Bahrain's Memorial and Counter-Memorial, the essential
progression in maritime boundary delimitation is to identify sovereignty over the land
and, on the basis of those findings, to effect an appropriate maritime boundary

delimitation. This is so for the basic constitutive principle, the virtual grundnorm,
expressed as early as the Anglo-Norwegian Fisheries case, is that the land dominates
the sea: "It is the land which confers upon the coastal State a right to the waters off its
coasts." 146

303. In its pleadings, Qatar reverses this necessary relationship. Qatar's proposal is a

transparent effort to elevate one of a number of techniques available to achieve an
equitable result, to a principle that pre-empts the finding of territorial sovereignty. For
Qatar, islands and other insular formations are "insignificant" and "distorting" rather
than important parts of the territorial base and socio-economic life of the archipelagic
state. As noted above, Qatar's recognition of its inability to establish its sovereignty
over the insular features of the Gulf of Bahrain, and Bahrain's corresponding ability to
do so, presumably influences its wish for the Court to ignore those features. For an

archipelagic state such as Bahrain, whose people live in an integral relationship with
the sea, islands and other insular formations are not insignificant and distorting, but
are important for many reasons - including survival itself. For the people of an
archipelagic state, each island and insular formation will have a name and probably an
historic narrative. Qatar's rather contemptuous characterisation of these same islandsas "insignificant" and "distorting" tellingly reveals its land-based perspective and takes
no account of the actual and potential socio-economic use of these features by
Bahrain.147 From that perspective, Qatar asserts that "no account is to be taken of tiny
islets, rocks and shoals scattered in a relatively restricted area of shallow sea."148 In
short, as Qatar would have it, archipelagos are not to be treated as archipelagos.

H. Qatar's assertion that security considerations require its mainland-to-
mainland principle does not arise under the facts of the present case

304. The ostensible justification for Qatar's radical inversion of logical and mandatory
normative sequence and its elevation of a technique to the level of a primary principle
is "security". Qatar asserts rather portentously in its Counter-Memorial that "[t]he

basic reason for a mainland-to-mainland delimitation lies in the security interests of
the two States concerned."149

305. Bahrain would not contest the fact that security is one of a range of factors to be
taken into account in effecting an equitable result, but in no case has a court or tribunal
"reshaped" geography for security.

SECTION 5.3 The determination of sovereignty over islands and low-tide
elevations must precede the maritime boundary delimitation150

306. Because the land dominates the sea, one can hardly determine maritime
boundaries until the territorial sovereignty over any formations that are entitled to
and/or generate maritime zones has first been determined. The imperative priority of

this intellectual decision task is clear. The specific issue in contention here is not, one
must emphasise, "countless islands, islets and rocks," but essentially the status and
sovereignty of three formations: Fasht al Azm, Fasht ad Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah.

307. In its Memorial151 and its Counter-Memorial,152 Bahrain demonstrated that in
addition to Al-Awal (the largest island), Sitrah, Muharraq, Rabad al Gharbiyah, Rabad
ash Sharkiyah, Al Mu'tarid, Jazirat Mashtan and Umm Jalid incontestably qualify as

islands in accordance with Article 121(1) of the 1982 Law of the Sea Convention.
Nothing in Qatar's submissions has challenged that. Rather, Qatar has only tried to
depreciate their juridical value with its putative mainland-to-mainland theory, the
specious nature of which has been demonstrated above.

308. In its Counter-Memorial, Qatar indicates, as a point of disagreement, the status of

Fasht ad Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah. Qatar insists that they are low-tide elevations and
that their status is therefore governed by the Law of the Sea. Bahrain, for reasons
elaborated in both its Memorial and Counter-Memorial, contests Qatar's submission as
a matter of law and as a matter of fact. As a matter of law, Bahrain confirms its
position with respect to low-tide elevations. Recent developments that provide
additional authority for that position are set out elsewhere in this Reply.153 With
respect to the facts, Bahrain confirms its submission that Qit'at Jaradah qualifies as an

island under Article 121(1) of the Law of the Sea Convention. This is an objective
finding and is not a question of appreciation or appraisal.

A. Fasht al Azm is part of Sitrah Island, whose drying line incorporates the entire
length of Fasht al Azm309. Qatar asserts that Fasht al Azm is a separate feature from Sitrah Island.154 The
basis for its conclusion is Qatar's claim that Sitrah Island is separated from Fasht al
Azm by a natural channel just to the east of Sitrah Island. Qatar suggests that this
channel was filled in during land reclamation conducted in 1982 during the building of
the petroleum plant now located on the site. Qatar therefore proposes that the relevant

basepoint of Sitrah Island for delimitation purposes does not include the low water line
of Fasht al Azm.

310. Qatar's claim is without factual foundation. It is based on conjecture rather than
fact and is contradicted by charts and photographs which clearly illustrate that, prior to
the land reclamation process of 1982, there was no channel separating Sitrah Island
from the Fasht. Fasht al Azm is a natural extension of Sitrah Island, which

incorporates its low water line.

311. Qatar referred to Bahrain Chart 1502 (published in 1984) and British Chart 3790
(new edition published 1993), claiming that it is clear from these charts, that there
must have been a natural channel where the petrochemical plant now stands.155
However, both charts were produced after the construction of the petrochemical plant.
They do not show the area underneath the plant. They show a channel that was

dredged to the east

of the plant in 1982, but they do not indicate that there was ever a natural channel, as
suggested by Qatar. Qatar's claim is therefore not supported by these charts. Qatar has
thus not produced any evidence illustrating such a channel. Qatar's desire for such a
channel to have existed does not mean that there "must" have been one.

312. Qatar also referred to a document entitled "Technical Circular No. 12. Dredging
and land reclamation activities along Bahrain coasts",156 which Qatar states:

"provides evidence of a natural navigable channel, traditionally used by Bahraini
fishermen and separating Fasht al Azm from Sitrah and, as a corollary, of the need to
dredge an alternative fishermen's channel."157

The reference taken from this document, however, is simply referring to an
inlet that ran half-way across the Fasht before terminating abruptly, as shown
on the photographs reproduced on the following pages. The document does not
support Qatar's assertion: it does not state that the channel ran all the way
through the Fasht and it gives no indication that it was navigable. Qatar's

assertion is no more than hopeful conjecture, without any factual basis.

313. Clearly contradicting Qatar's fanciful conjecture are aerial photographs from the
1950s, 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, reproduced on the pages that follow. These
photographs clearly show that no channel ever separated the Fasht from Sitrah Island.
Rather, they show the existence of an inlet in the southern side of the Fasht which
abruptly ends half-way across the Fasht. The natural connection of the Fasht to Sitrah

Island is clearly illustrated. In addition, fish traps are clearly visible at the terminus of
the inlet, which further proves that the inlet did not cut right through the Fasht, as
Qatar hypothesises. Qatar's speculation would place these fish traps in the middle of a
maritime thoroughfare, thus hindering any vessels in their passage. This is plainly not
the case. The most recent photograph, taken in 1983, post-dates the construction of thepetrochemical plant, which is clearly shown on the north side of the Fasht to the north
of the inlet. The artificial channel, dredged in 1982, is also clearly visible on the 1983
photograph, at a site where no channel existed previously.

PHOTO 1 : AERIAL PHOTOGRAPH OF SITRAH ISLAND/FASHT AL AZM 1955

(119 KB)

PHOTO 2 : AERIAL PHOTOGRAPH OF SITRAH ISLAND/FASHT AL AZM 1958
(104 KB)

PHOTO 3 : AERIAL PHOTOGRAPH OF SITRAH ISLAND/FASHT AL AZM 1966
(97 KB)

PHOTO 4 : AERIAL PHOTOGRAPH OF SITRAH ISLAND/FASHT AL AZM 1977
(92 KB)

PHOTO 5 : AERIAL PHOTOGRAPH OF SITRAH ISLAND/FASHT AL AZM 1980
(112 KB)

PHOTO 6 : AERIAL PHOTOGRAPH OF SITRAH ISLAND/FASHT AL AZM 1983
(107 KB)

314. These photographs are consistent with charts and survey data of the area dating

back to the last century. Commander Chris Carleton, Head of the Law of the Sea
Department at the United Kingdom Hydrographic Office, conducted a review of all
relevant historical data, including Admiralty charts and available satellite imagery, in
order to illustrate the physical continuity of Fasht al Azm and Sitrah Island.158
concluded as follows:

"An extensive search of historical records dating back to the first British
Admiralty Chart published in 1862 and all associated reports and descriptions
of this part of the coast of the Gulf of Arabia reveals no mention of a natural
passage separating Sitrah Island from Fasht al Azm (although there is repeated
mention of a natural passage on the other side of Sitrah Island separating Sitrah
Island from Al Awal, the largest island of the archipelago).

The charted channel that presently exists through the reef is very clearly a
man-made feature, dredged in 1982, that does not alter the status of the Fasht
as a natural prolongation of Sitrah Island.

Modern land reclamation work in the region of Sitrah Harbour and the
petrochemical plant, rather than creating a new connection of the Fasht to
Sitrah, has in fact reduced the connection of Fasht al Azm to Sitrah in this area.

Historic charts show a much more extensive continuity of land connecting the
two features prior to the modern dredging and land reclamation activities."159315. Commander Carleton also conducted a review of available infra-red satellite
imagery in order to establish the extent of Fasht al Azm's drying line. He concluded as
follows:

"Satellite imagery shows the natural connection of Sitrah to Fasht al Azm and clearly

illustrates the extent of the Fasht's drying line. Broken only by the dredged channel, it
stretches from Sitrah Island to the eastern extremity of the Fasht...

My conclusion, therefore, is that Fasht al Azm is a natural extension of Sitrah Island,
drying (with the exception of the channel dredged in 1982) along the entire length of
its northern edge. The entire area of Fasht al Azm is thus the coast of Sitrah Island
and, as such, may be used as a basepoint or straight baseline point for the calculation

of seaward maritime zones."160

B. The future of Fasht al Azm

316. Fasht al Azm is an integral part of Sitrah Island. This geographical and geological
fact affords Bahrain sovereignty over the Fasht as far as its eastern extremity. Fasht al

Azm also has a significant socio-economic role for Bahrain's future.

317. Qatar denies that Fasht al Azm is an integral part of Sitrah Island and proposes a
maritime boundary which would cut across it. Were Qatar's proposal to be adopted,
this would result in a maritime boundary between Bahrain and Qatar that cuts across
land territory. From Bahrain's side, it is possible to walk to the proposed maritime
boundary between the two states without ever crossing water.

318. As stated above, Bahrain is the fifth most densely populated State in the world
and its population is growing to the extent that it is expected to double over the next
22 years. 161 To cope with this rapid increase in population and the increase in
infrastructure which must necessarily accompany it, Bahrain has for many years now
conducted major land-reclamation schemes throughout its territory and built industrial,
housing, hotel and leisure facilities on the reclaimed land. Fasht al Azm is part of

Bahrain's land-reclamation programme. Feasibility studies have been taking place
there since the 1980s. Attached to this Reply at Annex 4 is the Executive Summary of
one such study, published in June 1987, entitled "Fasht Al Adhm, Urban Development
Study". At page 7 of that Report, under the heading "Development of Fasht Al-Adhm"
and subheading "The Capacity of Fasht Al-Adhm", is written:

"The reclamation of Fasht Al Adhm will provide between 9,000 and 12,000
hectares of land which could accommodate 320,000 people. This could satisfy
the Ministry [Housing]'s housing programmes for over 30 years...

Also, it can accommodate 128,000 jobs by the year 2031. This is 28 per cent of
Bahrain's total employment at this time."

319. Under the subheading "Other benefits of developing Fasht Al Adhm" it is noted
that: · Administrative advantages would be gained, and economies of scale
achieved, by concentrating housing development in one major location, rather
than in several dispersed locations on the mainland;

· Infrastructure can be provided economically because it is concentrated in one

location;

· Capital savings are available, with the costs of reclaimed land on Fasht
estimated to be BD7 per m2 compared with acquisition prices of BD30 per m2
for land in the vicinity of Manama;

· A new focus of urbanisation of high environmental quality could be formed,

providing opportunities for private sector development associated with
waterfront sites, which may not be a feature of available mainland locations;

· Significant economic activity can be generated by manufacturing industry,
fisheries, education, tourism and recreation. Also port facilities and shipping
channels can be provided; and

· International transport links can be improved by allowing a causeway
between Fasht Al-Adhm and Qatar."

320. This report clearly illustrates that Fasht al Azm, rather than being an area of little
socio-economic value to Bahrain, could in the early twenty first century become a
major focus for Bahrain's population and economy.

321. In stark contrast to the role it may play in Bahrain's future, Fasht al Azm is of no
socio-economic relevance to Qatar at all. The maritime spaces of the Gulf of Bahrain
separate Fasht al Azm from the west coast of the Qatar peninsula. Thus, even were
Qatar to adopt a policy of land reclamation, Fasht al Azm could play no part in it. In
addition, Qatar's west coast is, as has amply been demonstrated by Bahrain in its
pleadings,162 unpopulated desert. Qatar remains as focused to the east today as

historically it has always been.

322. Thus, Fasht al Azm is an area of significance to Bahrain. It will play no role of
any significance in the future of Qatar.

C. Qit'at Jaradah is an island and pertains to Bahrain

323. With respect to Fasht al Azm, Fasht ad Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah, there are two
questions to be addressed: their status under international law and the identity of their
sovereign. Bahrain's submission with respect to the first question in relation to Qit'at
Jaradah has a factual and legal component.

324. In its Counter-Memorial, Qatar complains that "[t]he rules asserted by Bahrain

are taken from the law on acquisition of land territories."163 (Emphasis in the
original.) Bahrain does this, of course, because both logically and legally the first issue
to be addressed is land territories. Qatar then asserts that "[t]hese rules do not in
principle apply to maritime features other than islands (and in particular do not apply
to low-tide elevations)."164 Thus the Parties agree that these rules do apply to islandsand that an island is defined authoritatively by Article 121 of the Law of the Sea
Convention. Qit'at Jaradah is an island, as is described more fully in the succeeding
Sub-section of this Reply, and thus the rules with respect to acquisition of territory
must apply.

D. The historical record and independent scientific studies confirm that Qit'at
Jaradah is a naturally formed island despite Qatar's attempt to eradicate it in the
aftermath of Qatar's 1986 attack

325. Bahrain's pleadings demonstrate that the historical record confirms Qit'at
Jaradah's status as an island. Bahrain's evidence includes:

· a 14 August 1937 letter from Charles Belgrave to the British Political Agent referring
to Qit'at Jaradah as "an island";165 and

· a detailed report from the Political Resident to the India Office dated 18 January
1947, describing the Political Agent's findings that Qit'at Jaradah was above the water
level and bore the appearance of having not recently been submerged.166

326. The conclusion that Qit'at Jaradah is permanently dry at all tide levels and thus an
island is confirmed by the evidence submitted by Qatar in its Memorial and Counter-
Memorial, including:167

· a 26 March 1940 communication from the British Political Agent to the British
Political Resident;168

· a 20 March 1956 report from the British Political Resident to the Foreign Office;169

· a 21 April 1956 minute from Ewart-Biggs of the Eastern Department, Foreign
Office;170

· a report by the Commander of H. M. S. Loch Fada dated 14 April 1959;171

· a 20 August 1959 letter from the British Political Resident to the Arabian Department
of the Foreign Office;172 and

· a 1959 opinion of a British Hydrographic Officer173 that Qit'at Jaradah "might turn
back into a low-tide elevation". Two points can be drawn from this statement: first,

that Qit'at Jaradah's status as an island was explicitly recognised by Britain; secondly,
that any question that Qit'at Jaradah might not remain an island in the future was mere
conjecture.

