fbpx
Wikipedia

Chilean–Peruvian maritime dispute


Perú v. Chile (also called the Chilean–Peruvian maritime dispute) was a public international law case concerning a territorial dispute between the South American republics of Peru and Chile over the sovereignty of an area at sea in the Pacific Ocean approximately 37,900 square kilometres (14,600 sq mi) in size. Peru contended that its maritime boundary delimitation with Chile was not fixed, but Chile claimed that it holds no outstanding border issues with Peru. On January 16, 2008, Peru brought forth the case to the International Court of Justice at The Hague, the Netherlands, which accepted the case and formally filed it as the Case concerning maritime delimitation between the Republic of Peru and the Republic of Chile - Perú v. Chile.

The disputed area (left) and the boundary as per the ICJ ruling (right)

The dispute primarily concerned an area at sea between the parallel that crosses the end point of the land border between Chile and Peru, and the bisecting line perpendicular to the coasts of Chile and Peru. This line was formed by the overlapping of the baselines of both countries, forming a trapezoid of 67,139.4 square kilometres (25,922.7 sq mi). Peru requested an equitable division of the maritime territory, but Chile demanded sovereignty over approximately 38,000 square kilometres (15,000 sq mi) of the territory. On a secondary level, the dispute included the status of a maritime triangle to the left of the aforementioned trapezoid, approximately 28,471.86 square kilometres (10,993.05 sq mi) in size, which Chile considered a part of the international waters and Peru as a part of its maritime domain.

Facts edit

The background of this dispute goes back to the mid-1980s. In 1985, the then Foreign Minister of Peru, Allan Wagner first addressed this issue formally with the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Chile at the time, Jaime del Valle. The following year, the Peruvian Ambassador Juan Miguel Bakula Patino had an interview with Foreign Minister Jaime del Valle on this matter, and handled a diplomatic note, dated May 23 of 1986. By the aforementioned note, issued by the Embassy of Peru in Santiago de Chile, Peru stated its position regarding the necessity of "concluding a treaty on maritime boundaries", on the premise that it must reach a formal and definitive delimitation of maritime spaces, which complement the geographical proximity between Peru and Chile. In ICJ proceedings Chile disputes that these meeting was ever about Peru wanting a maritime boundary treaty, in the contrary Chile argued that Peru recognized the Treaties signed in 1950's and that meetings had a totally different basis.

Chile ratified the Convention on the Law of the Sea in 1997 and, according to its text, in September 2000, deposited it with the United Nations. Its nautical charts indicated the parallel 18º21'00" South as the maritime boundary between the two countries. The constitution of Peru prevents its government to ratify the sea convention however its Peruvian Government formalized its position on the issue, through a note sent to the United Nations on January 7, 2001, which does not recognize the line of latitude as the maritime boundary between the two countries.

Public discussion on this subject was revived in 2005, when the Congress of Peru began to process a bill on determining the baseline of maritime domain, which are sequences of points that determine where it finishes the coastal edge and therefore begins the territorial sea as such, setting the width of the maritime domain of Peru to the distance of 200 nautical miles, using a line bisector in the south, bordering with Chile. The Peruvian law was passed and promulgated on November 3, 2005.

 
Ambassador Allan Wagner

On January 16, 2008, the government of Peru introduced in the International Court of Justice the "Case Concerning Maritime Delimitation between the Republic of Peru and the Republic of Chile", also called Peru v. Chile. The case is meant to adjudicate the re-delimitation of the maritime border between these two countries.

In the case, Peru, whose legal team included jurist Juan Vicente Ugarte del Pino,[1] argued that the maritime boundary has never been defined by a treaty and should run on a southwestern direction from their land border, perpendicular to the natural slope of the South American coast in an equidistant angle from both coastlines. Chile claims that in trilateral treaties signed together with Peru and Ecuador in 1952 and 1954, it is clearly stated that a maritime boundary (written as "límite marítimo" in Spanish) runs in a western direction, parallel to the equator.[2][3] The Chilean agent to the Court is former Undersecretary for Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Alberto van Klaveren. The Peruvian agent is the current Ambassador to The Netherlands, Allan Wagner.

