PH VS China

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 5

Case Brief on the South China Sea Arbitration between the Republic of the Philippines and the People’s

Republic of China by the Permanent Court of Arbitration

SOUTH CHINA SEA ARBITRATION

(PCA Case Number 2013–19)

Between The Republic of the Philippines and The People’s Republic of China

Before An Arbitral Tribunal Constituted Under Annex VII to the United Nations Convention on the Law of
the Sea 1982

Registry: Permanent Court of Arbitration Date of Award: 12 July 2016

Preface

The South China Sea has, especially in contemporary times, emerged as a region of great interest to global
players, in terms of strategic and economic interests of the competing States. As Foreign Policy puts it,
“There’s no tenser set of waters in the world than the South China Sea. For the last few years, China and
its neighbors have been bluffing, threatening, cajoling, and suing for control of its resources.”[2]

To best understand the current situation in the South China Sea from a legal point of view, it is imperative
to refer back to the judgment passed by the Arbitral Tribunal of the Permanent Court of Arbitration last
year, in response to the claims brought by Philippines against China, primarily regarding maritime rights,
entitlements and zones in the South China Sea, as well as for the protection of the marine life and the
environment of the region, under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, 1982.

China has always argued for historic rights, as demarcated by the ‘Nine Dash Line’ on its official maps of
the region in question; other stakeholders, however, dispute this claim, as shown in the arbitral
proceedings. As is noted:

… While it was the Philippines which brought the case, it wasn’t the only interested party in the Asean.
Three other members have claims to parts of the South China Sea or the Spratly Islands or the Paracels
that conflict with China’s expansive nine-dash theory: Brunei, Malaysia, and Vietnam. Indonesia, Asean’s
largest economy, has continuing run-ins with Chinese fishing vessels and occasionally with the Chinese
Coast Guard in its exclusive economic zone.[3]

Now, as the Association of South East Nations (ASEAN) heads towards working on the enforcement of this
arbitration award from last year (2016), and attempting to employ a code of conduct for the South China
Sea, it becomes even more important to look at the arbitral ruling from an objective vantage point.

Case Brief

The South China Sea Arbitration was conducted between the Republic of the Philippines and the People’s
Republic of China by the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA), under the 1982 United Nations Convention
on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). The arbitration is related to disputes between the Parties regarding the
legal basis of maritime rights and entitlements, the status of certain geographic features, and the
lawfulness of certain actions taken by China in the South China Sea; in particular, the following four issues,
as raised by Philippines:
To resolve a dispute between the parties regarding the source of maritime rights and entitlements in the
South China Sea;

To resolve a dispute between the parties concerning the entitlements to maritime zones that would be
generated under the Convention by Scarborough Shoal and certain maritime features in the Spratly
Islands that are claimed by both the parties;

To resolve a series of disputes concerning the lawfulness of China’s actions in the South China Sea, vis-à-
vis interfering with Philippine’s rights, failing to protect and preserve the marine environment, and
inflicting harm on the marine environment (through land reclamation and construction of artificial
islands);

To find that China has aggravated and extended the disputes between the Parties by restricting access to
a detachment of Philippines Marines stationed at Second Thomas Shoal.

While China and Philippines are both parties to the UNCLOS, China specifically made a declaration in 2006
to exclude maritime boundary delimitation from its acceptance of compulsory dispute settlement. In
addition, China has shown disagreement with Philippines’ decision to take the matter to arbitration and
has decided neither to agree with the decision of the Tribunal nor to participate in the proceedings.

The Tribunal, on its end, has taken cognizance of these factors and has purported to not deal with
delimiting maritime boundaries. Furthermore, the Tribunal did not bar the proceedings, on the basis of
Article 9 of Annex VII of UNCLOS[4]. In addition, the Tribunal also noted that despite China’s absence from
the proceedings, since it is a party to the UNCLOS, the decision of the Tribunal would, in fact, be binding
upon it, pursuant to Article 296 (1)[5] and Article 11 of Annex VII[6].

China’s Foreign Ministry, further, stated its position with regard to the proceedings by publishing a
Position Paper in 2014[7]. It claimed that the Tribunal lacks jurisdiction over the matter because:

The essence of the subject-matter of the arbitration is the territorial sovereignty over the relevant
maritime features in the South China Sea;

China and the Philippines have agreed, through bilateral instruments and the Declaration on the Conduct
of Parties in the South China Sea, to settle their relevant disputes through negotiations;

Philippines’ disputes would constitute an integral part of maritime delimitation between the two
countries.

