REPUBLIC OF CHILE
Ministry of Foreign Aftàirs
May l4th. 2015
H.E. Mr Philippe Couvreur
Registrar
International Court of Justice
Peace Palace
The Hague
The Netherlands
Sir,
Obligation to Negotiate Access to the Pacifie Ocean (Bolivia v. Chile)
C/lile'commem~ 0·1Boli,•iaAtr.~ o hrdge Owatl11's11e.~ cmictmi11gthe mea11i1gscribedb)'
the Partiett "so"ereign acces.'tto tite.'tea"
1have the honour to convey the comments of the Republic of Chile on the answer given by Bolivia
on 13 May 2015 to the question asked by Judge Owada conceming the meaning of the terrn
·'sovereign access to the sea.. for the purpose of deterrnining whether the Court has jurisdiction
over the matter that Bolivia has reterred toit.
ln its answer, Bolivia adopts the extraordinary position that the meaning to be ascribed to an
expression central to its Request tor Relief can be deterrnined only as part of a consideration of
the merits of its daim. The meaning of Bolivia's Request for Relief cannot depend on a
consideration of the merits of whether the Court should grant that relief. What Bolivia·s Request
for Relief means is exactly the kind of issue of characterization that can and should be determined
at a preliminary stage, order to decide whether the Court has jurisdiction. 1f Bolivia·s approach
were correct, a respondent State could be left to answer the merits of adaim the meaning ofwhich
the applicant declined to explain.
As Chile emphasized in its answer to .ludge Owada's question, it is clear from the content of
Bolivia's Application, Memorial and Request for Reliefthat by seeking a declaration that Chile is
under an obligation to agree to grant Bolivia ··sovereign access to the sea··. Bolivia seeks a
declaration that Chile is under an obligation to agree to transfer to Bolivia sovereignty over coastal
territory. Bolivia now declines to enunciate the point that it has already made so explicit in its
Application, Memorial and Request for Relief: becausitis clear that a request for a declaration
that Chile is under an obligation to agree to change the allocation of sovereignty over territory is
objectively inconsistent with the scttlement reachedhe 1904 Peace Treaty and thus outside the
Court's jurisdiction by force of Article VI of the Pact of Bogotâ. Chile's Preliminary Objectionmust. however. be dccided on the basis of the Application. Memorial and Request for Relief to
which it objects.
Chile additionally notes that in Bolivia's second round oral submissions on Friday 8 May. counsel
for Bolivia submitted that ··Bolivia is not even asking the Com1 to determine the specifie modality
of sovereign access. Such access could be expressed in many ways. whether it is a conidor. a
coastal enclave. a special zone. or sorne other practical solution:· (CR 2015/19, p. 51, para. 3
(Akhavan)).
Chile further notes that Bolivia's answer to .ludge Owada·s question equally focuses on its position
that the modalities of the claimed sovereign access would be a matter to be determined by
agreement between the two States, and is not something with which the Court should be concemed.
If Bolivia's reference to "'aspecial zone. or sorne other practical solution·· and its insistence that
the modalities of the claimed access are not a matter for the Court, are intended as a retreat from
the position adopted in the Application and Memorial and embodied in the expression ''fully
sovereign access·· contained in Bolivia ·s Request for Relief. Chile reiterates that its Preliminary
Objection must be decided on the basis of the Application, Memorial and Request for Relief in
response to which thal objection has been made, none ofwhich Bolivia has withdrawn or modified.
Accept, Sir, the assurances of my highest consideration.
Felipe Bulnes
Agent ofChile .r--
Comments in writing of Chile on the written reply of the Bolivian Government to the question put by Judge Owada at the public sitting held on the afternoon of 8 May 2015