327. Qatar acknowledges its military intervention on Qit'at Jaradah in 1986,174 as a
result of which bulldozers removed that part of Qit'at Jaradah which was exposed at
high tide.175 Despite this destruction, the bulldozing could not halt the process of

natural accretion by which Qit'at Jaradah maintained its character as an island. Over
the course of the next few years, the localised process of natural accretion once more
made Qit'at Jaradah an island; today it stands above water at all states of tide.328. Professor Lewis Alexander, who observed Qit'at Jaradah at High Water Spring
Tide at intervals throughout 1998 confirms that Qit'at Jaradah is once more an
island.176

His report concludes:

"Article 121(1) of the 1982 [Law of the Sea] Convention stipulates three
criteria for a feature to qualify as an island. The first is that it must be a
naturally formed area of land. Jaradah fits this description; it is a cay, i.e. a
sandbank atop a coral reef. The second criteria is that it is surrounded by water.
My observations confirm that Jaradah fits this description also. The third and
final criteria is that the feature is above water at high tide. My observations

confirm that the highest areas of Qit'at Jaradah are above water at monthly
high water springs. Jaradah thus fits the description of an island in Article
121(1)."177

329. Confirming this conclusion, a survey of Qit'at Jaradah and its environs was
conducted by the Bahrain Survey Directorate under the personal supervision and in the

physical presence of Professor Alexander.178 The survey report concludes:

"It should be noted that the maximum height observed on Jaradah during the
survey is 1.8 metres and that this is 0.4 metres above the HAT (Highest
Astronomical Tide) calculated from tidal observations for the area."179

330. The most up-to-date survey data is therefore consistent with the historical record:

Qit'at Jaradah is an island.

E. Qatar's submission that Qit'at Jaradah is not an island is unsupported

331. Qatar suggests that Qit'at Jaradah is not an island but rather a low-tide elevation.
However, in making this claim, Qatar admits to "some hesitation" and goes no further
than stating that Qit'at Jaradah "may not be dry at all states of the tide along its

southern edge". (Emphasis added.)180 Qatar's speculation that Qit'at Jaradah is a low-
tide elevation is thus tentative at best. In any event, it is unsupported.

332. Qatar has produced nothing that successfully challenges the evidence that Qit'at
Jaradah is an island. The evidence that Qatar does present is based on equivocal
information that clearly contradicts the consistent evidence from the 1940s onwards,

much of it included indirectly in Qatar's own Annexes,181 that confirms the island
status of Qit'at Jaradah.182

333. As stated elsewhere,183 following Qatar's attack in 1986, Qit'at Jaradah was
bulldozed, artificially reducing it to a low-tide elevation. It would be offensive to any
notion of law or equity to allow Qatar to benefit from this intentionally unlawful act.
Qit'at Jaradah was an island before the Qatari armed intervention and cannot be

deemed to have lost its status as a result of illegal activities.

334. It is worth emphasising that the photograph of Qit'at Jaradah reproduced in
Qatar's Memorial184 was taken at the end of July 1986, only two months after the
bulldozers had razed the island. More recent photographs of Qit'at Jaradah taken atspring high-tide confirm the process of natural accretion and Qit'at Jaradah's status as
an island.185

F. The historical record confirms that Bahrain exercised authority over Qit'at
Jaradah and there is no evidence that Qatar ever exercised authority there

335. Bahrain's numerous acts of sovereignty over Qit'at Jaradah, both historical and
present-day, have been well-documented in its Memorial and Counter-Memorial.
These include:

· conducting surveys and granting oil concessions over Qit'at Jaradah;186

· erecting a beacon on Qit'at Jaradah in 1939;187

· ordering the drilling of an artesian well on Qit'at Jaradah in the 1940s;188

· the activities of Bahrain's coastguard patrols around the area of Qit'at Jaradah;189
and

· Bahraini fishermen working the areas around Qit'at Jaradah.190

336. In addition, Bahrain's inhabitants have traditionally and exclusively used Qit'at
Jaradah as a weekend retreat for recreational purposes and continue to do so as
illustrated by the photograph reproduced on the opposite page.191

PHOTO 7 : BAHRAIN'S INHABITANTS USING QIT'AT JARADAH AS A
WEEKEND RETREAT FOR RECREATIONAL PURPOSES (119 KB)

337. Bahrain's authority over Qit'at Jaradah was recognised by Britain. For
example, in 1947 the Political Resident informed the India Office that the
Bahrain Government was responsible for the cairn and artesian well on Qit'at

Jaradah.192 The Political Resident further informed the India Office that Qit'at
Jaradah must be regarded as belonging to Bahrain:

"With regard to the ownership of [Qit'at Jaradah] I reluctantly agree
with the Political Agent that if it is possible for anybody to establish a
claim over shoals of the kind described, they must be regarded as
belonging to Bahrain. They have been treated by the Bahrain

Government as their property and beacons have been erected and wells
bored without any kind of protest by the Shaikh of Qatar. In fact, as the
Political Agent points out, the Shaikh of Qatar is a late arrival on the
scene."193

338. Qatar can offer no evidence of any acts of Qatari authority over Qit'at
Jaradah.194 Instead, consistent with its modus operandi, Qatar unsuccessfully

attempts to criticise Bahrain's genuine acts of authority:

· Qatar baldly challenges the relevance of the evidence that during the 1930s
and 1940s Bahrain erected beacons on, inter alia, Qit'at Jaradah195 and that
Bahrain drilled an artesian well on Qit'at Jaradah.196 Qatar omits to relate thatwhen Bahrain built the beacon and drilled the artesian well on Qit'at Jaradah,
Bahrain considered these acts as evidence of its sovereignty over the
island.197 Moreover, Britain recognised that these activities were consistent
with and further evidence of Bahrain's sovereignty over Qit'at Jaradah;198 and

· Qatar baldly challenges the relevance of evidence of activities carried out by
Bahrain's oil concessionaire on Qit'at Jaradah. Qatar notes that in 1946, Britain
refused to allow BAPCO to carry out structural drillings in the area of
Jaradah.199 Qatar omits to relate that this refusal was not permanent nor was it
evidence of Britain's view as to Bahrain's sovereignty over Qit'at Jaradah. It
was made during the process leading to Britain's maritime boundary proposal.

339. Qatar states that its concessionaire surveyed the area around Fasht ad
Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah during 1950 to 1952, that the 1947 line had been used
by each side's concessionaire as the limit of its territories and that the whole
area was surveyed by the Qatar concessionaire in during 1973 to 1974. Qatar
states that BAPCO in 1952 and Continental Oil Co. of Bahrain in 1965 were
both notified that they had to respect the

1947 line. However, Qatar has produced no evidence to support any of these
assertions and the Bahrain Ministry of Oil and Industry has no record of any of
these events having taken place. Even were these allegations factually correct
(and there is no evidence to support Qatar's assertions), they have no
significance with respect to the question of sovereignty over Fasht ad Dibal
and Qit'at Jaradah.

340. Qatar first made a claim to Fasht ad Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah in 1946.
Even then, in contrast to the evidence presented by Bahrain at the same time of
Bahrain's extensive use and exercise of authority over these features, Qatar
could only base its claim on geographical proximity and its desire to be
"compensated" for Britain's 1939 decision to recognise Bahrain's sovereignty
over the Hawar Islands.200 Qatar did not and does not even assert, let alone

submit any evidence, that it has ever exercised authority over Qit'at Jaradah.

341. Qatar's proximity claim to Qit'at Jaradah is premised on its
unsubstantiated and erroneous assumption that Qit'at Jaradah is a low-tide
elevation and thus governed by the law of the sea.201 The function of this
premise is to avoid having to contest Bahrain's acquisition of title over Qit'at
Jaradah by showing acts of sovereignty.202 Qatar's attempt to argue that

sovereignty is irrelevant is clearly necessary for its claim, given that Qatar does
not claim ever to have exercised authority over Qit'at Jaradah. However, now
that Qit'at Jaradah's status as an island is confirmed, Qatar is left without a
positive case for Qit'at Jaradah; in marked contrast to Bahrain.

G. Fasht ad Dibal is a low-tide elevation within Bahrain's territorial

waters

342. Fasht ad Dibal is incontestably a low-tide elevation and, equally
incontestably, well within twelve miles of both Qit'at Jaradah and Fasht al
Azm. The former is an island and the latter forms an integral part of SitrahIsland, sharing its low water line (see Sub-sections A and E, supra). Qatar
contends that Fasht ad Dibal, being a low-tide elevation, is subject to the law
of the sea rather than the law on acquisition of land territories.203 Bahrain has
already demonstrated that Qatar's contention is mistaken and that the law
governing sovereignty over low-tide elevations is the law governing territorial

sovereignty.204 Article 13(1) of the Law of the Sea Convention clearly
authorises the use of Qit'at Jaradah's and Sitrah's low-water lines as baselines
for purposes of delimitation. Bahrain submits that the status of Qit'at Jaradah
and Fasht al Azm and the geographical relationship of Qit'at Jaradah, Fasht al
Azm and Fasht ad Dibal are matters of fact on which there can be no
controversy.

343. Qatar has alleged that some of the low-tide elevations in the contested
area are as close to Qatar as to Bahrain and/or are within 12 miles of each. In
this regard, Bahrain would note the importance of the archipelagic factor.
Surely when an archipelagic State confronts a mainland State, the only
pertinent question is whether the maritime feature is part of the archipelago:
proximity to the neighbouring State has no relevance at all.

344. Both parties are in agreement that Fasht ad Dibal is a low-tide elevation.
However, the parties disagree about which of them exercises sovereignty over
it.

345. As in the case of Qit'at Jaradah and Sitrah Island, Bahrain has historically
exercised authority over Fasht ad Dibal. Bahrain has submitted evidence of the

exercise of Bahrain's sovereignty over Fasht ad Dibal, including:

· conducting surveys and granting of oil concessions;205

· constructing a cairn;206

· constructing an artesian well;207

· granting licences in respect of permanent fish traps;208

· resolving navigational difficulties concerning Fasht ad Dibal;209

· providing assistance during maritime emergencies;210 and

· the activities of Bahrain's coastguard patrols around the area of Fasht ad
Dibal.211

346. Qatar itself has submitted evidence of Bahrain's acts of sovereignty over
Fasht ad Dibal, including:

· a 10 May 1928 letter from the Director of Customs, Bahrain, concerning "port
lighting", in which the Director reported to Charles Belgrave that "A stone
beacon [had] recently been erected on the Fesht al Djebal" and recommended
that a light be affixed to it to warn mariners of the danger of the shoal";212· the 1932 Persian Gulf Pilot, which refers to the beacon;213

· official British correspondence referring to the construction of the beacon;214

· a 20 July 1940 letter from the Political Agent, Bahrain, to the British Political

Resident, providing details of BAPCO structure drilling on Fasht ad Dibal215
and a 1950 BAPCO memorandum concerning the same;216

· a 10 July 1946 letter from Charles Belgrave to the Political Agent, Bahrain,
listing the cairns erected by Bahrain and including specific reference to the
artesian well on Fasht ad Dibal (and Qit'at Jaradah also);217

· an 18 January 1947 letter from the Political Resident to the Secretary of State
for India reporting the existence on Fasht ad Dibal of "...a cairn and an artesian
well bored by BAPCO on behalf of the Bahrain Government through a
contractor"218;

· the 1947 British maritime boundary proposal, which found that Bahrain

exercised sovereignty over Fasht ad Dibal;219

· a December 1950/January 1951 Admiralty survey referring to the well;220

· official British correspondence from 1950 and 1951 describing the
constructions on Fasht ad Dibal;221

· British Admiralty Charts 2830 (1953), 2886 (1957), 2886 (1972), all of which
refer to the constructions on Fasht ad Dibal;222

· further construction work by Bahrain on Fasht ad Dibal which the 1986
Qatari military intervention subsequently removed, thus preventing Bahrain
from exercising its sovereign rights on Fasht ad Dibal;223

· a 3 July 1991 incident where a Qatari naval boat approached Fasht ad Dibal
and was confronted by a Bahraini boat. The Qatari vessel withdrew. This Qatar
incursion into Bahraini waters was the subject of Bahraini official protests,
both to Qatar and the GCC;224

· a 3 August 1991 incident, in which a Qatari vessel approaching Fasht ad

Dibal was confronted by two Bahraini coastguard boats, a Bahraini helicopter
and a Bahraini missile boat. The Qatari vessel was escorted from Bahraini
water. Again, Bahrain protested to Qatar and to the GCC;225

· a 15 August 1991 incident, in which a Qatari gun-boat to the west of Fasht ad
Dibal was approached by Bahraini naval vessel and forced to withdraw;226
and

· a 17 August 1991 incident, in which a Qatari vessel to the west of Fasht ad
Dibal was confronted by two Bahraini coastguard vessels and escorted from
the area.227347. In marked contrast, Qatar can offer no evidence of any Qatari acts of
authority over Fasht ad Dibal. Instead, Qatar only attempts to criticise
Bahrain's genuine acts of authority:

· Qatar challenges the relevance of the evidence that Bahrain erected a beacon

on Fasht ad Dibal in 1928228 and that Bahrain built an artesian well on Fasht
ad Dibal.229 However, when Bahrain built the beacon and the artesian well on
Fasht ad Dibal, Bahrain considered these acts as evidence of its sovereignty
over Fasht ad Dibal.230 Not only that, but Britain recognised that those
activities were consistent with and further evidence of Bahrain's sovereignty
over Fasht ad Dibal;231

· Qatar challenges the relevance of BAPCO's construction of the artesian well
on Fasht ad Dibal in the 1930s. However, Qatar omits to note that BAPCO was
acting pursuant to the concession granted by Bahrain;

· Qatar refers to the fresh water flowing through the well on Fasht ad Dibal as
being "...provided by nature... and not by the Government of Bahrain."232

Bahrain does not dispute that fresh water is produced naturally. However, the
structure through which the water flows was built by and is under the authority
of the Government of Bahrain;

· Qatar disputes Charles Belgrave's authority to sanction drilling on Fasht ad
Dibal.233 However, Bahrain's sovereignty over the feature was not the issue in
the correspondence Qatar refers to; rather, the issue was whether Belgrave

acted outside of his authority in providing such authorisation without first
having consulted the Political Agent;

· Qatar refers to Britain's refusal to allow drilling around Fasht ad Dibal and
Qit'at Jaradah in 1946. This refusal was entirely unrelated to the issue of
sovereignty (as explained in para. 334 above). As referred to in paragraph 335
above, Qatar states its concessionaire surveyed the area around Fasht ad Dibal

and Jaradah in 1950-52, that the 1947 line has been used by each side's
concessionaire as the limit of its territories, that the whole area was surveyed
by the Qatar concessionaire in 1973-74 and that BAPCO in 1952 and
Continental Oil Co. of Bahrain in 1965 were both notified that they had to
respect the 1947 line. However, Qatar has provided no evidence to support
these assertions. Further, the Bahrain Ministry of Oil and Industry has no
record of any of these events having taken place. Even assuming that these

allegations are factually correct (and there is no evidence to suggest they are),
they have no significance with respect to the question of sovereignty over
Fasht ad Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah; and

· Qatar denies that Fasht ad Dibal is used exclusively by Bahraini boats or that
Bahrain exercises exclusive coastguard control over it, but provides no

evidence to substantiate its denials. Rather, as shown above, the evidence
Qatar adduces in fact provides details of numerous instances of the Bahrain
coastguard preventing Qataris from interfering on Fasht ad Dibal.234348. In conclusion, both Bahrain and Qatar agree that Fasht ad Dibal is a low-
tide elevation and both have provided ample evidence of the historical and
present-day exercise of authority over it by Bahrain. There is no evidence of
the exercise of Qatari authority over Fasht ad Dibal.

