11 State Practice of International Law and the South China Sea Dispute Management Dr. Hong Nong...

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11

State Practice of International Law and the South China Sea Dispute Management

Dr. Hong Nong

University of Alberta/ National Institute for South China Sea Studies

November 25, 2014, Ottawa

CIUA

To consider…

Does International law help? (State practices of international law, including UNCLOS by the SCS claimant states)

What works in reality? (Practices of dispute management/ settlement in the region)

Has China changed its strategy of maritime dispute management? (China’s public relations management)

Is China a follower of international norms? (China’s approach to international law, including UNCLOS)

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3

The South China Sea Issues

Islands Regime

Historic Concepts

Other Maritime Regimes

Resources Management

Freedom of Navigation

Marine Environment

3

Part XV of UNCLOS

(Third-party compulsory settlement

mechanism)

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Among the claimants

• Old story continues (island regime, maritime delimitation, historic vs. modern claims…)

• New dimensions (CLCS submissions, national legislations, public relations campaign )

External players

• Geopolitical calculation

• “Freedom of navigation”

• “internationalism” “regionalism” “bilateralism”

What is the nature of the escalation of the SCS dispute since 2009?

Does International law help?

(State practices of international law, including UNCLOS by the SCS claimant states)

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What works in reality?Practices of dispute management/ settlement

in the region

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LOGO State Practice of Maritime Dispute management

-China/Vietnam-The Philippines/ Indonesia-Vietnam/Thailand-Vietnam /Indonesia-Malaysia/Indonesia-Malaysia/Thailand-Malaysia/Indonesia/Thailand-Malaysia/Brunei-Malaysia/Indonesia

-Malaysia/Singapore

-China/Brunei-Vietnam/Malaysia-Malaysia/Thailand-China/Philippines/Vietnam

-Indonesia Informal Workshop-China-ASEAN Maritime Cooperation Fund-DoC and CoC

The SCS Arbitration Case

Legal and Political Implication from the Arbitration Case

• In the short-term, the action has increased tensions and delayed cooperation and progress towards the CoC.

• In the longer-term, it may clarify some legal issues, but at the risk of undermining the international dispute settlement process.

• Positive outcomes possible if the Philippines succeeds in winning some of its case• But do these possible longer-term benefits for maritime security outweigh the costs

– both short-term and longer-term• An example of the interplay of politics and the law. The Philippines had political

objectives in putting case forward - hoped to isolate China and gain international support for its position

What next…

• Sino-Philippine relations in SCS will not be improved due to this litigation

• Problems will get more complicated

• It will be more difficult for peace and order

• What should we do with such a situation benefitting nobody…

• Core disputes should be addressed first, before everything else…

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Has China changed its strategy of maritime dispute management?

China’s public relations management- a review of China’s maritime policy

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Has China changed its strategy of maritime dispute management?

China’s public relations management- a review of China’s maritime policy

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Evolution of China’s Policy on the SCS

Pre-1970s: Announcement of sovereignty

From early 1970s to late 1980s: Announcement of sovereignty + Resuming control of some features

Since 1990s: Shelving the dispute, promoting cooperation

2002-2009: from bilateral to multilateral, interaction with ASEAN

Post-2009: Passive response

Unchanged: peace, stability, negotiation

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Case 1: China vs. Vietnam in the Paracels waters

• Location: China’s Haiyang Shiyou 981 drilling rig in waters around the Paracel Islands

• Actors:

Vietnam: naval and coast guard ships, fishing vessels

China: Patrol vessels , vessels involved in oil rig projects

Some facts

• China: not having rigs in the SCS

• Call for joint development

• Story about Vanguard Bank (Wan an tan)

• Constrain itself to Paracels

• Timing? (China-Vietnam Dialogue on Maritime Cooperation, US president’s visit to Asia and SCS policy?)

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http://thediplomat.com/2014/06/china-internationalizes-south-china-sea-dispute/

• Actors:

The Philippines: Warship the Gregorio del Pilar

China: Fishing vessels, Marine Surveillance Vessels

• Location: Scarborough Shoal

• Post-standoff consequence

Case 2: Scarborough Shoal

Is China a follower of international norms?

(China’s approach to international law, including UNCLOS)

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• Attitude Towards International Law (e.g. Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence)

--Sovereignty= independence, internal powers of independence such as legislation, establishment of national system; external powers of freedom to deal with international affairs, participations in international conference and signing treaties.

--Strict adherence to the principle of inviolability of sovereignty has become a distinctive feature of foreign policy of the PRC and is treated as the basis of international relations and the cornerstone of the whole system of international law

• Participation in UNCLOS Process• Maritime Legislation Review• Practice Of Dispute Settlement

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Some Observations

• International and regional legal framework: Comprehensive

• National legislation: a consolidation of maritime claims

• Means of dispute settlement/management: various approaches

• China’s policy: evolved but remained unchanged in principle

• Way forward: more regional efforts, more practical cooperation, less nationalism propaganda, less public relations campaign

Thank you

Questions? Comments?

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