Berliner Boersenzeitung - ICJ sides with E.Guinea in spat with Gabon over oil-rich islands

EUR -
AED 4.324247
AFN 78.159677
ALL 96.383136
AMD 449.156415
ANG 2.108142
AOA 1079.738196
ARS 1707.873712
AUD 1.756
AWG 2.119737
AZN 2.004683
BAM 1.953035
BBD 2.371842
BDT 143.906264
BGN 1.955183
BHD 0.444171
BIF 3482.669398
BMD 1.177468
BND 1.511959
BOB 8.155419
BRL 6.501385
BSD 1.177633
BTN 105.803209
BWP 15.480018
BYN 3.437334
BYR 23078.372706
BZD 2.368437
CAD 1.610311
CDF 2590.430108
CHF 0.92851
CLF 0.027159
CLP 1065.420451
CNY 8.275831
CNH 8.252726
COP 4408.20468
CRC 588.1673
CUC 1.177468
CUP 31.202902
CVE 110.109113
CZK 24.255958
DJF 209.25926
DKK 7.469533
DOP 73.815495
DZD 152.411371
EGP 55.986841
ERN 17.66202
ETB 183.219828
FJD 2.671905
FKP 0.873155
GBP 0.872474
GEL 3.161474
GGP 0.873155
GHS 13.101396
GIP 0.873155
GMD 87.728137
GNF 10292.428455
GTQ 9.022227
GYD 246.370154
HKD 9.156244
HNL 31.041054
HRK 7.533201
HTG 154.191703
HUF 388.726923
IDR 19698.038712
ILS 3.751445
IMP 0.873155
INR 105.771538
IQD 1542.715894
IRR 49600.839466
ISK 148.005699
JEP 0.873155
JMD 187.844059
JOD 0.834827
JPY 183.703876
KES 151.834978
KGS 102.969522
KHR 4720.297177
KMF 492.181341
KPW 1059.742047
KRW 1700.793727
KWD 0.361706
KYD 0.981406
KZT 605.253111
LAK 25485.810144
LBP 105455.453235
LKR 364.543896
LRD 208.434024
LSL 19.599152
LTL 3.476757
LVL 0.712239
LYD 6.372977
MAD 10.744289
MDL 19.754948
MGA 5385.352798
MKD 61.564829
MMK 2472.481239
MNT 4186.07642
MOP 9.432805
MRU 46.632979
MUR 54.104464
MVR 18.192014
MWK 2042.000359
MXN 21.123411
MYR 4.762889
MZN 75.251308
NAD 19.599152
NGN 1707.858371
NIO 43.338643
NOK 11.782763
NPR 169.285334
NZD 2.018368
OMR 0.452732
PAB 1.177628
PEN 3.96269
PGK 5.0858
PHP 69.220404
PKR 329.88087
PLN 4.214723
PYG 7980.701292
QAR 4.292423
RON 5.092787
RSD 117.235767
RUB 93.019627
RWF 1715.164466
SAR 4.416323
SBD 9.600357
SCR 17.936864
SDG 708.237705
SEK 10.798895
SGD 1.512051
SHP 0.883406
SLE 28.347521
SLL 24690.91944
SOS 671.845979
SRD 45.138822
STD 24371.210202
STN 24.465363
SVC 10.304411
SYP 13019.121378
SZL 19.583275
THB 36.583609
TJS 10.822332
TMT 4.132913
TND 3.42605
TOP 2.835061
TRY 50.450028
TTD 8.010625
TWD 37.022301
TZS 2912.404656
UAH 49.679666
UGX 4250.981657
USD 1.177468
UYU 46.02484
UZS 14192.906339
VES 339.215383
VND 30990.957634
VUV 142.639112
WST 3.283512
XAF 655.026862
XAG 0.016367
XAU 0.000263
XCD 3.182166
XCG 2.122395
XDR 0.81366
XOF 655.029639
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.767028
ZAR 19.625447
ZMK 10598.620736
ZMW 26.58425
ZWL 379.144214
  • RBGPF

    1.0400

    81.26

    +1.28%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.2000

    15.56

    +1.29%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.02

    +0.04%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    13.1

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2500

    77.49

    +0.32%

  • BTI

    0.2000

    57.24

    +0.35%

  • GSK

    0.1100

    48.96

    +0.22%

  • RIO

    -0.0800

    80.89

    -0.1%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    41.09

    -0.1%

  • BCE

    0.2800

    23.01

    +1.22%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.47

    +0.45%

  • CMSD

    0.1200

    23.14

    +0.52%

  • AZN

    0.3100

    92.45

    +0.34%

  • BP

    -0.2700

    34.31

    -0.79%

  • BCC

    1.4800

    74.71

    +1.98%

ICJ sides with E.Guinea in spat with Gabon over oil-rich islands
ICJ sides with E.Guinea in spat with Gabon over oil-rich islands / Photo: Nick Gammon - AFP

ICJ sides with E.Guinea in spat with Gabon over oil-rich islands

The top United Nations court on Monday sided with Equatorial Guinea in a decades-long dispute with Gabon over three tiny islands in potentially oil-rich waters.

Text size:

The two west African nations have been squabbling over the 30-hectare (74-acre) island of Mbanie and two smaller low-lying islets, Cocotiers and Conga, since the early 1970s.

The islands themselves are tiny and virtually uninhabited but lie in an area potentially rich in oil and gas.

The dispute dates all the way back to 1900, when then colonial powers France and Spain signed a treaty in Paris setting out the borders between the two countries.

But Gabon argued that a later treaty, the 1974 Bata Convention, then fixed the islands' sovereignty in their favour.

However, the International Court of Justice ruled that the Bata Convention "invoked by the Gabonese Republic is not a treaty having the force of law... and does not constitute a legal title."

It said that the legal title to the islands was held by Spain, which then passed to Equatorial Guinea upon independence in 1968.

Unlike most countries appearing before the ICJ in The Hague, which rules in disputes between states, Guinea and Equatorial Guinea agreed to ask judges for a ruling in an effort to find an amical solution.

The two countries asked the court to decide which legal texts are valid -- the Paris Treaty of 1900 or the Bata Convention of 1974.

In hearings in October, Equatorial Guinea argued that Gabon invaded the islands in 1972 and had occupied them illegally ever since.

Lawyers for the country rubbished the Bata Convention in the October hearings, saying Gabon suddenly produced the document in 2003, surprising everyone.

"No one had seen or heard of this supposed convention," Domingo Mba Esono, Vice-Minister of Mines and Hydrocarbons from Equatorial Guinea, told ICJ judges.

"Moreover, the document presented was not an original but was only an unauthenticated photocopy," said Esono.

Philippe Sands, a lawyer representing Equatorial Guinea, dismissed the Bata Convention as "scraps of paper".

"You are being asked to rule that a state can rely on a photocopy of a photocopy of a purported document, the original of which cannot be found and of which no mention was made or any reliance placed for three decades," said Sands.

Equatorial Guinea has been asking for an original copy of the Bata Convention since 2003, so far in vain.

- 'Badly managed' -

But Marie-Madeleine Mborantsuo, honorary president of Gabon's constitutional court, argued that the Bata Convention "resolves all sovereignty issues regarding the islands and border delimitation".

She admitted that "sadly, neither of the two parties can find the original document", noting it was drawn up in an era before computers and databases.

"Archives were badly managed because of a number of things -- unfavourable climate, a lack of trained personnel and lack of technology," said Mborantsuo.

The court ruled that neither country seemed to regard the Bata Convention as binding upon them, meaning the court did not consider it the correct title in force.

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)