H. The future of Qit'at Jaradah and Fasht ad Dibal

349. While the historical exercise of sovereignty over Bahrain's offshore
features forms the basis for its title to those features, the potential significance
of Qit'at Jaradah and Fasht ad Dibal to Bahrain's future cannot be ignored.

350. For the same reasons that Bahrain has commissioned feasibility studies

concerning the reclamation of Fasht al Azm, Bahrain has similar plans for
other components of its archipelago, including Qit'at Jaradah and Fasht ad
Dibal. Given the shallow waters around the Bahrain archipelago, in particular
around Fasht al Azm, Qit'at Jaradah and Fasht ad Dibal, as illustrated in the
photographs reproduced on the opposite page, these areas have potential for
future economic development. Also reproduced on the opposite page is a map

entitled "The proposed reclamation of the Bahrain archipelago", prepared by
the Bahrain Ministry of Housing. It illustrates the potential of the different
features of Bahrain's archipelago, for housing, industry, tourism, infrastructure,
communications, leisure and wildlife, and provides an insight into how
Bahrain could look in the twenty-first century.

PHOTO 8 : AREAS OF THE BAHRAIN ARCHIPELAGO WITH

POTENTIAL FOR LAND RECLAMATION - FASHT AL AZM - QIT'AT
JARADAN - FASHT AD DIBAL (81 KB)

351. Land reclamation is seen as the most viable solution to the dilemma posed
by Bahrain's rapidly increasing population. This necessarily includes
potentially all of Bahrain's islands and low-tide elevations. As has been
explained in relation to Fasht al Azm in Sub-section B above, Qatar, in contrast

to Bahrain, does not need to reclaim land to meet its population or other
requirements. Nor would it be in a position to reclaim land from any islands or
low-tide elevations off its west coast even were the maritime boundary to be
redrawn and those features were to be taken from Bahrain and assigned to
Qatar. The many features of Bahrain's archipelago are irrelevant to the future
of Qatar regardless of where the maritime boundary is drawn. Undoubtedly
this is one reason why Qatar considers these features to be irrelevant in

delimiting the maritime boundary.

MAP 9 : PROPOSED RECLAMATION OF THE BAHRAIN
ARCHIPELAGO (218 KB)

I. Low-tide elevations are subject to territorial sovereignty whether as a

matter of law or adjudication on an agreed principle

352. With respect to the remaining low-tide elevations in the contested
maritime area, there is no controversy as between the Parties that they are low-
tide elevations and that, as such, they are susceptible to acquisition andsovereignty. Qatar itself implicitly acknowledged this principle of law in
claiming for itself Fasht ad Dibal (which indisputably is a low-tide elevation)
and Qit'at Jaradah (which Qatar alleges is a low-tide elevation, although it is in
fact an island), though its claims had to be based on asserted proximity, since it
can demonstrate no effectivités. A necessary corollary of Qatar making such

claims to what it acknowledges to be low-tide elevations is that it must
perforce accept as a matter of law that they are susceptible to acquisition. In
this respect, the susceptibility of the acquisition of low-tide elevations may be
taken as part of an adjudication on an agreed principle in the case at hand.

353. Since the Counter-Memorials in the present case were exchanged, a
Tribunal sitting in the Eritrea/Yemen arbitration has rendered its award in the

first stage of the proceedings.235 While the geographical facts are different
(Eritrea and Yemen are two coastally opposite mainland States), some of the
holdings of the Tribunal are pertinent to this discussion. Of particular interest
is the fact that the Tribunal unanimously found that low-tide elevations both
within and beyond the territorial sea may be subject to the territorial
sovereignty of a State,236 effectively dismissing Qatar's insistence that "[t]he
law of the sea does not permit a State to acquire sovereignty over low-tide

elevations beyond the outer limits of its territorial sea."237 And the Tribunal
held, as a matter of

law, that "[r]epute is also an important ingredient for the consolidation of
title."238 Thus, Britain's recognition of Bahrain's sovereignty over the low-tide
elevations confirms that title.

354. In its Counter-Memorial, Bahrain demonstrated that the fact that low-tide
elevations give rise to a territorial sea entitlement indicates that they form part
of the territory of a State and are subject to its territorial sovereignty.239
Wholly apart from that general proposition, it is clear that the Parties
recognised that, in the southern sector, in the unique circumstances obtaining
in the region and given the archipelagic nature of Bahrain, Bahrain had title to

the low-tide elevations by virtue of what was, in effect, a local usage or lex
specialis.

355. Qatar, anxious to rely on certain aspects only of the delimitative
consequences of the 1947 British letters, resists Britain's prior recognition of
Bahrain's sovereignty over Fasht ad Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah. Qatar argues
plaintively, "the decision of the British Government in 1947 to allocate

sovereign rights over the Fasht ad Dibal and Qit'at Jaradah shoals to Bahrain
appears to have been mistaken."240 The fact (which Qatar wishes to dismiss)
that Britain properly and on the basis of sound evidence and analysis
recognised Bahrain's sovereignty over certain low-tide elevations is very
significant evidence, for repute is an important indicator of title in international
law.

J. Qatar's claims to the low-tide elevations are based on alleged proximity,
unfounded in law or in fact356. While Qatar purports to reject the susceptibility of low-tide elevations to
appropriation by the rules of territorial acquisition, as a matter of law, it
implicitly acknowledges, as noted above, that they are susceptible to
acquisition by itself claiming them. Because Qatar is unable to demonstrate
any effectivités, however, it is obliged to base its claim to the low-tide

elevations entirely on asserted proximity.241

357. Even assuming, arguendo, that proximity alone could defeat the superior
claim if not title of another State, Qatar's reference point was not the nearest
Bahraini island to the low-tide elevation in question, as would be appropriate
for an archipelagic State, but the second-furthest possible Bahraini island, viz.
Al-Awal, the main island. In fact, there are Bahraini islands that are closer to

the low-tide elevations in question, hence any argument of title based upon
proximity must redound to Bahrain's benefit. Even were some of the maritime
features closer to Qatar than to Bahrain, they would still pertain to Bahrain
based on its manifestations of sovereignty and on the fact that an archipelagic
State is confronting an exclusively mainland State. Bahrain will return to the
relevance of relative distance to sovereign title in its consideration of Qatar's
arguments with respect to sovereignty below.

K. Bahrain's sovereign title to the insular formations in dispute is firmly
based on continuous and contextually appropriate manifestations of
sovereignty as well as on repute

358. In modern international law, the root of territorial sovereignty is, in Max

Huber's words, "effective apprehension",242 which is determined by legal
history and demonstrations of effectivités. The requisite standard of
demonstration of occupation takes account of the habitability and accessibility
of the territory in question, such that relatively uninhabitable or inaccessible
areas require a lower level of demonstration.243

359. As the Court has used the term in Frontier Dispute244 and Gulf of

Fonseca,245 the test of occupation, especially in ecologies that are less
hospitable to continuous human habitation, is one of demonstrating effectivités.
Where two States contend for the same area, the decision-maker must compare
the quantity and quality of the effectivités adduced by each. The juridical value
of the alleged factual events is determined, as will be elaborated below, by
reference to a legal code that can be derived from international jurisprudence.

Bahrain's demonstration of its sovereignty over the insular formations in
dispute, as described above, meets this legal test.

L. Only in the absence of a preponderance of effectivités - not applicable in
the present case - may a tribunal resort to presumptions that take account
of the location of the insular formations in question

360. In the first stage of the Eritrea/Yemen award, the Tribunal was
constrained to rely on two rather innovative presumptions because the Tribunal
held that neither of the Parties was able to muster a legal history in support of
its claims, something that does not obtain in the present case. The Tribunal'sfirst presumption was that "islands within the twelve-mile coastal belt will
belong to the coastal State, unless there is a fully-established case to the
contrary ...".246 The second presumption was that "islands off a coast will
belong to the coastal State, unless another, superior title can be
established."247 Even assuming that both of these presumptions, each of

which imposes a different evidentiary burden, are accepted as lex lata, it is
clear that neither comes into operation in the present case, for the contingency
that the Tribunal required does not obtain here. In the present case, Bahrain has
marshalled extensive evidence of effectivités, which will be reviewed briefly
below. Discounting the forged evidence, which has been withdrawn by Qatar,
Qatar has only one example of a purported effectivité, viz. the military
intervention on Qit'at Jaradah on 26 April 1986. This will also be dealt with

below.248 Hence a critical issue which falls to be decided in the present case
in order to determine the coasts of the Parties for purposes of the delimitation
of their maritime boundary is the preponderance of effectivités over the insular
formations in the contested maritime areas.

M. Effectivités have a legal and factual dimension

361. Manifestations of sovereignty for purposes of establishing or
consolidating title to territory in international law have a legal as well as a
factual component. Not every factual event qualifies as an effectivité;
moreover, a factual event in one context may be an effectivité, yet not
constitute an effectivité in another context. As the Chamber in the Frontier
Dispute case said:

"The role played in this case by such effectivités is Chamber will have
to weigh carefully the legal force of these in each particular instance. It
must however state forthwith, in general terms, what legal relationship
exists between such acts and the titles on which the implementation of
the principle of uti possidetis is grounded. For this purpose, a
distinction must be drawn among several eventualities. Where the act

corresponds exactly to law, where the administration is additional to the
uti possidetis juris, the only role of effectivité is to confirm the exercise
of the right derived from a legal title. Where the act does not
correspond to the law, where the territory which is the subject of the
dispute is effectively administered by a State other than the one
possessing the legal title, preference should be given to the holder of
the title. In the event that the effectivité does not co-exist with any legal

title, it must invariably be taken into consideration. Finally, there are
cases where the legal title is not capable of showing exactly the
territorial expanse to which it relates. The effectivités can then play an
essential role in showing how the title is interpreted in practice."249

362. International jurisprudence supplies many examples of lawful effectivités.
For example, overflight of an uninhabited island that is inhospitable to human

habitation has not been deemed a manifestation of sovereignty. Nor would
naval movement in the waters around a contested island be deemed a
manifestation of sovereignty over it. Arrests of fishing vessels for violations of
regulations would constitute a manifestation of sovereignty. Publication ofnotices to mariners or pilotage instructions relating to the waters of contested
islands may constitute manifestations of sovereignty. The establishment and
maintenance of lighthouses have been held in Grisbadarna250 to be an
effectivité, but, as will be seen below,251 recent jurisprudence has appraised
the juridical value of this factual event in the specific context in which it

occurred. Oil exploration licenses over waters, without reference to the islands
concerned are not deemed to be manifestations of sovereignty over those
islands. Permanent military posts will be considered to be manifestations of
sovereignty. The exercise of legislative, criminal and civil jurisdiction is a
manifestation of sovereignty over islands.

363. The leitmotif in all of the lawful examples of effectivités is "an intentional

display of power and authority over the territory, by the exercise of jurisdiction
and State functions."252 All of these examples manifest a common juridical
method that is highly sensitive to context and circumstance and that is applied
flexibly to the necessarily wide diversity of geographical and historical
circumstances presented for decision.

N. Bahrain's effectivités on the insular features establish its title to them

364. In its Memorial, Bahrain provided evidence of the historical exercise of
its sovereignty over the insular features.253 Much of this evidence is
confirmed by the

testimony of retired sailors, fishermen and pearl-fishers from Bahrain and

Saudi

Arabia.254

365. In its Counter-Memorial, Qatar challenges five categories of Bahraini acts
of sovereignty: the erection of beacons or cairns; activities of oil companies;
aids to fishermen; exclusive use of fashts; navigational safety and police; and

the pearling and fishing industries. Bahrain will comment briefly on these
challenges seriatim, but will take up pearling in its discussion of the northern
sector, below.

366. In its Memorial, Qatar reviews, in some detail, Bahrain's beaconing and
the erection of cairns on the contested maritime features.255 These activities

are of course well known, as Qatar unintentionally shows. Thus, there is no
need to enter into a discussion of the facts. It is acknowledged that this is a
Bahraini activity and that there is no corresponding Qatari activity whatsoever.
As far as law is concerned, Qatar simply says "the erection of markers or
beacons has never been recognised as a means of acquisition of territory."0

367. As a mainland State, one can understand why Qatar sees no particular

significance in the beacons and cairns. For sea-going and archipelagic peoples,
however, these are extremely important structures, vital for navigation and
sometimes for survival itself. Hence, at the very least, the erection of the
beacons and cairns by Bahrain (without any corresponding activity by Qatar)shows a strong interest in the maritime features. In Grisbadarna, the Tribunal
said

"Whereas, a demarcation which would assign the Grisbadarna to
Sweden is supported by all of several circumstances of fact which were

pointed out during the discussion and of which the following are the
principal ones:

a) The circumstance that lobster fishing in the shoals of Grisbadarna
has been carried on for a much longer time, to a much larger extent,
and by much larger number of fishers by the subjects of Sweden than
by the subjects of Norway.

b) The circumstance that Sweden has performed various acts in the
Grisbadarna region, especially of late, owing to her conviction that
these regions were Swedish, as, for instance, the placing of beacons, the
measurement of the sea, and the installation of a light-boat, being acts
which involved considerable expense and in doing which she not only

thought that she was exercising her right but even more that she was
performing her duty; whereas Norway, according to her own
admission, showed much less solicitude in this region in these various
regards. . . ."1

368. More recently, as the Tribunal in Eritrea/Yemen said of Yemeni
lighthouses, the construction of lighthouses has "implications":

"The erection and maintenance of lights, outside of any treaty
arrangements and for the indefinite future, had certain implications.
The acceptance of Yemen's offer did not constitute recognition of
Yemen sovereignty over islands. But it did accept the reality that
Yemen was best placed and was willing, to take on the role of
providing and managing lights in that part of the Red Sea; and that

when the time came finally to determine the status of those islands
Yemen would certainly be a `party concerned'."2

369. Bahrain submits that the fact that, for many decades, it has established
and maintained beacons and cairns while Qatar has not, demonstrates the
acceptance and discharge of the maritime responsibility of an archipelagic
State, continued interest, and the exercise of jurisdiction through assistance to

mariners. In context, Bahrain submits that these facts constitute an effectivité.