Judgment edit

 
The maritime boundary between Chile and Peru as defined by the International Court of Justice on 27 January 2014.

On January 27, 2014, in the final ruling of the Court, Peru gained some maritime territory. The maritime boundary extends only to 80 nautical miles off of the coast. From that point, the new border runs in a southwest direction to a point that is 200 miles equidistant from the coast of the two countries.

Under the ruling, Chile lost control over part of its formerly claimed maritime territory and gives additional maritime territory to Peru.

From the 27 January 2014 court press release: The Court concludes that the maritime boundary between the Parties starts at the intersection of the parallel of latitude passing through Boundary Marker No. 1 with the low-water line, and extends for 80 nautical miles along that parallel of latitude to Point A. From this point, the maritime boundary runs along the equidistance line to Point B, and then along the 200-nautical-mile limit measured from the Chilean baselines to Point C. In view of the circumstances of the case, the Court has defined the course of the maritime boundary between the Parties without determining the precise geographical co-ordinates.*[4]

Significance edit

Chile - Peru relations
 
 
Chile
 
Peru

Physicist Frank Duarte has been a consistent and early critic of the Chilean Government's handling of this dispute. In particular, he has sharply criticized President Sebastián Piñera's performance (deemed as favoring commercial interests over the interest of the Chilean people) and called for Chile's withdrawal from The Hague, early in 2012.[5] Following the ruling, several political figures in Chile, of various political parties, have also called for Chile's withdrawal from The Hague that would, in addition, imply a withdrawal from the Pact of Bogota. Senators and members of parliament advocating this position include Ivan Moreira,[6] Jorge Tarud,[6] Jaime Orpis,[7] and Fulvio Rossi.[7] Former president Ricardo Lagos has added his voice to the criticism of the tribunal's ruling.[8] Furthermore, the newly designated minister for foreign relations, Heraldo Muñoz, has declared that the topic of membership in the Pact of Bogota should be under "legitimate discussion".[9] On February 11, 2014, President Sebastián Piñera, originally a strong advocate of The Hague, requested a report on the advantages and disadvantages of Chile's membership in the Pact of Bogota.[10]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Murió Vicente Ugarte del Pino, miembro de equipo ante La Haya". El Comercio (Peru). 2014-10-06. Retrieved 2015-10-25.
  2. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-03-09. Retrieved 2013-05-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ BBC News, Chile-Peru spat over sea border. Retrieved on January 27, 2007.
  4. ^ CORDER, MIKE (27 January 2014). "World court draws new Peru-Chile maritime border". ap.org. Associated Press. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
  5. ^ El Voluntario, February 8, 2012 http://www.elvoluntario.com/index20120229.shtml
  6. ^ a b La Segunda, January 27, 2014 http://www.lasegunda.com/Noticias/Politica/2014/01/910056/fuertes-criticas-de-parlamentarios-aqui-chile-no-ha-ganado-nada-hemos-perdido
  7. ^ a b La Estrella de Arica, January 27, 2014 http://www.estrellaarica.cl/impresa/2014/01/27/full/4/ 2014-02-02 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ La Segunda, January 28, 2014 http://www.lasegunda.com/Noticias/Politica/2014/01/910188/Ex-presidente-Lagos-No-entiendo-por-que-el-paralelo-es-hasta-las-80-millas-y-despues-se-quiebra
  9. ^ La Segunda, January 28, 2014 http://www.lasegunda.com/Noticias/Politica/2014/01/910324/munoz-se-abre-a-debatir-retiro-de-chile-de-pacto-de-bogota-es-una-discusion-legitima
  10. ^ La Segunda, February 11, 2014 http://www.lasegunda.com/Noticias/Politica/2014/02/913578/presidente-pidio-informe-de-pros-y-contras-ante-retiro-de-pacto-de-bogota

