Indonesia,
South China Sea and the 11109-dashed lines
Arif Havas Oegroseno ;
Indonesian ambassador to Belgium, President of the 20th
Meeting of the States Parties of UNCLOS 1982 for the period of 2010-2011
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JAKARTA
POST, 09 April 2014
There seems to be an obsession among political commentators in
Asia and beyond that Indonesia has to admit that it is a claimant state in
the South China Sea (SCS) dispute and, therefore, must surrender its role as
a “mediator”. This is indeed laughable in the eyes of international law.
This is my take on the matter.
First, the very essence of the SCS dispute is, in simple terms,
about who owns over hundreds of islands, rocks, reefs, low-tide elevations
and sandbanks in the Spratleys and the Paracels.
The claimants are Brunei, China, Malaysia, the Philippines and
Vietnam. Taiwan is also considered a claimant by many.
Since its independence, Indonesia has never imagined laying
claim to any of those hundreds of features in the SCS. Even when then prime
minister Djuanda Kartawidjaja proclaimed Indonesia’s archipelagic waters in
1957, Indonesia did not include the Spratleys. Indonesia has no territorial
ambition in this area whatsoever.
If the claimants truly want to settle who owns what and where,
they have to adopt the general principle of public international law and
jurisprudence that dates back to the decision of Las Palmas/Miangas in 1928.
They can not operationalize the United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea (UNCLOS) 1982 as it was not designed to settle sovereignty disputes.
Second, if, not when, the ownership of the hundreds of features
in the SCS is ever determined, the following exercise would be the
delimitation of maritime zones from those features. International legal
principle stipulates that “land dominates the seas”, therefore, any width of
maritime zones in the South China Sea must be based on projection from land.
The applicable laws are embodied in the UNCLOS 1982, especially
articles 15 (delimitation of territorial waters), 74 (delimitation of
exclusive economic zones [EEZ]), 83 (delimitation of the continental shelf)
and 121 (regime of islands).
Regime of islands is a very critical facet of the law of the sea
in determining the entitlement of the maritime zone of a particular island.
The Chinese delegation to the 19th session of the state parties to UNCLOS
stated that according to Article 121 of UNCLOS, rocks that cannot sustain
human habitation or economic life shall have no EEZ or continental shelf.
As most of the features in the dispute fall within this article,
what could happen would be “bubbles” in the 12-mile territorial waters. Those
bubbles are likely to be located far away to overlap with the Indonesian EEZ
in the SCS.
Third, all claimants in the dispute have made their statements
of claims crystal clear, yet none of them has elaborated the basis of their
bids. Perhaps their arguments lack legal grounds so that revealing them would
be disastrous.
Fourth, one of the claimants has proposed a cartographic piece
with an inconsistent drawing known as nine-dashed line. It is inconsistent
because the line does not always have nine dashes. Sometimes there are 11 or
10.
The dashed line is not connected. The dashes appear not to be a
maritime zone projection of any features in the SCS. The cartographic piece
on which these 11/10/nine dashed lines are drawn has neither coordinates nor
specific datum nor geodetic system.
No one has ever explained decisively whether the map is intended
to show the claims over features only or features and waters or features,
waters and maritime boundaries.
In the Burkina Faso-Mali dispute it was stipulated that “Maps
[…] by virtue of solely their existence […] cannot constitute territorial
title”. In the arbitration of Eritrea against Yemen, the International Court
of Justice ruled that it “is unwilling to attribute meaning to dotted lines.
The conclusions on this basis urged by Eritrea in relation to […] its map are
not accepted”.
In explaining its claim, China employed terms unknown in the
UNCLOS 1982, namely “relevant waters” and “adjacent waters”. Chinese
commentators also mentioned that the map represented historic rights or
historic waters.
Yet the UNCLOS 1982 only knows historic bays and historic title
in relation to territorial waters.
Fifth, Indonesian waters in that region are divided into two
segments by the outer line of the 12-nautical-mile territorial water belt.
This outer line is generated from archipelagic baselines that have been
lodged with the UN and is considered in accordance with the archipelagic
principle of the UNCLOS 1982.
The waters behind this outer line are Indonesian territorial
waters and archipelagic waters called the Natuna Sea. The waters beyond this
outer line all the way to the Indonesian limit of the EEZ are part of the
SCS. Indonesia and Malaysia lodged their treaty of delimitation of
continental shelves in the SCS in October 1969 with the UN secretary-general.
Not a single country has challenged the validity of this 45
year-old treaty that divides rather significantly certain segments of the
SCS.
Sixth, for Indonesia to declare itself a claimant state in the
SCS dispute by virtue of the existence of the 11/10/nine-dashed-line map
would be absurd.
As a matter of law, fact and logic make it simply unfathomable
that Indonesia would start overlaying its highly precise and legally correct
work with an incomplete, inaccurate, inconsistent and legally problematic
map.
Indonesia outlined its position on the dashed-line map in its
diplomatic note to the UN secretary-general on July 8, 2010, saying the map
lacked international legal basis and was tantamount to upsetting the UNCLOS
1982.
Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa reiterated Indonesia’s
rejection of the legality of the map on March 19.
As an international law of the sea abiding country, Indonesia
has always dismissed any lines over waters that have no basis regarding
UNCLOS 1982, such as the 1898 Treaty of Paris and the dashed-line map.
In the realm of international law of the sea, they have no legal
value, whatsoever. There is no ambiguity, strategic or otherwise.
Seventh, arguments by some commentators such as Dr. Murphy of
the US and Dr. Batongbacal of the Philippines that Indonesia has lost its
role as mediator in the SCS dispute are a mistake beyond repair. Indonesia is
not a “mediator” because the dispute has not entered into the “mediation”
stage.
It is beyond any reasonable doubt that the dispute is currently
being discussed, not mediated, under the ASEAN-China Joint Working Group on
the Implementation of the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the SCS
that just met last March in Singapore.
Indonesia’s relentless facilitation in the second track
approach, known as the Workshop on Managing Potential Conflict in the South
China Sea, is not intended to position Indonesia as a mediator. It is a
confidence-building measure to enhance understanding and mutual trust.
The mere existence of an incomplete, inaccurate, inconsistent
and legally problematic map will neither force Indonesia to abandon its
efforts to facilitate confidence building nor suddenly make Indonesia lose
confidence in its highly precise, legally correct and UN-lodged maritime
projection in the SCS.
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