370. With respect to activities by oil companies, once again, the facts are not
disputed. Qatar, however, submits in its Counter-Memorial:

"[S]urvey work by private oil companies operating out of Bahrain, and

even the drilling of structure holes on a low-tide elevation, particularly
when carried out in the circumstances just described, constitutes [sic]
no evidence of "acts of sovereignty'" by Bahrain over Fasht ad Dibal
and Qit'at Jaradah."3371. Bahrain submits that, in international law, activities undertaken in a
territory by private actors under license from a State claiming that territory do
indeed constitute manifestations of sovereignty. Once again Bahrain has
submitted evidence of such activities; Qatar can submit none.

372. Aids to fishermen (without reference to the beacons and cairns discussed
above), wells drilled by an oil company under license of Bahrain or by Bahrain
nationals using the islands in question are manifestations of Bahraini
sovereignty. Once again, Bahrain would draw the Court's attention to the fact
that there are no corresponding activities by Qatar.

373. With respect to the use of the fashts by Bahraini boats, the issue is not

whether the nationals of other States used the fashts, but which State exercised
jurisdiction over them. Bahrain has adduced ample evidence of its legislative,
regulatory and administrative jurisdiction. Qatar has submitted none. Bahrain
will take up this aspect in its discussion of the pearling areas, below.

O. Qatar's alleged effectivités, their arguable effectiveness

notwithstanding, do not meet the test of the aforementioned legal
dimension for manifestations of sovereignty and hence are devoid of
juridical significance

374. Excluding the mass of fraudulent evidence that Qatar has been
constrained to abandon, Qatar can adduce virtually no effectivités with respect
to the various insular formations and maritime features that are pertinent to the

delimitation of the southern sector. That should occasion no surprise, as Qatar,
in its short history, has been a land-based and land-oriented State and its
continental thrust to the sea, such as it was, has been eastward from the eastern
coast of the peninsula, where its population has historically clustered. As a
result, Qatar has been forced to invent a theory of the inherent insusceptibility
of Bahrain's insular formations in the southern sector to effectivités; a theory
that archipelagic components are to be ignored in maritime delimitation; and a

theory that they are then to be assigned to the proximate "mainland." The
covert objective of these various contrived theories is to evade a comparative
assessment of the effectivités of the parties.

375. The one, glaring exception to Qatar's absence of effectivités over any of
the insular formations is Qatar's military invasion of Qit'at Jaradah on 26 April
1986. The ostensible Bahraini "sin" that Qatar used to justify the invasion was

that Bahrain had erected a lighthouse on Qit'at Jaradah. A lighthouse is, of
course, critical for navigation and only a State that has an interest in it would
assume the substantial investment involved in establishing and maintaining
one. Qatar has established no lighthouses in the southern sector. If Bahrain had
not had title to Qit'at Jaradah, any juridical value from the construction and
maintenance of a lighthouse would have been precluded by the doctrine of

critical date. If a lighthouse is an effectivité, then Bahrain's action is an
important event for purposes of title, whether on Qit'at Jaradah or on the other
formations on which Bahrain has maintained lighthouses.376. If the establishment and maintenance of a lighthouse on Qit'at Jaradah
was an effectivité, then Qatar is obliged to acknowledge that all of Bahrain's
lighthouses are manifestations of sovereignty. In its Memorial and Counter-
Memorial, Bahrain has insisted that, in any case, Qatar's illegal action can have
no effect on Bahrain's title. It is significant that, once the fraudulent evidence

was purged from its case, the only effectivité to which Qatar can point is this
single violation of the United Nations Charter.

SECTION 5.4 Qatar's new allegations with respect to the southern sector

377. The Parties agree that the delimitation must be effected in two distinct
sectors, but disagree on the exact location of the division and the legal

implications of effecting a division. They agree that the northernmost point of
each of their coasts is the proper terminus of the line dividing the southern and
northern sectors but they disagree as to where those points are.

A. Qatar's proposed dividing line is inconsistent with law and fact

378. Because Qatar insists that coast means the coast of the mainland, it rejects
Bahrain's characterisation of its northernmost point as Ras Rakan and proposes
instead Point RK:

"having regard to the necessity of relying strictly on the actual coast
and . . . out of a desire to be consistent with Qatar's position in the
present case, that no account should be taken of islets, rocks and low-

tide elevations. Thus, in Qatar's view, and contrary to what has
seemingly been Bahrain's choice, the low-water line on Ras Rakan islet
cannot be regarded as representing the northern tip of the Qatar
peninsula and as a relevant point for that purpose."4

379. This self-righteous assertion on Qatar's part is rather surprising, for in
Qatar's Memorial, it described "the relevant coast of Qatar" as extending from

R'as Uwaynat in the south "to the northernmost point of the coast of Qatar
located east of the light of Ras Rakan",5 thereby acknowledging the validity of
the coastal theory submitted by Bahrain. Without regard to the inconsistency
between its formulations in its Memorial and its Counter-Memorial or the legal
accuracy of the theory of coast Qatar is using in this part of its argument,
Bahrain will defer to a State's competence to describe its own coast, as long as
the description is infra legem, and will henceforth take Qatar's preference as

the northernmost point of the Qatari coast. As the Court said in the Anglo-
Norwegian Fisheries case, "the coastal State would seem to be in the best
position to appraise the local conditions dictating the selection."6

380. With respect to the northernmost point of Bahrain's coast, Bahrain, as an
archipelago, has designated Fasht ad Dibal, the basepoint of Qit'at Jaradah

Island. This is the northernmost point of Bahrain's coast facing Qatar in a
configuration of coastal opposition. Qatar, choosing to ignore the archipelagic
character of Bahrain, has arbitrarily selected a point on Muharraq Island as
Bahrain's northernmost point. Because Qatar's submission is completelyinconsistent with the archipelagic character of Bahrain (which it itself
acknowledges) and the international law relating thereto, Bahrain rejects it.

B. Because the co-ordinates from which Qatar has generated its proposed
provisional median line in the southern sector are unfounded in fact and

law, the resulting line is equally unfounded in fact and law

381. The parties are in agreement, as a matter of law, that the praxis for
maritime boundary delimitation in situations of coastal opposition calls, as a
first step, for the projection of a provisional median line every point of which
is equidistant from the opposite coasts. However, Qatar chooses to ignore the
archipelagic character of Bahrain and selects instead a coastline on part of the

archipelago that discriminates in its own favour. Bahrain rejects the factitious
provisional line produced in Qatar's exercise.

C. Qatar's proposed criteria for adjustment of the median line are either
incorrect or misapplied

382. A second step, after the description of a provisional median line between
the coasts of parties in a configuration of coastal opposition, is to inquire
whether any adjustments are called for, in the circumstances of the case, in the
provisional median line. Qatar proposes two reasons for adjusting the fictitious
line it has created. The first is the alleged disparity in the lengths of the
coastlines of each of the States. The second is the British letters of 1947.
Neither of those assertions has any basis in law or fact.

D. There is no disparity between the legal coasts of the two States in the
southern sector

383. Significantly, Qatar elects to compute only what it characterises as
Bahrain's "relevant coast."7 That imaginary construct excludes the archipelagic
coast of Bahrain and the Hawar Islands. If Bahrain's coast and the Hawar

Islands are taken into account, there is no significant disparity in the lengths of
coastline in the southern sector. Hence, there is no need for an adjustment of an
appropriately described provisional median line in the southern sector, due to
the effective parity of the lengths of the opposite coasts of each State in that
sector.

E. The British letters of 1947 do not constitute a factor under
international law that calls for an adjustment in a properly described
provisional median line

384. Qatar's second proposed reason for adjustment is the 1947 British letters.
As Qatar has already acknowledged that they do not constitute an agreement
and are not binding on the Parties, as explained earlier, there is no basis for

their application. At that, the Court will note how capricious and inconsistent
Qatar is in using the British line. It ignores it entirely with respect to the Hawar
Islands (other than Janan and Hadd Janan), because Britain had confirmed
Bahrain's sovereignty in accord with the 1939 award (other than Janan andHadd Janan), but only uses it in those circumstances in which it believes that it
will discriminate in its favour.

SECTION 5.5 Qatar's allegations in the northern sector

385. In its Counter-Memorial, Bahrain demonstrated the manifold factual and
legal errors in Qatar's submission with respect to the single maritime boundary
in the northern sector. In this Reply, Bahrain will, insofar as possible, confine
itself to responding to Qatar's assertions in its Counter-Memorial about the
Bahraini submission with respect to the northern sector, focusing on the
significant points of disagreement and restating parts of its own position only
when it is necessary to clarify matters already before the Court. Geographical

facts, e.g., that Qit'at Jaradah is an island and that Fasht ad Dibal is an
appropriate basepoint of that island, need not be restated, even though Qatar
devotes a great deal of time to them in the presentation of its case with respect
to the northern sector. Facts such as these are inconvenient for Qatar, but they
are facts nevertheless.

A. The parties agree on the law that applies

386. Despite Qatar's assertions,8 Bahrain agrees entirely that, here as in the
southern sector, the law that governs is customary international law. Bahrain
and Qatar apparently disagree only on the application of that law to the facts of
the present case and, in particular, the weight to be given to different factors in
the unique features of this, as indeed of every other, maritime delimitation. The

principles of delimitation must be applied differently rather than mechanically
in each particular configuration. That is one reason why maritime boundary
delimitation is such a challenging task for international decision makers.

B. Qatar misconceives the purpose of sectoralisation, transforming it into
an illogical and often meaningless exercise

387. The Parties agree that there should be a sectoralisation, separating the
northern and southern sectors. But Qatar submits that "the northern sector is
quite clearly a prolongation of the southern sector, which is an obvious case of
delimitation between States with opposite coasts."9 If that were the case, there
would be no point to the sectoralisation suggested. One sectoralises when the
relevant geographical features are so different in the two sectors that, without
treating them separately, an equitable result in one sector would produce an

inequitable result in another.

388. Moreover, when one sectoralises, one does not "double-count." If a
sectoral line is an appropriate step in delimitation here - and both parties agree
that it is - then the relevant coasts in the southern sector are not counted again
in the northern sector. In the present case, the relevant coast in the northern

sector is the dimension created by the sectoral line, viz., Fasht ad Dibal to point
RK, the point selected by Qatar as its northernmost extremity. The resulting
configuration approximates one of coastal adjacency; coastline ratio is
computed by reference to that constructive coastal line.C. Qatar's contention that Bahrain's maritime boundary encroaches upon
Qatar's "natural prolongation" is incorrect

389. Despite Qatar's contention, Bahrain also agrees that a delimitation based
upon equitable principles must allow for "the normal seaward projection of

Qatar's coasts"10 and agrees with the principle enunciated in Guinea/Guinea-
Bissau, upon which Qatar relies in theory.11 Bahrain submits that its line in
the northern sector does precisely this. The purpose of sectoralisation is to
enable the Court to treat each of the distinct and different geographical
situations differently. Without a sectoralisation line, equitable treatment in one
sector would be compromised in the other, because of the different
geographical configuration existing there. The sectoral line - which is, as

Bahrain has demonstrated, not a "closing line" - separates the southern and
northern sectors and enables a delimitation to be effected in each that responds
to its particular geographical features.

390. Bahrain's southern line in no way compromises Qatar's seaward extension
in that sector; it stops it at the point where Bahrain's ocean space in the
southern sector commences. In the northern sector, Bahrain's delimitation line

in no way obstructs Qatar's northern thrust seaward; Bahrain's line between O-
R allows Qatar full access to the sea. There is absolutely no basis to Qatar's
claim that the vector established by O-R in any way fails an equitable
principles (or equitable result) test on this ground. Qatar may argue that the
lines R-S-T-U-Z, which depart from the O-R vector to take account of
Bahrain's historic title to the pearling banks, take maritime space it would

otherwise enjoy were the O-R vector continued vers le large. That assertion is
correct. But the validity of the R-S-T-U-Z line is based on a historic title to the
pearling grounds, a pre-existing title which must be recognised if Bahrain's
claim to the pearling grounds is sustained. That finding, whether affirmative or
negative, has no effect on the lawfulness of the vector produced by the co-
ordinates O-R, which in no way limits Qatar's seaward projection northward.

D. Bahrain's historic title to the pearling banks is based on continuous,
peaceful exercise of imperium, through legislative, judicial and
administrative action

391. Bahrain claims a historic title to the pearling banks in the northern sector,
the existence of which requires an adjustment in the boundary line.12 Bahrain
bases its title on the exercise of jurisdiction and control over the pearling banks

by Bahrain through acts of legislation, administration and adjudication. The
fact that pearling is now substantially reduced cannot affect a title that has
vested and against which no other claimant can demonstrate the contextually
appropriate manifestation of sovereignty.

392. Bahrain's administration of the waters around its pearling banks continues

today. Its coastguard vessels patrol those areas, as they always have.13 In
addition, the Bahrain coastguard has no record of Qatari coastguards patrolling
these areas.393. Qatar, in its Counter-Memorial, does not address any of those legislative,
administrative or judicial actions. Indeed, Qatar acknowledges them. Dr.
Bhandarker's testimony demonstrates that Bahrain provided, at government
expense, health services on the banks. Qatar alleges that its coastguard engaged
in patrols in the area, but provides no data for the assertion.

394. Qatar contends that the historic fishing rights of Bahrain are undermined
by the fact that some nationals of other States in the area also used the pearl
fishing grounds. Bahrain does not contest that fact. To the contrary. Qatar fails
to distinguish between acts of imperium and acts of dominium. There is no
question but that Bahrain alone exercised the acts of imperium over the
pearling banks in dispute. Qatar does not challenge that.

395. The question here, as in other bilateral disputes with respect to
sovereignty over territory, is comparative and not absolute. In this regard, it is
significant that Qatar can invoke no legislation, administration or adjudication
whatsoever with respect to the pearling banks.

396. Qatar invokes the Bahraini Proclamation of 5 June 1949 as well as its own
Proclamation issued four days thereafter. In the final paragraph of the Bahrain
Proclamation (the Qatari Proclamation is identical), the Ruler of Bahrain,
Sheikh Salman bin Hamed Al-Khalifa, stated that nothing in the Proclamation
was to be considered as affecting, inter alia, "traditional pearling rights in such
waters". This is no more than an assurance to private users, who had pearled
subject to Bahraini jurisdiction and control, that they may continue to do so.