External links edit

  • on of International Court of Justice and Peru Takes Chile to UN World Court of 16 January 2008 and BBC and and Chile ICJ Team and GAR Listing Both ICJ Teams of 16 January 2008
  • All court documents:

    chilean, peruvian, maritime, dispute, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, spanish, april, 2020, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, spanish, article, machine, tra. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish April 2020 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Spanish article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es Controversia de delimitacion maritima entre Chile y Peru see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated es Controversia de delimitacion maritima entre Chile y Peru to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Peru v Chile also called the Chilean Peruvian maritime dispute was a public international law case concerning a territorial dispute between the South American republics of Peru and Chile over the sovereignty of an area at sea in the Pacific Ocean approximately 37 900 square kilometres 14 600 sq mi in size Peru contended that its maritime boundary delimitation with Chile was not fixed but Chile claimed that it holds no outstanding border issues with Peru On January 16 2008 Peru brought forth the case to the International Court of Justice at The Hague the Netherlands which accepted the case and formally filed it as the Case concerning maritime delimitation between the Republic of Peru and the Republic of Chile Peru v Chile The disputed area left and the boundary as per the ICJ ruling right The dispute primarily concerned an area at sea between the parallel that crosses the end point of the land border between Chile and Peru and the bisecting line perpendicular to the coasts of Chile and Peru This line was formed by the overlapping of the baselines of both countries forming a trapezoid of 67 139 4 square kilometres 25 922 7 sq mi Peru requested an equitable division of the maritime territory but Chile demanded sovereignty over approximately 38 000 square kilometres 15 000 sq mi of the territory On a secondary level the dispute included the status of a maritime triangle to the left of the aforementioned trapezoid approximately 28 471 86 square kilometres 10 993 05 sq mi in size which Chile considered a part of the international waters and Peru as a part of its maritime domain Contents 1 Facts 2 Judgment 3 Significance 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksFacts editThe background of this dispute goes back to the mid 1980s In 1985 the then Foreign Minister of Peru Allan Wagner first addressed this issue formally with the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Chile at the time Jaime del Valle The following year the Peruvian Ambassador Juan Miguel Bakula Patino had an interview with Foreign Minister Jaime del Valle on this matter and handled a diplomatic note dated May 23 of 1986 By the aforementioned note issued by the Embassy of Peru in Santiago de Chile Peru stated its position regarding the necessity of concluding a treaty on maritime boundaries on the premise that it must reach a formal and definitive delimitation of maritime spaces which complement the geographical proximity between Peru and Chile In ICJ proceedings Chile disputes that these meeting was ever about Peru wanting a maritime boundary treaty in the contrary Chile argued that Peru recognized the Treaties signed in 1950 s and that meetings had a totally different basis Chile ratified the Convention on the Law of the Sea in 1997 and according to its text in September 2000 deposited it with the United Nations Its nautical charts indicated the parallel 18º21 00 South as the maritime boundary between the two countries The constitution of Peru prevents its government to ratify the sea convention however its Peruvian Government formalized its position on the issue through a note sent to the United Nations on January 7 2001 which does not recognize the line of latitude as the maritime boundary between the two countries Public discussion on this subject was revived in 2005 when the Congress of Peru began to process a bill on determining the baseline of maritime domain which are sequences of points that determine where it finishes the coastal edge and therefore begins the territorial sea as such setting the width of the maritime domain of Peru to the distance of 200 nautical miles using a line bisector in the south bordering with Chile The Peruvian law was passed and promulgated on November 3 2005 nbsp Ambassador Alberto van Klaveren nbsp Ambassador Allan Wagner On January 16 2008 the government of Peru introduced in the International Court of Justice the Case Concerning Maritime Delimitation between the Republic of Peru and the Republic of Chile also called Peru v Chile The case is meant to adjudicate the re delimitation of the maritime border between these two countries In the case Peru whose legal team included jurist Juan Vicente Ugarte del Pino 1 argued that the maritime boundary has never been defined by a treaty and should run on a southwestern direction from their