The Tribunal considered China’s Position Paper as a plea on jurisdiction, and conducted a separate hearing
on the issue of jurisdiction and admissibility. Additionally, the Tribunal also declared that it would honour
China’s declaration of 2006 and the UNCLOS and would neither delve into issues of maritime boundary
delimitation or questions of sovereignty. The Philippines also stated that it, “does not seek in this
arbitration a determination of which Party enjoys sovereignty over the islands claimed by both of them.
Nor does it request a delimitation of any maritime boundaries.”[8]

Pursuant to this, the Tribunal issued its Award on Jurisdiction[9] in October 2015, in which it concluded
that it did indeed have jurisdiction in the case, as per Philippines’ Final Submissions[10], and that China’s
lack of participation would not prove to be a bar to its proceedings. It, further, concluded that the treaties
China was relying on were either political in nature and not legally binding[11], or that they did were
legally binding and yet did not bar either Party from alternative means of dispute resolution[12]. In
accordance with Article 283 of the UNCLOS[13], the Tribunal found that this requirement was met in the
diplomatic communications between the Parties and that Philippines’ initiation of proceedings under the
UNCLOS did not constitute an abuse of of process as claimed by China.

The Tribunal, proceeding with the first two submissions made by the Philippines, considered the validity
of China’s claim to historic rights in the maritime region of the South China Sea and the ‘Nine-Dash Line’.
Through a lengthy analysis of the text and context of the Convention, in line with the principles set out in
the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, the Tribunal established that the Convention supersedes
any treaties in force before its coming into force. It questioned China’s claim to historical rights in the
region, and established that China’s state practice does not show that China had been enjoying any
historical rights in the South China Sea; rather, it was enjoying the freedom of the high seas and since it
did not create bar to other states’ usage of the same, it could not be understood as being a historical right.
Furthermore, since China’s publishing of the same in its Notes Verbales in 2009, many states have
objected to its claim as well. “The Tribunal concludes that the Convention superseded any historic rights
or other sovereign rights or jurisdiction in excess of the limits imposed therein.”[14] However, the Tribunal
also concluded that its jurisdiction was limited to the claims of historic rights on the maritime region and
not to the land masses in the South China Sea, i.e. if it can claim historic rights on any of the islands, then
it may also be able to claim maritime zones (as per the Convention) on the basis of these islands.

Next, the Tribunal looked at Philippines’ submissions 3 to 7, concerning the nature of the features in the
South China Sea. It differentiates between low-tide elevations[15], high-tide features[16] and rocks[17].
In its Award on Jurisdiction, the Tribunal clarified that:

This is not a dispute concerning sovereignty over the features, notwithstanding any possible question
concerning whether low-tide elevations may be subjected to a claim of territorial sovereignty. Nor is this
a dispute concerning sea boundary delimitation: the status of a feature as a “low-tide elevation”, “island”,
or a “rock” relates to the entitlement to maritime zones generated by that feature, not to the delimitation
of such entitlements in the event that they overlap.[18]

The Philippines put forward three categories for classifying low-tide elevations: where a low-tide elevation
is located within 12 miles of a high-tide feature[19], where the low-tide elevation is beyond 12 miles but
within the state’s exclusive economic zone or continental shelf[20], and where the low-tide elevation is
located beyond the areas of natural jurisdiction[21].

For the purpose of identifying the nature of the features in the South China Sea, the Tribunal relied upon
satellite imagery that had been conducted on the area and direct surveys that had been carried out, by
navies or otherwise, in the area, and relied upon maps that were sufficiently detailed. They chose a certain
tidal height to maintain uniformity across the features, and decided to rely, in cases where there had been
significant man-made changes, alterations or construction on the features, upon maps/imagery/surveys
that depicted the features as they had been in their original form.[22]

Again the Tribunal relied upon statements previously made by China to obtain their stance on the nature
of the features, since China had neither submitted any document to the Tribunal nor had it discussed
these in its Position Paper.

The Tribunal concluded that Scarborough Shoal, Cuarteron Reef, Fiery Cross Reef, Johnson Reef,
McKennan Reef and Gaven Reef (North) were all found to be high-tide features. The Tribunal further
noted that for the purposes of Article 121(3), the high-tide features at Scarborough Shoal and the reefs
were rocks that cannot sustain human human habitation or economic life of their own and so have no
exclusive economic zone or continental shelf. The Tribunal found the same to be true of the Spratly Islands
and so concluded that China, therefore, has no entitlement to any maritime zone in the area of Mischief
Reef or Second Thomas Shoal; they do, however, form part of the exclusive economic zone and
continental shelf of the Philippines as they lie within 200 nautical miles of the Philippines’ coast and there
are no overlapping entitlements in the area with respect to China.