That authorisation in no way compromises the sovereignty of the State
allowing the traditional activity to continue. Indeed, the Eritrea/Yemen
Tribunal stated:

"In finding that the Parties each have sovereignty over various of the
Islands the Tribunal stresses to them that such sovereignty is not
inimical to, but rather entails, the perpetuation of the traditional fishing

regime in the region."14

397. The Proclamation is, in no way, an admission that Bahrain lacked
sovereignty over the pearling banks in question.

398. Nor does the British letter of 19 December 1960, to which the Ruler of
Bahrain responded on 16 August 1961, indicate acquiescence on the part of

Bahrain to the British position. It need hardly be stated that the British
position, dictated by its own political interests, could hardly be dispositive of
the international legal rights of Bahrain, which fall to be decided by the
International Court of Justice. Nor, as the International Court has said in Jan
Mayen,15 does a negotiated agreement between two States import an
acceptance of a principle of law with respect to third party States. It is obvious

that a wide variety of non-maritime political factors as well as idiosyncratic
maritime and geographic factors would be weighed in the negotiation of a
bilateral maritime boundary delimitation. 399. Qatar contends that Bahrain has inaccurately described the location of the
pearling banks.16 In support of its contention, Qatar refers to British charts of
the area.17 These charts are intended for navigational purposes only; they
make no reference to pearling banks. Bahrain notes that Qatar has not disputed
the fact that the twelve principal Bahrain pearling banks described in Bahrain's

pleadings18 belong to Bahrain.

LIST OF ANNEXES

Annex No. Description Page No.

1 Decypher of telegram from British Political Resident 1
to Secretary of State of India, 18 August 1932 (FO
371/16000)
2 Foreign Office minute, 10 June 1964 (FO 371 2-4

174526, in division BB 1081/6)
3 Extract from Gulf Daily News, 11 August 1986 5
4 Executive summary of "Fasht al Adhm Urban 6-31

Development Study", June 1987
5 International Maritime Boundaries, Ed. John Charney 32-33
and Lewis Alexander (Martinus Nijhoff) 1993, Vol.
2, p. 997

6 Extracts from Gulf Daily News, 18 January 1997 34-49
onwards
7 Extracts from Gulf Daily News, 24 May 1997 50-59
onwards

8 Extracts from Gulf Daily News, 20 July 1997 60-65
onwards
9 Extracts from Gulf Daily News, 9 September 1997 66-69
onwards

10 Extracts from Gulf Daily News, 29 September 1997 70-71
onwards
11 UNDP Human Development Report State of Bahrain, 72-74
1998, p. 48

12 Extracts from Gulf Daily News, 25 October 1998 75-76
onwards
13 Expert research report by Professor Lewis Alexander: 77-98

"An Assessment of Qit'at Jaradah's Juridical Status:
13(a) Island or Low-tide Elevation", 28 March 1999 84-85

13(b) Photographs of Qit'at Jaradah at high water spring 86-91
tide, April, June, August, September, October,
13(c) November 1998 92-93

13(c)(i) Annex One: extracts from the State of Bahrain tide 94
tables for 1998
13(c)(ii) 95
Annex Two: report of the Bahrain Survey Directorate13(c)(iii) on the status of Qit'at Jaradah 96

13(c)(iv) Chart showing the Apparent High Water Mark and 97
the Apparent Low Water Mark

13(c)(v) 98
Chart showing spot heights

Chart showing spot heights

Chart showing spot heights

Chart showing spot heights
14 Expert research report by Christopher Carleton, 99-124
MBE: "Fasht al A'zm: An Extension of Sitrah Island",
14(a) 29 March 1999 110-111

14(b) Notice 1: Admiralty Notice to Mariners NM 1042/85,
22 April 1985 112
14(c)
Notice 2: Admiralty Notice to Mariners NM 3865/87, 113
14(d) 23 December 1987
114

14(e) Chart I: Survey by HM Indian Surveying Schooner,
1872-74 115
14(f)
Chart II: Admiralty Chart 2377, 1902 116
14(g)
Chart III: Survey of HM "Ormonde", 1932 117

14(h)
Chart IV: Admiralty Chart 3790, 1939 118
14(i)
Chart V: Admiralty Chart 3790, 1953 119
14(j)
Chart VI: Survey by Iraq Petroleum Company 120
14(k)

Chart VII: Admiralty Chart 3790, 1982 121
14(l)
Chart VIII: Bahrain Chart 1502, 1986 122
14(m)
Chart IX: Admiralty Chart 3790, 1987 123
14(n)

Chart X: Admiralty Chart 3790, 1992 124

Chart XI: Admiralty Chart 3790, 1993

Satellite image of Fasht al A'zm, 15 November 1986

15(a) Translation of statement of Ibrahim bin Irhama Al 125
Binali, 4 May 1999
15(b) 126 Statement of Ibrahim bin Irhama Al Binali, 4 May
1999

16(a) Translation of statement of Ahmad bin Mohamad Al 127
Shayji, 4 May 1999
16(b) 128
Statement of Ahmad bin Mohamad Al Shayji, 4 May
1999

17(a) Translation of statement of Mohamad bin Abdalla Al 129
Thawadi, 4 May 1999
17(b) 130-131
Statement of Mohamad bin Abdalla Al Thawadi, 4
May 1999

18(a) Translation of statement of Saleh bin Abdalla bin 132
Mohamad, 4 May 1999
18(b) 133
Statement of Saleh bin Abdalla bin Mohamad, 4 May
1999

19(a) Translation of statement of Mubarak Ahmad Al 134
Naaimi, 4 May 1999
19(b) 135
Statement of Mubarak Ahmad Al Naaimi, 4 May
1999

20(a) Translation of statement of Mubarak bin Salman Al 136
Ghatam, 5 May 1999
20(b) 137-138
Statement of Mubarak bin Salman Al Ghatam, 5 May
1999

21(a) Translation of statement of Ali bin Ahmad bin 139
Shaheen Al Dosari, 5 May 1999
21(b) 140-141
Statement of Ali bin Ahmad bin Shaheen Al Dosari, 5
May 1999

22(a) Translation of statement of Majed bin Abdalla bin 142
Thamer Al Dosari, 5 May 1999
22(b) 143
Statement of Majed bin Abdalla bin Thamer Al
Dosari, 5 May 1999

23(a) Translation of statement of Abdallah bin Ali bin 144-145
Thamir Al Dosari, 5 May 1999
23(b) 146-147
Statement of Abdallah bin Ali bin Thamir Al Dosari,
5 May 1999

24 Coastguard report from the Ministry of the Interior, 5148-162
May 1999 (with English translation)
24(a) 152
Annex 1: Map showing the extent of Bahrain
24(b) 153-162 coastguard patrols

Annex 2: Extracts from Bahrain coastguard logbooks,

with translations
25 Photographs of Qit'at Jaradah, 7 May 1999 163-175
26(a) Translation of statement of Salim bin Mohammed 176

Salim Al-Omairi, 8 May 1999
26(b) 177-178
Statement of Salim bin Mohammed Salim Al-Omairi,
8 May 1999

27(a) Translation of statement of Khalil bin Ibrahim Al- 179
Khaldi, 8 May 1999
27(b) 180-181
Statement of Khalil bin Ibrahim Al-Khaldi, 8 May
1999

28(a) Translation of statement of Abdullah bin Thazaa Al- 182
Majdal, 8 May 1999
28(b) 183
Statement of Abdullah bin Thazaa Al-Majdal, 8 May
1999

29(a) Translation of statement of Sulaiman bin Sagr bin 184
Salman Al-Majdal Al-Khaldi, 8 May 1999
29(b) 185
Statement of Sulaiman bin Sagr bin Salman Al-
Majdal Al-Khaldi, 8 May 1999

30(a) Translation of statement of Bader bin Mohammed Al- 186
Majdal Al-Khaldi, 8 May 1999
30(b) 187
Statement of Bader bin Mohammed Al-Majdal Al-
Khaldi, 8 May 1999

31(a) Translation of statement of Mubarak bin Saad, 188
undated
31(b) 189
Statement of Mubarak bin Saad, undated

__________

FOOTNOTES

1 When initially presenting the 81 astonishing documents in its Memorial, Qatar referred to:

"the glaring gap between appearance and reality. The appearance is reflected in the official
documents in the British archives ... The unpleasantreality is reflected in a number of
documents dating from the mid-1930s which are in the Qatari archives." See Qatar Memorial
(hereinafter "QM") para. 6.63.

Now that the documents have been exposed as forgeries, Qatar's assertion ironically confirms
Bahrain's position.2 The discussion of sovereignty over all the various islands and other features of the Bahrain
archipelago belongs properly in the part devoted to territorial issues (Part I). However, as in its previous
pleadings, because of their effect on the maritime delimitation, Bahrain will address these issues (except
for those relating to the Hawar Islands) in the maritime part of the Reply (Part II).

3 Qatar both acknowledges and challenges the arbitration.See QM para. 6.122.

4 Qatar Counter-Memorial (hereinafter "QCM") para. 1.2.

5 QCM para. 1.2.

6 QCM para. 1.4.

7 QCM para. 1.4.

8 QCM para. 2.39 to 2.40.

9 QCM para. 5.1.

10 The Court needs no reminding that it expressly included Zubarah as an issue in the dispute between
the Parties in its Judgment of 15 February 1995.

11 Bahrain Memorial (hereinafter "BM") Section 1.4(A); Bahrain Counter-Memorial (hereinafter

"BCM") para. 159. See also Chapter 3 of this Reply.

12 BM Section 3.6(A) (D) and (F).

13 See e.g., BM paras. 442 to 444 and 448.

14 BCM paras. 159 to 161; QM para. 5.8.

15 BM Sections 3.5 to 3.7.

16 BCM Section 2.3.

17 Except where additional evidence has been adduced by Bahrain in its Counter-Memorial, all
references are to the BM.

18 BM paras. 413 and 424.

19 Brucks survey p. 113, BM Annex 7, Vol. 2, p. 92 at p. 101. BM paras. 116 and 415.

20 BM para. 417.

21 BM para. 347.

22 BM para. 432.

23 BM paras. 21, 410 and 425.

24 BM paras. 433 to 436, 476 to 478 and 480 to 482.

25 BM para. 424.

26 BM paras. 479 and 480.27 BM para. 479.

28 BM paras. 410 and 424 and paras. 426 to 431.

29 BM para. 427.

30 BM para. 424.

31 BM para. 436.

32 BCM paras. 169 to 173; QM para. 5.44.

33 BCM paras. 169 to 173; QM para. 6.218.

34 BCM paras. 159, 190 and 191.

35 BM Anns. 313 to 316.

36 BM Ann. 242, Case No. 264/1351 (1932).

37 BM Ann. 243, Case No. 6/1351.

38 BM para. 439.

39 BM paras. 418, 442 and 443.

40 BM paras. 418, 440 and 452.

41 BM paras. 444 to 446.

42 BM paras. 447 and 466.

43 BM para. 466.

44 See, e.g., BM paras. 445 and 459.

45 BM paras. 460 to 463.

46 BM paras. 451 and 484.

47 BM para. 483.

48 BM paras. 454 to 457.

49 BM paras. 455 to 457.

50 BM para. 457.

51 BM paras. 440 and 472.

52 BCM paras. 196 and 197.

53 BCM paras. 217 and 218.

54 BCM para. 207.55 BCM paras. 237 to 241.

56 BCM paras. 237 to 241.

57 BCM para. 242.

58 BCM paras. 243 and 244.

59 BCM paras. 246, 247 and 251 to 255.

60 BCM Sections 2.3(b)(iv) and (v).

61 BM para. 483.

62 BM para. 473 and 483.

63 BM para. 458.

64 BM para. 471.

65 BM para. 472.

66 BM para. 460.

67 BM para. 472.

68 BM para. 484.

69 BM para. 466.

70 BM para. 475.

71 BM para. 464.

72 BM paras. 466 and 474.

73 BM para. 467.

74 BM paras. 468 and 469.

75 BM para. 469.

76 BM para. 487.

77 BM paras. 453 and 498; see also Extracts from Gulf Daily News, Annex 7, Vol. 2, p.50.

78 BM para. 498.

79 BM para. 487; see also Bahrain Coastguard Report, Annex 24, Vol. 2, p. 148.

80 BM para. 487.

81 BM para. 488.

82 BM para. 489.83 BM paras. 488 and 490.

84 BM paras. 488, 490 and 497.

85 BM paras. 488 and 490.

86 BM para. 488.

87 BM para. 491.

88 BM para. 491; see also Extracts from Gulf Daily News, Annex 6, Vol. 2, p. 34.

89 BM para. 491.

90 BM paras. 492 to 496.

91 BCM para. 159.

92 BM para. 466.

93 BM para. 358.

94 BM para. 41.

95 BM paras. 406 to 411.

96 BCM Sections 2.2.E to 2.2.F, 2.2.H to 2.2.J and 2.3.

97 See paras. 197 to 203, infra.

98 QM paras. 5.60 to 5.68.

99 QCM paras. 3.82 to 3.95 and 3.105 to 3.118.

100 QCM para. 3.107.

101 QCM para. 3.106.

102 BM Section 3.6.A.

103 BM Section 3.6.B.

104 BM Section 3.6.C.

105 BM Section 3.6.D.

106 BM Section 3.6.E.

107 BM paras. 415, 417, 422, 424, 427, 432 and 436; BCM para. 184.

108 BM paras. 440, 442, 444, 448, 456, 459, 462, 471, 475 and 482.

109 BM para. 424.

110 BM paras. 447, 455, 477 and 481.111 BM para. 422.

112 BCM para. 186

113 BM paras. 413 to 414.

114 BM para. 417.

115 BCM para. 191.

116 BM paras. 410, 426 to 431.

117 BCM para. 191; see also, Lorimer, J.G., Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf, Oman and Central Arabia,
Gregg, Farnsborough, 1970. BM Ann. 74, Vol. III, p. 371 at p. 378.

118 BCM para. 193.

119 BM paras. 427 and 429.

120 BM paras. 433 to 437.

121 QCM para. 3.86.

122 In its efforts to impugn Bahrain's evidence of the extent of the Al-Khalifa's authority and control
over the Dowasir, Qatar selectively quotes from a letter dated 4 April 1909 from the British Political
Agent (Prideaux) concerning the Ottoman claim to Zakhnuniya Island: "... the Dowasir regarded Hawar

as their own independent territory ...." QCM para. 3.86. When read in full and in context, however, the
statement actually shows that the Hawar Islands were viewed by Prideaux as belonging to Bahrain in
view of the fact that the Dowasir had originally been granted permission to reside there by the Al-
Khalifa.

123 QCM para. 3.88.

124 BM para. 429.

125 Qatar also quotes from a statement by another British Political Agent (Alban) some thirty years
later, in a document entitled "Ownership of Hawar" see QCM para. 3.87. Bahrain has addressed the
views expressed by Alban and the then Political Resident, Prior, and refuted Qatar's misplaced reliance
on them, in section 2.3(H) of its Counter-Memorial. For present purposes, it is sufficient simply to
recall that Alban's comments concerning his views on the ownership of the islands had been prepared
on a hurried basis, without any opportunity to investigate the extent of the Ruler of Bahrain's

relationship with the Dowasir and without any prior knowledge of that relationship. Moreover, when he
expressed his view he had just been appointed Political Agent in Bahrain and, indeed, had not even
visited the Hawar Islands. BCM para. 299. The circumstances and substance of Alban's comments are
to be contrasted with the findings of Alban's predecessor, Weightman, in the context of Britain's
arbitration of Qatar's and Bahrain's claims to the Hawar Islands. BM para. 383.

