Maritime Delimitation between Nicaragua and Honduras in the Caribbean Sea (Nicaragua v. Honduras) - Public hearings on the merits of the dispute to open on Monday 5 March 2007

Document Number
120-20060719-PRE-01-00-EN
Document Type
Number (Press Release, Order, etc)
2006/31
Date of the Document
Document File

INTERNATIONAL COURTOFWSTICE

PeacePalace,2517 KJTheHague.Tel:+31 (0)70302 23 23. Cables:Intercourt,
TheHague.Fax:+31 (0)70 364 9928. Telex:32323.E-mailaddress:
[email protected]:http://www.icj-cij.org.

Press Release
Unofficial

No. 2006/31
19 July 2006

Maritime Delimitation between Nicaragua and Honduras in the Caribbean Sea
(Nicaragua v. Honduras)

Public hearings on the merits of the dispute to open on Monday 5 March 2007

THE HAGUE, 19 July 2006. The public hearings in the case conceming Maritime
Delimitation between Nicaragua and Honduras in the Caribbean Sea (Nicaragua v. Honduras) will
open on Monday 5 March2007 before the International Court of Justice (ICJ), the principal judicial
organ of the United Nations.

The detailed schedule for the hearings, which will be on the merits of the dispute, will be
announced in due course.

History of the proceedings

On 8 December 1999 Nicaragua filed an Application instituting proceedings against the
Republic of Honduras in respect of a dispute concerning the delimitation of the maritime zones
appertaining to each of those States in the Caribbean Sea.

In its Application, Nicaragua states inter alia that it has for decades "maintained the position

that its maritime Caribbean border with Honduras has not been determined", but that Honduras's
position is that "there in fact exists a delimitation line that runs straight easterly on the parallel of
latitude from the point fixed [in an Arbitral Award of 23 December 1906 made by the King of
Spain conceming the land boundary between Nicaragua and Honduras, which was found valid and
binding by the International Court of Justice on 18 November 1960] on the mouth of the Coco
river".

According to Nicaragua, "the posltwn adopted by Honduras . . . has brought repeated
confrontations and mutual capture of vessels of both nations in and around the general border
area". Nicaragua further states that "diplomatie negotiations have failed". It therefore requests the
Court "to determine the course of the single maritime boundary between areas of territorial sea,
continental shelf and exclusive economie zone appertaining respectively to Nicaragua and
Honduras, in accordance with equitable principles and relevant circumstances recognized by
general international law as applicable to such a delimitation of a single maritime boundary". -2-

As a basis for the Court's jurisdiction, Nicaragua invokes Article XXXI of the American

Treaty on Pacifie Settlement (officially known as the "Pact of Bogota"), signed on 30 April 1948,
as weil as the declarations under Article 36, paragraph 2, of the Statute of the Court, by which the
two States have accepted the compulsory jurisdiction of the Court.

By Order of 21 March 2000 the Court fixed 21 March 2001 as the time-limit for the filing of
a Memorial by Nicaragua and 21 March 2002 as the time-limit for the filing of a Counter-Memorial
by Honduras. The Memorial and Counter-Memorial were filed within the prescribed time-lirnits.

By Order of 13 June 2002 the Court authorized the subrnission of a Reply by Nicaragua and
a Rejoinder by Honduras and fixed as the time-limits for the filing of those pleadings
13 January 2003 for the Reply and 13 August 2003 for the Rejoinder. Nicaragua's Reply and
Honduras's Rejoinder were filed within the time-lirnits fixed.

Information Department:

Mrs. Laurence Blairon, Head ofDepartment (Tel.: +31 70 302 23 36)
Messrs. Boris Heim and Maxime Schouppe, Information Officers (Tel.: +31 70 302 23 37)

E-mail address: information @icj-cij.org

Document file FR
Document Long Title

Maritime Delimitation between Nicaragua and Honduras in the Caribbean Sea (Nicaragua v. Honduras) - Public hearings on the merits of the dispute to open on Monday 5 March 2007

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