land border perpendicular to the natural slope of the South American coast in an equidistant angle from both coastlines Chile claims that in trilateral treaties signed together with Peru and Ecuador in 1952 and 1954 it is clearly stated that a maritime boundary written as limite maritimo in Spanish runs in a western direction parallel to the equator 2 3 The Chilean agent to the Court is former Undersecretary for Foreign Affairs Ambassador Alberto van Klaveren The Peruvian agent is the current Ambassador to The Netherlands Allan Wagner Judgment edit nbsp The maritime boundary between Chile and Peru as defined by the International Court of Justice on 27 January 2014 On January 27 2014 in the final ruling of the Court Peru gained some maritime territory The maritime boundary extends only to 80 nautical miles off of the coast From that point the new border runs in a southwest direction to a point that is 200 miles equidistant from the coast of the two countries Under the ruling Chile lost control over part of its formerly claimed maritime territory and gives additional maritime territory to Peru From the 27 January 2014 court press release 1 The Court concludes that the maritime boundary between the Parties starts at the intersection of the parallel of latitude passing through Boundary Marker No 1 with the low water line and extends for 80 nautical miles along that parallel of latitude to Point A From this point the maritime boundary runs along the equidistance line to Point B and then along the 200 nautical mile limit measured from the Chilean baselines to Point C In view of the circumstances of the case the Court has defined the course of the maritime boundary between the Parties without determining the precise geographical co ordinates 4 Significance editChile Peru relations nbsp nbsp Chile nbsp PeruPhysicist Frank Duarte has been a consistent and early critic of the Chilean Government s handling of this dispute In particular he has sharply criticized President Sebastian Pinera s performance deemed as favoring commercial interests over the interest of the Chilean people and called for Chile s withdrawal from The Hague early in 2012 5 Following the ruling several political figures in Chile of various political parties have also called for Chile s withdrawal from The Hague that would in addition imply a withdrawal from the Pact of Bogota Senators and members of parliament advocating this position include Ivan Moreira 6 Jorge Tarud 6 Jaime Orpis 7 and Fulvio Rossi 7 Former president Ricardo Lagos has added his voice to the criticism of the tribunal s ruling 8 Furthermore the newly designated minister for foreign relations Heraldo Munoz has declared that the topic of membership in the Pact of Bogota should be under legitimate discussion 9 On February 11 2014 President Sebastian Pinera originally a strong advocate of The Hague requested a report on the advantages and disadvantages of Chile s membership in the Pact of Bogota 10 See also edit nbsp Chile portal nbsp Peru portalArica y Parinacota controversy Atacama Desert border dispute Chilean Peruvian territorial dispute Foreign policy of the Ollanta Humala administration List of International Court of Justice casesReferences edit Murio Vicente Ugarte del Pino miembro de equipo ante La Haya El Comercio Peru 2014 10 06 Retrieved 2015 10 25 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 03 09 Retrieved 2013 05 21 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link BBC News Chile Peru spat over sea border Retrieved on January 27 2007 CORDER MIKE 27 January 2014 World court draws new Peru Chile maritime border ap org Associated Press Retrieved 27 January 2014 El Voluntario February 8 2012 http www elvoluntario com index20120229 shtml a b La Segunda January 27 2014 http www lasegunda com Noticias Politica 2014 01 910056 fuertes criticas de parlamentarios aqui chile no ha ganado nada hemos perdido a b La Estrella de Arica January 27 2014 http www estrellaarica cl impresa 2014 01 27 full 4 Archived 2014 02 02 at the Wayback Machine La Segunda January 28 2014 http www lasegunda com Noticias Politica 2014 01 910188 Ex presidente Lagos No entiendo por que el paralelo es hasta las 80 millas y despues se quiebra La Segunda January 28 2014 http www lasegunda com Noticias Politica 2014 01 910324 munoz se abre a debatir retiro de chile de pacto de bogota es una discusion legitima La Segunda February 11 2014 http www lasegunda com Noticias Politica 2014 02 913578 presidente pidio informe de pros y contras ante retiro de pacto de bogotaExternal links editPeru v Chile Maritime Dispute on the docket of International Court of Justice and Peru Takes Chile to UN World Court of 16 January 2008 and BBC and Peru ICJ Team and Chile ICJ Team and GAR Listing Both ICJ Teams of 16 January 2008 All court documents https web archive org web 20140130064247 http www icj cij org docket index php p1 3 amp p2 2 amp case 137 Press release Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chilean Peruvian maritime dispute amp oldid 1189465782, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

    article

    , read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.