126 QCM para. 1.34.

127 Qatar advances the curious argument that if the Dowasir's temporary presence in Hasa provided no
basis for the Ruler of Bahrain to claim sovereignty in Hasa, then the Dowasir's presence in the Hawar
Islands cannot provide a basis for Bahrain's sovereignty over the Hawar Islands. QCM para. 3.90.

Qatar's argument is contradicted by the fact that the two situations are entirely distinguishable. There
can be no equating the Dowasir's established presence on the Hawar Islands for more than 200 years
and their steadfast relationship with the Ruler of Bahrain during the entirety of that time with the three
and a half years during which the Dowasir absented themselves from Bahrain's territorial jurisdiction.128 BCM para. 193.

129 Khuri, F.I., Tribe and State in Bahrain, University of Chicago Press, Chicago 1980. QCM Annex
III. 55, Vol. 3, p. 319.

130 QM para. 6.54.

131 QCM para. 3.86.

132 Khuri, F.I., op. cit., p. 97.

133 QM para. 6.54.

134 BCM para. 195.

135 BCM para. 193.

136 QCM paras. 3.84 to 3.86.

137 QCM paras. 3.91 and 3.92.

138 QCM paras. 3.94 and 3.95.

139 BM paras. 21 and 410.

140 BM para. 410.

141 QCM paras. 2.67 et seq., para. 3.121.

142 BM paras. 410 and 427; BCM paras. 174 and 175.

143 BM para. 410.

144 BM paras. 427, 429, 431, 433 to 437; BCM para. 193.

145 BM paras. 426 and 431.

146 BM paras. 426 and 431.

147 BM para. 431.

148 BM paras. 410, 426 to 431.

149 BM para. 431.

150 BM paras. 415 and 416.

151 QCM para. 3.122.

152 BM para. 416.

153 BM para. 432.

154 BM paras. 433 to 437.155 QCM para. 3.147.

156 BM para. 430.

157 BM para. 439.

158 BM paras. 440 to 442.

159 BM para. 441.

160 BM para. 442.

161 BM paras. 444 to 447.

162 QCM para. 3.148; BCM para. 189.

163 QCM para. 3.149.

164 BM para. 448 to 453.

165 QCM para. 3.154.

166 BM paras. 455 to 457.

167 QCM para. 3.60.

168 QCM para. 3.60.

169 QCM para. 3.60. The legal significance that Qatar has attempted to draw from the views expressed
by Britain in 1936 is discussed in Section 2.7(B), infra.

170 BCM Section 2.3(b).

171 BCM paras. 212 to 226. In December 1925, with Britain's approval, the Ruler of Bahrain had
awarded an oil concession in Bahrain to the Eastern and General Syndicate (EGS), a British registered
company, covering an area of 100,000 acres on the main island of Bahrain. The remainder of the Ruler
of Bahrain's territories not covered by the 100,000 acres came to be known as the "Bahrain Additional
Area" or "unallotted area". EGS assigned its concession in 1928 to BAPCO, a wholly owned subsidiary

of Standard Oil Company of California (SOCAL). The establishment in Bahrain of an American oil
company had a significant effect on the British Government's policies concerning future oil concession
negotiations, in the context of which Britain would doits utmost to promote the interests of British oil
companies. See BCM paras. 204 and 205.

172 QCM para. 3.61.

173 BCM paras. 213 to 216.

174 BCM para. 215.

175 BCM paras. 223.

176 BCM para. 217.

177 BCM para. 217.178 Despatch from the British Political Agent to the British Political Resident, 30 July 1933. QM Ann.
III.87, Vol. 6, p. 445.

179 QM para. 6.20.

180 Telegram from the British Political Resident to the Secretary of State for India, 31 July 1933. QM
Ann. III.88, Vol. 6, p. 449.

181 QCM para. 3.61.

182 BCM paras. 218 to 220.

183 QCM para. 3.46.

184 BCM para. 226.

185 In 1935, Anglo-Persian was awarded an oil concession by the Ruler of Qatar, which it assigned that
same year to PCL, a subsidiary of the Iraq Petroleum Company, in which Anglo-Persian was a major
shareholder. The significance of the 1935 Qatar Concession for Qatar's claim to the Hawar Islands is

discussed in paras. 152 and 153,infra; see also BCM paras. 227 to 236.

186 BCM para. 242.

187 BCM para. 239.

188 BCM para. 233.

189 QCM para. 3.74.

190 BM Ann. 247, Vol. 5, p.1074; QM Ann. III.106, Vol. 7, p.27.

191 QCM para. 3.62.

192 BM Ann. 247, Vol. 5, p. 1074; QM Ann. III. 106, Vol. 7, p. 27.

193 QCM para. 3.67.

194 QCM para. 3.72.

195 QCM para. 3.62.

196 BCM paras. 244 to 249.

197 BCM para. 236.

198 See BCM paras. 251 to 255 (concerning Britain's views regarding the implications of the Hawar
Islands being considered as part of Bahrain and efforts to pressure the Ruler of Bahrain to favour PCL
over BAPCO).

199 BCM para. 253.

200 BCM para. 254.

201 QCM para. 3.73.202 BCM para. 253.

203 QCM para. 3.73.

204 QCM para. 3.73.

205 BCM para. 257.

206 QCM, paras. 3.49 to 3.59.

207 Bahrain agrees with Qatar that the illegal occupation of territory cannot form the basis of a
legitimate claim to sovereignty. Thus, Qatar's armed attack on and illegal occupation of the Zubarah
region in 1937 cannot form the basis for Qatar's claim to sovereignty over that region. See Chapter 4,
infra.

208 QM para. 3.50.

209 QCM para. 3.53.

210 QCM paras. 3.56 to 3.59.

211 QCM para. 3.53.

212 QCM para. 3.53.

213 QCM para. 3.53.

214 QCM para. 3.53.

215 QCM para. 3.53.

216 BM paras. 370 to 376.

217 BM paras. 370 to 376.

218 BM paras. 377 to 380.

219 BM paras. 354 to 356.

220 BCM Section 3.5A.

221 BM paras. 389 and 547.

222 BM paras. 381 to 403; BCM paras. 423 to 427.

223 BCM para. 374.

224 BCM para. 374.

225 BM paras. 357.

226 BM paras. 359 to 369.

227 BM Section 3.5.228 BM paras. 406 to 411.

229 BCM para. 374.

230 BM para. 548.

231 BM para. 354.

232 BM para. 357.

233 BM para. 357.

234 BM para. 552.

235 BM para. 357.

236 BCM Sections 3.2 and 3.5.

237 BCM Chapter 3.

238 BM Section 3.3 and BCM Section 3.2.

239 BCM Section 3.5.A.

240 BM paras. 381 to 403; BCM Sections 3.1 and 3.5.

241 QM paras. 6.83(1) and 6.87; QCM para. 3.60.

242 QCM para. 3.71.

243 In this respect, Bahrain feels compelled to point out to the Court the pervasive use of selective
misquotations by Qatar throughout its pleadings. Bahrain has elsewhere described certain of the most
egregious examples of this. In relation to the allegations by Qatar of British bias in the conduct of the

1938-1939 adjudication, Bahrain notes that the description of BM Annex 292 in Qatar's Counter-
Memorial (at paras. 3.13 to 3.142) is highly fanciful. As is so often the case in Qatar's pleadings, its
credibilty is undermined not only by the unsupported innuendos and suppositions that Qatar strains to
attach to innocent words but by Qatar's description being predicated on its conspiracy theory and forged
documents.

244 See, e.g., BCM Section 3.5.B.

245 BCM Section 2.3.G.

246 BCM para. 197.

247 QCM paras. 3.163 to 3.171.

248 QCM para. 3.171.

249 QCM para. 3.163.

250 See, e.g., QCM paras. 3.164, 3.165, 3.168 and 3.170.

251 QCM paras. 3.165 to 3.170.252 QCM para. 3.166.

253 BCM Section 3.5.F.

254 BCM Section 3.5.A.

255 QCM para. 3.87.

0 BCM Section 2.3.H.

1 See, in particular, the opinion of Sir Olaf Caroe of the Government of India's External Affairs
Department found at BCM paras. 302 to 305. The recent decision of the Tribunal in the Eritrea/Yemen
arbitration held that internal memoranda of government officials do not necessarily represent the view
or policy of any government and may not have been more than an expression of a personal view of a
civil servant at any particular moment. Award of the Arbitral Tribunal in the First Stage of the
Proceedings (Territorial Sovereignty and Scope of the Dispute) in the Matter of an Arbitration Pursuant

to an Agreement to Arbitrate Dated 3 October 1996 (Eritrea/Yemen Arbitration), 9 October 1998,
(hereinafter "Eritrea/Yemen Award of 1998") paras. 94, 97 to 100.

2 BM paras. 359 to 369.

3 QCM para. 3.145.

4 India Office minute, 7 June 1939, BM Ann. 283, Vol. 5, p. 1174 at p.1175.

5 Letter from Hugh Weightman, British Political Agent, to Sir Trenchard Fowle, British Political
Resident, 3 June 1938, BM Ann. 262, Vol. 5, p. 1112.

6 Letter from Hugh Weightman, British Political Agent, to Sir Trenchard Fowle, British Political
Resident, 3 June 1938, BM Ann. 262, Vol. 5, pp. 1112 to 1114.

7 Letter from H. Weightman, British Political Agent, to the British Political Resident in the Persian
Gulf, 22 April 1939. BM Ann. 281, Vol. 5, p. 1165; QM Ann. III.195, Vol. 7, p. 497.

8 Letter from O.K. Caroe, External Affairs Department, Government of India, to R. Peel, External
Affairs Department, Government of India, 19 November 1941. QM Ann. III.230, Vol. 8, p. 133. See
also BCM paras. 302 to 305.

9 See, e.g., hand-written annotation by R. Peel, External Affairs Department, Government of India in
the memorandum found at BCM Ann. 107, Vol. 2, pp. 331 to 332.

10 Express letter, W.R. Hay, British Political Resident, to Retaxandum, London, 4 June 1946. BCM
Ann. 108, Vol. 2, pp. 333 to 334.

11 BM paras. 354 et. seq.; BCM Section 3.5.

12 Letter from British Political Agent to the Ruler of Bahrain, 23 December 1947. QM Ann. III.257,
Vol. 8, p. 269. Letter from British Political Agent to the Ruler of Qatar. BM Ann. 297, Vol. 5, p. 1208;
QM Ann. III.256, Vol. 8, p. 265. See also BCM paras. 314 to 343 and Section 2.10, infra., for a
discussion of the inclusion of Janan island as one of the Hawar Islands in the 1939 Award.

13 Confidential Annex to Qatar Diary No. 2 for period 2 February to 1 March 1961, BM Ann. 300, Vol.
5, p. 1214 at pp. 1216 to 1217. See also BM paras. 499 to 504.

14 BM paras. 499 to 504, BM Section 2.14.15 BCM para. 442.

16 QCM paras. 3.178 to 3.179.

17 Foreign Office minute dated 15 June 1964 (FO 371 174526, in division BB 1081/6). Annex 2, Vol.
2, p. 2.

18 BCM Section 3.8.

19 QM para. 6.242.

20 July 1946, February 1948, April 1965. Qatar itself claims to have made only three other protests to
the British Award, in August 1939, November 1939 and June 1940. Thus, three protests were made
within the first year following the Award. Of the remaining three, two were made during 1946-1948 as
part of Qatari responses to British inquiries related to the 1947 British letters. Paragraph 6.245 of
Qatar's Memorial makes vague and unsubstantiated reference to "further protests" from the two Rulers

(in the context of the 1947 British letters) in the early 1950s. The final protest noted by Qatar was in
1965, again in response to British inquiries related to the maritime delimitation.

21 QM para. 6.243.

22 QM para. 6.243.

23 BM para. 501.

24 BM para. 502.

25 For descriptions of Bahrain's claim to the Zubarah region, see BM Section 2.14 and BCM Chapter 4.

26 QCM paras. 3.96 to 3.101.

27 16 UNRIAA para. 167.

28 20 UNRIAA para. 175, at p.45.

29 Goldie, The Critical Date, 12, ICLQ (1963) 1251 at 1254.

30 Qatar's Memorial contends that one of the Rulers of Qatar visited the Hawar Islands. QM para.
6.194. The evidence cited for this claim is the unsubstantiated assertion in the Qatar counter-claim of 30
March 1939 that this was the case. Qatar's Memorial also makes reference to "other evidence" -

supposed witness statements submitted by Qatar in 1939 in one handwriting with no signatures or
thumbprints. QM para. 6.200. Qatar acknowledges that this "was not as compelling as it might
otherwise have been." Britain dismissed this "evidence" as unsubstantiated assertions that merited - and
were given - no credence in 1939. Their weight has not increased with time.

31 QCM para. 3.31.

32 QCM para. 3.30.

33 See Section 3.5, infra.; see also, BM paras. 421, 425, 539 and 540 and BCM paras. 35, 36, 104 to
106, 122.

34 BCM para. 170.

35 QCM paras. 3.40 to 3.43.36 QCM para. 3.41.

37 QCM para. 3.42.

38 QCM para. 3.42.

39 BCM para. 171.

40 BCM para. 171.

41 QCM para. 3.46.

42 QCM paras. 3.44 and 3.45.

43 QCM para. 3.44.

44 QCM para. 3.44(5)

45 Indeed, Qatar's pleadings often try to present untenable arguments that fly in the face of evidence by
replacing logic or analysis with a claim that the conclusion or interpretation proposed is "obvious".

46 QCM para. 3.44(2).

47 British India Office report of 1928:Qatar Memorial Jurisdictional Admissibility, Annex I.18.

India Office letter of 3 May 1933, see BCM para. 203 and para. 61, supra.

Telegram from the acting Political Resident to the Secretary of State for India dated
31 July 1933, see BCM paras. 218 to 219 and para. 67, supra.

Map requested by the Secretary of State for India and supplied by the Political
Resident on 4 August 1933, see para. 70, supra.

48 QCM para. 3.8.

49 BCM para. 215.

50 QCM para. 3.72(6).

51 QCM para. 3.72(6).

52 QCM Annex III.43, Vol. 3, p. 237 at p. 239.

53 QM Annex III.94, Vol. 6, p. 479; QCM Annex III.43, Vol. 3, p. 237.

54 BCM paras. 227 to 236.

55 BCM para. 233.

56 BCM para. 234.

57 BCM paras. 235 and 236.

58 QCM para. 4.3.59 QCM paras. 4.5 to 4.8.

60 QCM paras. 4.6 and 4.13.

61 QCM paras. 4.7 to 4.12.

62 The fact that Janan has always been considered to be one of the Hawar group of islands is
acknowledged by Qatar when it cites Lorimer's description in 1908 of the Hawar Islands. See QM para.
5.38: "The island [Jazirat Hawar] is adjoined on the north by Jazirat Rubadh and on the south by Jazirat
Janan...".

63 BCM paras. 322, 323 and 330.

64 BCM para. 322.

65 BCM para. 322.

66 See para. 171, infra.

67 BCM para. 324.

68 BCM paras. 242 and 325.

69 BCM para. 326.

70 BCM para. 326.

71 BCM para. 327.

72 BCM para. 327.

73 BCM para. 328.

74 BCM para. 329.

75 BCM para. 347.

76 BCM paras. 348 and 349.

77 BCM paras. 350 and 351.

78 BCM para. 352.

79 BCM para. 353.

80 BCM paras. 355 to 361.

81 BCM para. 362.

82 BCM paras. 363 and 364.

83 BM para. 207; BCM para. 364.

84 BCM para. 364.85 BM para. 405.

86 BCM para. 330.

87 BCM paras. 331 and 332.

88 BCM paras. 334 and 335.

89 BCM paras. 337 and 338.

90 BCM paras. 341 to 343.

91 QCM paras. 4.1 and 4.2.

92 See, in addition, Extracts from Gulf Daily News, Annex 8, Vol. 2, p. 60.

93 See, in addition, Extracts from Gulf Daily News, Annex 7, Vol. 2, p. 50.

94 See, in addition, Extracts from Gulf Daily News, Annex 6, Vol. 2, p. 34.

95 BM para. 491; BCM para. 159.

96 See Extracts from Gulf Daily News, Annex 6, Vol. 2, p. 34.

97 Annex 10, Vol. 2, p. 70.

98 Annex 12, Vol. 2, p. 75.

99 BM para. 54.

100 BM para. 54.

101 Annex 11, Vol. 2, p. 72.

102 BM paras. 104 to 130; 195 to 214; 224 to 233 (evidence of item a); paras. 73 to 103 (evidence of
item b).

103 BCM paras. 70 to 76; 95 to 97 (evidence of item a); paras. 42 to 57 (evidence of item b).

104 BCM paras. 88 to 97.

105 BCM para. 56.

106 BCM para. 32.

107 BCM para. 32.

108 BCM para. 33.

109 BCM paras. 32 and 33.

110 BCM paras. 39 to 41. A series of maps illustrating the evolution of the spheres of influence on the
Qatar peninsula can be found following page 9 of this Reply.

111 BCM para. 68.112 QCM Chapter 2.

113 BM para. 233; BCM para. 41.

114 BM Section 2.13.

115 A legal proposition with whichQatar itself agrees: see para. 91, supra.

116 BCM para. 64.

117 BM para. 106 and BCM para. 63. Qatar's claim that Zubarah is older is based on the forged
documents in combination with a mis-translation of the Arabic "Al Zara" as "Al Zubarah" in an Arab
history text, and a mis-translation of that same text to imply that Zubarah was founded before the arrival
of the Al-Khalifa (the text in fact says the opposite): see BCM paras. 58 to 62.

118 BM paras. 104 to 107.

119 BM para. 108.

120 BM para. 109.

121 BM para. 110.

122 BM para. 110.

123 BM para. 112.

124 BM para. 112.

125 Section 4.1 of this Reply.

126 BM para. 117.

127 Lorimer Vol. I, Pt.1, p.793, op. cit., QM Ann. II.5, Vol. 3, p.143 at 200.

128 BM para. 120.

129 BM para. 120.

130 BM para. 120.

131 BM para. 120.

132 BM para. 120.

133 BCM para. 73.

134 BCM para. 73.

135 BM para. 122.

136 BM para. 123.

137 BM para. 124.138 BCM para. 73.

139 BM para. 126.

140 QM para. 3.30.

141 QM para. 3.30..

142 QM para. 3.30.

143 QM para. 3.32.

144 QM paras. 3.31 and 3.33.

145 QM para. 3.31.

146 BCM paras. 81 to 82 and QM Ann. II.74, Vol. 5, p. 399.

147 Qatar states that Bahrain acknowledged "...that the Al-Thani family had attained predominant
influence in Qatar by 1868". QCM para. 3.20. Thisis not the case. Qatar is again mistakenly and
misleadingly equating references to "Qatar" as apolitical entity with references to "Qatar" as a
geographic entity (the peninsula). Bahrain's "acknowledgement" is a quotation from Lorimer who is
referring to Qatar the political entity, being no more than Doha town and its environs. BM para. 131.

148 BM para. 132; BCM para. 35.

149 BM para. 127; BCM para. 19.

150 BM para. 132.

151 BM para. 134.

152 BM paras. 20, 118 and 145.

153 BM paras. 133 and 158; BCM para. 19.

154 BCM para. 19.

155 BCM para. 90.

156 BM para. 143.

157 BCM para. 95.

158 BCM para. 96.

159 BCM para. 96.

160 BM para. 163.

161 BCM para. 106.

162 BM para. 133; BCM para. 19.

163 BCM para. 92.164 BM para. 146.

165 BCM para. 108.

166 BM para. 148; BCM paras. 19 and 107.

167 BM para. 164; BCM para. 19.

168 BCM para. 35.

169 BM para. 149.

170 BCM para. 117.

171 BCM para. 117.

172 BM para. 155; BCM para. 118.

173 BM paras. 167 to 187; BCM paras. 19 and 95.

174 BCM para. 120.

175 BM Section 2.6, Section 2.2.H.(i); BCM para. 19.

176 QCM paras. 2.10 and 2.29.

177 QM para. 3.30.

178 QM para. 3.30.

179 QM para. 3.30.

180 QM para. 3.32.

181 QM paras. 3.31 and 3.33.

182 QM para. 3.31.

183 QM para. 3.49.

184 QM para. 3.22; QCM para. 2.22.

185 QM para. 2.19.

186 QCM para. 2.26.

187 QCM para. 2.25.

188 BM para. 34; BCM para. 38.

189 BCM para. 31.

190 BM para. 132.

191 QCM para. 2.34.192 QCM para. 2.34.

193 QCM para. 2.34.

194 It is worthwhile noting Qatar's heavy reliance on Zahlan's commentary. Qatar quotes at length or
cites to Zahlan no less than six times in its Memorial and Counter-Memorial to support its various
contentions, but in each instance the citation is to a view of history offered by Zahlan which is

unsupported by reference to the historical record.

195 QCM para. 2.45.

196 QCM paras. 2.45 and 2.50. Here again, the Zahlan text cited by Qatar provides no support for
Qatar's position.

197 QCM para. 2.48.

198 QCM para. 2.48.

199 QCM para. 2.49.

200 BCM paras. 93 and 94.

201 QCM para. 2.29.

202 BM paras. 35 to 38.

203 QCM para. 2.29.

204 BM paras. 162 to 166.

205 Map of the Vilayet of Basra prepared by Captain Izzet of the Imperial Army of the Ottoman Empire
(1878), reproduced in the BM following page 6.

206 QCM paras. 2.30 to 2.38.

207 For example, Qatar refers to a 28 August 1873 letter from the British Political Resident (Ross), in
which it is indicated that the Turkish authorities had established an influence on the Qatar coast as far as
the Udeid boundary. This is uncontroversial, until Qatar adds its interpretation to the effect that "in
other words, from the south-west of the Qatar peninsula (in the vicinity of Dawhat Salwa) as far as the
extreme south east of the peninsula." Qatar offers nothing to support its expansionist interpretation. The

correspondence cited shows nothing other than British acknowledgement that Turkey now had a
foothold on the peninsula. It contains no indication that Britain considered that influence to incorporate
the entire peninsula. Further, the correspondence makes no mention of the Al-Thani. See QCM para.
2.31.

208 QCM para. 2.42.

209 QM Annex II.7, Vol. 4, p. 59.

210 QM Annex II.7, Vol. 4, p. 62.

211 QCM para. 2.44.

212 BM Section 2.4.

213 BM Section 2.7.214 BM Sections 2.6 and 2.7.

215 BCM para. 94.

216 BCM paras. 83 to 87.

217 QM para. 5.6; QCM para. 3.20 et seq.

218 QCM para. 3.29.

219 BM, Annex 12, Vol. 2, p. 156.

220 Section 3.3 supra.

221 QCM paras. 3.40 to 3.43.

222 BCM para. 126.

223 BCM para. 127.

224 BCM para. 124.

225 BCM para. 125.

226 BCM para. 127.

227 Indeed, if the Convention were as definitive of the extent of Al-Thani territory as Qatar suggests,
this omission would evidence a clear lack of intent to include the Hawar Islands within Al-Thani
territory.

228 See, e.g., BM Section 2.7.

229 BCM para. 131.

230 BM paras. 219 to 220.

231 BCM para. 132.

232 BCM para. 132.

233 BCM para. 136.

234 See, e.g., BCM paras 144, 147 to 149.

235 BCM para. 137.

236 BCM paras. 140 to 141, 144 and 145.

237 BM paras. 224 and 233.

238 QCM paras. 3.44 and 3.45.

239 QCM paras. 2.4 to 2.12 and 2.51.

240 QCM paras. 2.20 and 2.21.241 QCM para. 2.21.

242 QCM para. 2.21.

243 QM paras. 3.26 to 3.29; QCM para. 2.51.

244 BM paras. 120 to 123; BCM paras. 66 and 67.

245 BM para. 120; BCM paras. 66 to 69.

246 BCM para. 68.

247 See, e.g., BM paras. 36, 417 to 419, 426 to 431, BCM para. 159.

248 QCM para. 2.12.

249 See, e.g., extracts from Lorimer at QM Annex II.5, Vol. 3, p.143 at pp. 256 to 257, including an
1822 statement from the Bombay Government criticising an agreement reached with Persia by the

British Political Resident, who was removed from his post as a result of signing it, and the Bombay
Government's criticism of the agreement including that: "It acknowledges the King of Persia's title of
Bahrain of which there is not the least proof...".

250 QCM para. 2.51.

251 See, e.g., extracts from Lorimer at QM, Annex II.5, Vol. 3, p.143 at pp. 248 to 249.

252 See, e.g., extracts from Lorimer at QM, Annex II.5, Vol. 3, pp. 248 to 249.

253 QCM para. 2.51.

254 See, e.g., extracts from Lorimer at QM, Annex II.5, Vol. 3, p. 143 at pp. 249 to 250, 263 to 264.

255 QCM para. 2.51.

0 BCM para. 67.

1 QCM paras. 2.4 to 2.77.

2 BM Sections 2.2, 2.9 and 2.11; BCM Section 2.2.

3 QCM para. 5.48.

4 BM para. 116.

5 Section 4.5 of this Reply. The dominant Al-Jabr branch of the Naim tribe remained in the Zubarah

region and recognised the authority of the Al-Khalifa Rulers, notwithstanding the drift of smaller
groups of Naim elsewhere in Arabia including a group that moved to Doha.

6 BCM paras. 47 to 52.

7 For details of the following list, see BM paras. 25, 75, 77 to 88 and BCM paras. 47 to 57.

8 BCM para. 43.

9 BCM para. 85.10 BCM para. 50.

11 BCM para. 51.

12 BCM para. 43.

13 BM para. 77.

14 BM para. 77.

15 BM paras. 79 and 210.

16 BM para. 207.

17 BM paras. 79 and 210.

18 BCM para. 53.

19 BCM para. 92.

20 BCM paras. 45 and 49.

21 BM para. 81.

22 BM para. 82.

23 BM para. 82.

24 BCM para. 54.

25 BCM para. 43.

26 BCM para. 56.

27 BM para. 86.

28 BM para. 87.

29 BCM para. 48.

30 BM para. 87.

31 BM para. 88.

32 BM Section 4.4.

33 QCM paras. 2.13 to 2.15.

34 QCM paras. 5.58 to 5.61.

35 QCM para. 2.28.

36 QCM paras. 2.42 to 2.44. Once again, the text of Zahlan cited by Qatar provides no evidence for its
bald assertions.37 BM Section 2.7.

38 QM paras. 8.7 to 8.30, 8.57; QCM paras. 5.41 and 5.58.

39 In its attempts to criticise the evidence submitted by Bahrain, Qatar claims that one motivation of
Bahrain and Britain for preventing the Ottomans or the Al-Thani from exercising authority over the
Zubarah region was to protect the islands of Bahrain from an attack launched from there. (QCM paras.

5.17 to 5.18.) This is irrelevant. The motivation for preventing Bahrain's authority from being replaced
by the Ottomans' authority neither diminishes the fact of Bahrain's authority nor creates an Ottoman
authority where none existed. Nor does the issue of motivation detract from the fact that Bahrain and
Britain did act to rebuff the Ottomans and the Al-Thani in Zubarah.

40 See, e.g., QCM paras. 2.8 to 2.10, 2.28 to 2.38 and Chapter V.

41 At paragraph 2.34 of its Counter-Memorial, Qatar reproduces an extensive quotation taken from a
secondary source, the book by Rosemarie Zahlan. Zahlan provides no citations or evidence whatsoever
for her bald statement that there was "no doubt" that the Al-Thani authority extended throughout the
Qatar peninsula during the Ottoman period. As described in para. 197, supra, the evidence shows just

the opposite.

42 QCM para. 2.32.

43 QCM para. 2.33.

44 QCM para. 2.33.

45 BM Section 2.7.

46 BCM para. 94.

47 QCM para. 5.17.

48 BM Section 2.6; BCM Section 2.2.H(i).

49 QCM para. 5.17.

50 QCM para. 2.30.

51 BCM paras. 93 and 94.

52 Ottoman Report on Bahrain, 16 September 1895. BCM Ann. 26, Vol. 2, p. 90.

53 Ottoman Report on the Zubarah Affair, 3 May 1897. BM Ann. 63, Vol. 2, pp. 269 to 272.

54 Ottoman Report on the Zubarah Affair, 3 May 1897. BM Ann. 63, Vol. 2, pp. 269 to 272.

55 Ottoman Report on Bahrain from the Council Chamber, 22 April 1900. BCM Ann. 28, Vol. 2, pp. 96
to 97.

56 Projected Ottoman decision concerning Katar, 11 March 1913. BCM Ann. 40, Vol. 2, p. 125.

57 Letter from Sheikh Jasim Al-Thani to the British Political Resident, 24 November 1880. BCM Ann.

15, Vol. 2 pp. 37 to 38.

58 Saldana J.A., Precis of Qatar Affairs, Simla, 1904, p. 39. BM Ann. 70, Vol. 2, p. 327; QM Ann. II.7,
Vol. 4, pp. 59 to 61.59 See, e.g., QM para. 8.15 and paras. 3.49 et seq..

60 BM Sections 2.5, 2.6 and 2.7 and BCM Section 2.2.H (iv).

61 BM paras. 183 to 186, 297 to 301 and BCM Section 2.2.H (iii).

62 BCM paras. 117 to 122.

63 BCM para. 94.

64 QCM para. 5.43.

65 BM Sections 2.1, 2.9 and 2.2.13; BCM Sections 2.1 B, C and K, and Section 4.1, supra.

66 See, e.g., QCM para. 5.17.

67 QCM paras. 5.19 and 5.51.

68 QCM para. 5.19. This is a remarkable admission by Qatar, inconsistent with its claims about
Britain's views of authority over the Zubarah region, no less than its claims about Bahrain's activities
there.

69 QCM para. 5.19.

70 QCM para. 5.17.

71 QCM para. 5.19.

72 QCM paras. 5.19 and 5.20.

73 QCM paras. 5.46 and 5.47.

74 QCM paras. 5.19 and 5.47.

75 QCM paras. 5.19 and 5.47.

76 The reference to the "northern Naim" is used to distinguish the Naim of the Qatar peninsula from
their southern cousins on the Arabian mainland.

77 QCM paras. 5.48 and 5.52.

78 QCM para. 5.52.

79 QCM paras. 5.58 to 5.63.

80 BM Section 4.4.

81 QCM para. 5.62.

82 QCM para. 2.13.

83 BCM Section 2.2.H (v).

84 BCM Section 2.2.J.85 BCM Annex 56, Vol. 2, p. 195.

86 Decypher of telegram from British Political Resident to Secretary of State for India, 18 August 1932,
FO 371/16000. Annex 1, Vol. 2, p.1.

87 BM Sections 2.13 to 2.14 and BCM Section 2.2.K.

88 It should be noted that Qatar agrees that the illegal occupation of territory cannot form the basis of a
legitimate claim to sovereignty. See para. 91, supra.

89 QCM paras. 5.38 to 5.40.

90 BM paras. 295 to 336.

91 BCM paras. 450 to 454.

92 BM para. 296.

93 BM para. 304.

94 BM para. 303.

95 BM para. 304.

96 BM para. 304.

97 BM paras. 306 to 308.

98 BM paras. 306 to 308.

99 BM paras. 310 to 314.

100 BM para. 312.

101 BM para. 313.

102 BM para. 315.

103 BM para. 316.

104 BM para. 317.

105 BM para. 317.

106 BM para. 318.

107 BM para. 319.

108 BM para. 320.

109 BM para. 321.

110 BM para. 322.

111 BM paras. 323 to 325.112 BM para. 325.

113 BM paras. 328 and 330.

114 BM paras. 329 and 330.

115 BM para. 331.

116 BM para. 336.

117 Section 2.7(I) supra.

118 Although Qatar interprets them differently, the Parties are essentially agreed as to the facts relating
to the events of 1937.

119 As will be explained below, the Parties agree that the delimitation must be conceived and effected
in two sectors, one northern, one southern, but they disagree as to the exact location of the divider
between the sectors and the legal implications and consequences of the sectoralization.

120 QM para. 11.3.

121 QM para. 11.20.

122 QM para. 11.20.

123 Bahrain demonstrated the inconsistency between Qatar's proposed delimitation exercise in its

Counter-Memorial. BCM para. 628.

124 QCM para. 6.60.

125 QCM para. 6.61.

126 1982 Law of the Sea Convention, Article 46(a).

127 QCM para. 6.70.

128 BM paras. 657 to 681.

129 QCM para. 6.64.

130 QCM para. 6.65.

131 BM para. 68Q.

132 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, Article 32.

133 International Maritime Boundaries, Ed. John Charney and Lewis Alexander (Martinus Nijhoff)
1993, Vol. 1, p. 997. Annex 5, Vol. 2, p. 32.

134 QCM para. 6.69.

135 QCM para. 7.24.

136 1982 Convention, Article 46(b).137 QCM para. 6.94.

138 Anglo-Norwegian Fisheries case 1951 I.C.J. Rep. 116, 127.

139 QCM para. 7.24.

140 QCM para. 7.24.

141 QCM para. 7.27.

142 QCM para. 7.24.

143 QCM para. 7.24.

144 QCM para. 7.24.

145 1969 I.C.J. Rep. 3 at 54.

146 1951 I.C.J. Rep. 116 at para. 133.

147 See e.g. Section 5.3(B), infra.

148 QCM para. 7.26.

149 QCM para. 7.25.

150 The following discussion relates to Bahrain's territorial sovereignty over certain islands and low-
tide elevations in the Bahrain archipelago. It goes without saying that such issues more properly belong
with the discussion of the other territorial issuesin dispute between the Parties. Bahrain wishes to
emphasise to the Court that the discussion of these territorial issues in the Maritime part of its pleadings

thus far has simply been for convenience of presentation.

151 BM paras. 622 to 624.

152 BCM para. 510.

153 paras. 328, 329 and 334,infra.

154 QCM paras. 8.47 to 8.48.

155 QCM paras. 8.47 to 8.48.

156 QCM para. 8.49, referring to QCM Annex IV. 24, Vol. 4, p. 165.

157 QCM para. 8.49.

158 Commander Carleton's report is attached at Annex 14, Vol. 2, p. 99.

159 Annex 14, Vol. 2, p. 99 at p. 102.

160 Annex 14, pp. 107 and 108. The satellite image establishing the factual basis for Commander
Carleton's conclusion is annexed to his report, at page 124.

161 See para. 180, supra.162 BM para. 337.

163 QCM para. 6.15.

164 QCM para. 6.15.

165 BM para. 581.

166 BM para. 586; BM Annex 344, Vol. 6, p. 1478 at pp. 1480 and 1481.

167 BCM paras. 512 to 520.

168 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 136.

169 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 139.

170 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 139.

171 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 140.

172 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 140.

173 Letter from R. Kennedy, Hydrographic Department, Admiralty to A. R. Walmsley, Foreign Office,
25 August 1959. QM Ann. IV. 223, Vol. 11, p. 301.

174 QCM paras. 6.89 to 6.91.

175 BM para. 623; BCM paras. 515 and 519.

176 At high water spring tide, on 20 April, 26 June, 11 August, 8 September, 7 October, 5 November.

177 Annex 13, p. 77 at p. 82.

178 Professor Alexander, having observed the Survey Directorate's work, stated:

"I was present during the entire survey and can attest that, to the best of my knowledge, it was

carried out in conformance with the highest standards of maritime surveying. I believe that if
the survey had been carried out in the United States, it would have been found to conform with
the standards of the American Congress on Surveying and Mapping." (Annex 13, p. 77)

179 Annex 13, p. 77 at p. 93.

180 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 141.

181 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 141.

182 Qatar cites two British sources, from 1901-02 and 1932, (QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 135) the first
of which indicated that Qit'at Jaradah dried at low tide and the second of which indicated that Qit'at
Jaradah "almost dries". This evidence is, at best, inconclusive. Furthermore, it is clearly and forcefully
contradicted by the consistent evidence since the 1940s that Jaradah has been and is an island (paras.

325 to 330, supra.);

Qatar cites a letter dated 10 January 1951 from Sir Rupert Hay (British Political Resident) to
Rose (of the Foreign Office), which states that no part of Qit'at Jaradah is permanently above
water. QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p.135. This letter is, however, inconsistent with the historical record of observations from the 1940s onwards, including recent official surveys (paras. 325 to
330, supra) which establish that Qit'at Jaradah is an island;

Qatar cites the Persian Gulf Pilot (QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, pp. 135 to 141). However, the
Persian Gulf Pilot does not purport to be based on contemporaneous evidence. It is based on
the most recent available survey data, rather than up-to-date data, and contains material for
some areas which is many years old. In the case of Qit'at Jaradah, the statement in the Persian
Gulf Pilot that it "dries in places" (First stated in its 1955 edition and repeated in its 1967, 1982
and 1994 editions, all cited to by Qatar. QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, pp. 138, 140, 141) is based

on the questionable interpretation of a survey that is 50 years out of date, (British Admiralty
survey of December 1950/January 1951; cited in QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 137) which is
inconsistent with the evidence from the 1940s onwards that establishes that Qit'at Jaradah is an
island;

Qatar cites British Admiralty chart 3798. QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 141. This shows the
sandy southern part of Qit'at Jaradah as being 1.2 metres above lowest astronomical tide
(LAT). However, the information on Qit'at Jaradah in the chart is based on equivocal data
gathered 45 years ago. As stated, later surveys confirmed that it is an island (For example, the
Bahrain Survey Directorate Survey 1998, attached at Annex 13 (c)); and

Qatar cites a 1959 list of features in the Gulf of Arabia prepared for Aramco by
Hudson and Young, which describes Qit'at Jaradah as a "reef, ... a sandbar on the
south-eastern side of the reef rises seven feet above the water at low-tide... A masonry
beacon is reported to stand on the southern edge of the reef" see QM Appendix 5,
Vol. 15, p.140. This last comment exposes the report to be not a first-hand account
and thus based on conjecture.

183 BM para. 623; BCM paras. 515 and 519, para. 327 supra.

184 Opposite p. 238.

185 Annex 25, Vol. 2, p. 163.

186 BM para. 576.

187 BM para. 582.

188 BM para. 584.

189 BM paras. 598 and 599.

190 BM paras. 595 to 597.

191 Taken on 7 May 1999. See also Annex 25 Vol. 2, p. 163. See also Gulf Daily News, 11 August
1986, Annex 3, Vol. 2, p.5.

192 BM para. 586. See, in addition, Bahrain Coastguard Report, Annex 24, Vol. 2, p. 148.

193 BM para. 586.

194 Qatar asserts without providing any evidence that Qatari coastguard boats patrol the area around
Jaradah (QCM para. 6.35). However, Bahraini coastguard vessels are stationed permanently off Qit'at
Jaradah and have no record of such patrols (See Bahrain Coastguard Report, Annex 24, Vol. 2, p. 148 at

p. 151.) Furthermore, Qatar itself has admitted that whenever Qatari vessels have approached Bahrain's
waters, they have been met and turned away by Bahrain's coastguards (QM Appendix 1, Vol. 14, p.1).

195 QCM para. 6.21.196 QCM para. 6.31.

197 BM paras. 582 to 584.

198 BM para. 586.

199 QCM para. 6.23.

200 BM paras. 584 and 585.

201 QCM para. 6.9.

202 QCM para. 6.15.

203 QM paras. 10.59, et seq., QCM para. 6.16.

204 BCM paras. 525 to 535.

205 BM para. 576.

206 BM para. 582.

207 BM para. 577.

208 BM para. 577.

209 BM paras. 577 to 579.

210 BM paras. 577 to 579.

211 See Bahrain Coastguard Report, Annex 24, Vol. 2, p. 148.

212 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 128.

213 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 128.

214 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 128.

215 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 129.

216 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, pp. 129 to 130.

217 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 130.

218 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 130.

219 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p.137.

220 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 131.

221 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 131 to 133.

222 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 132 to 133.

223 QM Appendix 5, Vol. 15, p. 134.224 QM Appendix 1, Vol. 14, p. 2.

225 QM Appendix 1, Vol. 14, pp. 2 to 3.

226 QM Appendix 1, Vol. 14, p. 3.

227 QM Appendix 1, Vol. 14, pp. 3 to 4.

228 QCM para. 6.21.

229 QCM para. 6.31.

230 BM paras. 582 to 584.

231 BM para. 586.

232 QCM para. 6.31.

233 QCM para. 6.22.

234 QM Appendix 1, Vol. 14, pp. 1 to 12.

235 Eritrea/Yemen Award of 1998.

236 Eritrea/Yemen Award of 1998, para. 527.

237 QCM para. 6.16.

238 Eritrea/Yemen Award of 1998, para. 516.

239 BCM paras. 529 et. seq..

240 QCM para. 6.19. The refrain of "mistake", without any supporting evidence or substantive analysis,
as the Court will by now appreciate, is Qatar's leitmotif with respect to those parts of every British
action it now finds inconvenient but which it otherwise wishes to adopt.

241 QM para. 10.73.

242 Island of Palmas , 2 U.N.R.I.A.A. para. 839.

243 Sovereignty over Clipperton Island (France v. Mexico), Award rendered at Rome, January 28,
1931, 26 AJIL 390 (1932); Legal Status of Eastern Greenland, P.C.I.J. ser. A/B, No. 53, p. 22.

244 1986 I.C.J. Rep. 586 to 587.

245 1992 I.C.J. Rep. 398.

246 Eritrea/Yemen Award of 1998, para. 474.

247 Eritrea/Yemen Award of 1998, para. 480.

248 Sub-Section O, infra.

249 1986 I.C.J. Rep., para. 63 at 586 to 587.250 "Grisbadarna, The Maritime Boundary between Norway and Sweden", 4 AJIL 226 (1910).

251 para. 368, infra.

252 Eritrea/Yemen Award of 1998, para. 239.

253 BM Sections 6.1.A and 6.2.B.

254 See statements of Ibrahim bin Irhama Al Binali, Ann. 15, Vol. 2, p. 125; Ahmad bin Mohamad Al
Shayji, Ann. 16, Vol. 2, p. 127; Mohamad bin Abdalla Al Thawadi, Ann. 17, Vol. 2, p. 129; Saleh bin
Abdalla bin Mohamad, Ann. 18, Vol. 2, p. 132; Mubarak Ahmad al Naaimi, Ann. 18, Vol. 2, p.134;

Mubarak bin Salman Al Ghatam, Ann. 20, Vol.2, p. 136; Ali bin Ahmad Shaheen Al Dosari, Ann. 21,
Vol. 2, p.139; Majed bin Abdalla bin Thamir Al Dosari, Ann. 22, Vol. 2, p. 142; Abdallah bin Ali bin
Thamir Al Dosari, Ann. 23, Vol. 2, p. 144; Salim bin Mohammed Salim Al-Omairi, Ann. 26, Vol. 2, p.
176; Khalil bin Ibrahim Al-Khaldi, Ann. 27, Vol. 2, p. 179; Abdullah bin Thazaa Al-Majdal, Ann. 28,
Vol. 2, p. 182; Sulaiman bin Sagr bin Salman Al-Majdal Al-Khaldi, Ann. 29, Vol. 2, p. 184; Bader bin
Mohammed Al-Majdal Al-Khaldi, Ann. 30, Vol. 2, p. 186; and Mubarak bin Saad, Ann. 31 Vol. 2, p.
188.

255 QM paras. 6.41 to 6.45.

0 QCM para. 6.21.

1 4 AJIL 226, 233 (1910).

2 Eritrea/Yemen Award of 1998, para. 237.

3 QCM para. 6.29.

4 QCM para. 6.98.

5 QM para. 9.4.

6 [1951] I.C.J. 131.

7 QCM para. 7.45.

8 QCM, paras. 8.14 to 8.16.

9 QCM para. 8.19.

10 QCM para. 8.5.

11 QCM para. 8.5.

12 BM Section 6.2B.

13 See Bahrain Coastguard Report, Annex 24, Vol. 2, p. 148, Bahrain informs the Court that Map
Number 7 of its Memorial is inaccurate insofar as it describes the north-west "usual" coastguard patrol
area. Bahrain clarifies that the relevant usual coastguard patrol area is as described in the map included
in the Bahrain Coastguard Report at Annex 22, Vol. 2, p. 148, at p. 152. This patrol line reflects the
description of the patrol routes as described in the Bahrain coast guard logs, samples of which are
provided in the same annex.

14 Eritrea/Yemen Award of 1998, para. 526.15 Delimitation of the Maritime Border in the Area between Greenland and Jan Mayen, I.C.J. Reports
1993, pp. 76-77, paras. 85-86.

16 QCM paras 6.43 to 6.48.

17 British Admiralty Charts 2837, 2847, 2886, 3788, and 3790. QCM para. 6.43.

18 BM para. 647 and Map 9; BCM Map 1.

Document Long Title

Reply of the Government of the State of Bahrain

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