On the contrary, Hughes Reef, Gaven Reef (South), Subi Reef, Mischief Reef and Second Thomas Shoal
were all found to be low-tide elevations, of which Hughes Reef lay within 12 miles of McKennan Reef and
Sin Cowe Island, Gaven Reef (South) lay within 12 miles of Gaven Reef (North) and Namyit Island, and Subi
Reef lay within 12 miles of the high-tide feature of Sandy Cay on the reefs to the west of Thitu.

In the issue of Chinese interference with the living and non-living resources (primarily concerned with
fishing practices in the South China Sea and oil and gas exploration and exploitation) of the Philippines,
the Tribunal considered diplomatic statements from China to the Philippines and regulations related to
the matter that China had passed domestically. The Philippines put forward four contentions related to
living resources: China’s prevention of fishing by Philippine vessels at Mischief Reef since 1995, and at
Second Thomas Shoal since 1995, China’s revision of the Hainan Regulation[23] and China’s moratorium
on fishing in the South China Sea in 2012[24]. The Tribunal finds that China had breached Articles 77[25]
and 56[26] of the Convention through the operation of its marine surveillance vessels (which interfered
with Philippines’ oil and gas exploration) and through its moratorium on fishing which interfered with the
exclusive economic zone of the Philippines, respectively.

The Tribunal also found China in breach of Article 58 (3)[27] of the Convention, due to its failure to prevent
fishing by Chinese flagged ships in the exclusive economic zone of the Philippines, failing to respect the
sovereign rights of the Philippines over its fisheries in its exclusive economic zone.

Submission 10 of the Philippines related to China’s interference with Philippines’ fishing vessels and
practices in the Scarborough Shoal. While both the states had conflicting views on the situation (China
believed that it was Philippines who was causing the interference) and both claimed historic rights
(Philippines distinguished this by clarifying that it only referred to historic fishing rights) to the region, the
Tribunal opined that China was, in fact, in contravention of the Convention by interfering with the
traditional fishing practice of the Philippines in its exclusive economic zone through the deployment of its
official ships in the region. The Tribunal also noted that this decision does not depend on the question of
sovereignty, and that the Tribunal once again refrained from commenting on the matter.
Philippines’ successive contention related to China’s activities on the reefs in the South China Sea, with
regards the practices it had adopted for the purpose of large-scale construction and reclamation at seven
locations in the Spratly Islands[28], and its practices with regards to fishing[29] in the South China Sea.
Philippines claimed that China had been harming and causing damage to the marine environment of the
South China Sea through these practices and despite objections from the surrounding states, China had
not ceased its actions. It was also noted that while some of the fishing ships were not state-appointed
ships and were being manned by non-state actors, the Chinese government had neither condemned their
actions nor made any efforts to stop them from proceeding. The Tribunal, assisted by three independent
experts on coral reef biology, expert briefs and satellite imagery, found that China was in breach of the
Convention for failing to stop the fishing vessels from engaging in harmful harvesting practices[30] and
also for its island-building activities[31]. The Tribunal further opined that China’s construction on Mischief
Reef, without authorization from Philippines was in violation of Philippines’ sovereign rights in its exclusive
economic zone and continental shelf and a breach of the Convention[32].

The next consideration before the Tribunal was the demeanour of China’s law enforcement vessels at
Scarborough Shoal[33] and the lawfulness of these actions. The Philippines also raised the issue under the
relevant provisions of the Convention on the International Regulations for Preventing of Collisions at Sea,
1972 (COLREGS). The Tribunal found that China, through the actions of its law enforcement vessels,
endangered Philippine vessels and personnel and created a serious risk of collision and found China in
breach of Article 94 of the Convention[34].

The Tribunal, in response to Submission 14 of the Philippines, opined that China had, in the course of the
proceedings of this arbitration, aggravated and extended its disputes with Philippines, through its actions
of dredging, artificial island-building and construction activities[35].

Lastly, the Tribunal did not find it necessary to make any further declaration, owing to the fact that both
the parties are already parties to the Convention and are already obliged to comply with it.

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy