Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Malaysia's Claim over Sabah

“Neither the Sulu Sultanate nor the Filipino government has a claim over the North Borneo state,” said DS Ranjit Singh, an expert on Southeast Asian political history who is now a visiting professor at Universiti Utara Malaysia.

“The moment we negotiate with them, we compromise our sovereignty,” he said in a talk at Universiti Malaya today.

He said the Sulu claim was futile for three reasons: the Philippine government’s predecessors renounced all claims over the state, the Sulu court has never administered the state, and the people of Sabah agreed to form Malaysia.

For one because the sultan lost his power entirely after its capture by the Spaniards, which happened 6 months after the signing of the 1878 treaty stipulating that the British administrators of Sabah must pay cession fees to the Sulu court.  

Instead the Spaniards became the rulers of the Philippines , so it was them who became the sovereign rulers of the territory of Sulu 

Then after the United States Colonized the Phillippines and they took over the Spaniards place as the sovereign rulers of Sulu or Sabah , the American administrators in turn signed documents defining the international boundary of the country, Ranjit added. 

“The Republic of the Philippines then inherited the Philippines from its predecessor, the US. So how can they claim in 1962 that Sabah is theirs when the predecessor has renounced that claim?”  

Because of these cases it also gives a reason for malaysia not to pay the RM5,300 anymore to the sultunate  


In my opinion i believe Malaysia should actually just take Sabah , for one thing because we do not deserve Sabah due to the state of our country no matter we recieve or not there will always be corruption beside oppurtunity and poor governance. 

Number two do we really ? wanna take out about millions of malaysians from there homes in Sabah . Technically like us we would also fight for our rights even if the odds were faired against us like the situation in the Scarborough Shoal No matter what will happen in the coming decision .China will continue to fight to take that territory . So if China can do that why cant they ? For all we know if we claim that land we would just make the Philippines a more of a public enemy then before . Malaysia has the support of other countries .While we the Philippines have none and as of now The Philippines are already tied down by the situation in Scarborough Shoal do we need to fight in 2 fronts like our friend the United states ?

Number three if ever it comes to the point of war what would violence promote?in the world right now more waste of good resources . That could have been used to make our economy grow .

Sources

http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/nation/2013/03/22/sabah-claim-history-on-malaysia%E2%80%99s-side/
http://www.up.edu.ph/an-outline-of-the-philippine-claim-to-sabah/
Posted by

Marc Frederick M Lim

BSOT 1B

An Outline of the Philippine Claim to Sabah

1. From the time it was acquired by the Sultan of Sulu from the Sultan of Brunei up to 24 April 1962 when it was formally ceded and transferred to the Republic of the Philippines under the title of sovereignty, the Sultanate of Sulu had continuously been the rightful sovereign of the portion North Borneo known as Sabah.
1.1. In the course of internal armed conflict in the Sultanate of Brunei referred by some historians as “civil war,” lasting for more than 10 years, the Sultan of Brunei requested the assistance of the Sultan of Sulu, with the promise that in the event of victory he would grant him the territories in North Borneo under his dominion. Following the victory of Sultan Muaddin of Brunei, with the armed intervention of the Sultan of Sulu, accordingly he ceded Sabah to the Sultan of Sulu in 1704.
1.2. By the Declaration of 24 April 1962 issued by the Heirs of the Sultan of Sulu, the territory of Sabah as thus required by cession from the Sultan of Brunei was ceded and transferred in sovereignty to the Republic of the Philippines. The Declaration was entitled “Recognition and Authority in Favour of the Republic of the Philippines.”
1.2.1. By this Declaration, the Philippine claim to sovereignty and dominion over a portion of North Borneo became a legal claim. After the cession from the Sultanate, the Philippines acquired the rights over the territory of North Borneo which it was duty-bound as a sovereign to protect and preserve.
1.3. This Declaration followed the petition of 5 February 1962 of the Heirs of the Sultan of Sulu addressed to the Department of Foreign Affairs. In this Petition the Heirs expressed their intention to have the portion of North Borneo included in the national territory of the Philippines.
1.3.1. By the Instrument of 12 September 1962, the Republic of the Philippines accepted the cession of sovereignty over Sabah proclaimed by the Sultanate of Sabah.
1.3.2. On 24 April 1962, congress adopted “Resolution urging the President of the Philippines to take the necessary steps for the recovery of a certain portion of the Island of Borneo and adjacent islands which belong to the Philippines.
1.3.3. On the basis of the Declaration of 24 April 1962 of the Heirs of the Sultan of Sulu on the transfer of sovereignty over Sabah, Congress enacted Republic Act No. 5446 amending the Baseline Law in Republic Act No. 3046, the amendment providing that the “Philippines has acquired dominion and sovereignty” over Sabah situated in North Borneo.
2. Malaysia’s claim to sovereignty over Sabah was based on its inclusion in the formation of the Federation of Malaysia. It is a claim of derivative title, based on:
(a) whatever interests the British Government had in Sabah, which were derived from
(b) whatever interests the British North Borneo Company (BNBC) had in Sabah, which were derived from whatever interests Overbeck and Dent derived from their 1878 agreement with the Sultan of Sulu.
2.1. Sufficient evidence has been shown on the side of the Sultan of Sulu that the Deed of 22 January 1878 executed by Sultan Mohammed Jamadul Alam with Gustavus Baron de Overbeck and Alfred Dent was an agreement of lease. “In consideration of this (territorial) lease…[they] promise to pay His Highness…and to his heirs and successors the sum of five thousand dollars annually to be paid each and every year.”
2.1.1. Written in Arabic, the agreement had been authoritatively translated by an American and by a Dutch scholar as “lease.” In the Spanish translation, the agreement has been described as an “arrendamento” which means “lease.”
2.1.2. In a speech before the House of Commons, the British Prime Minister himself, William Gladstone, made reference to the Deed of 1878 as a contract of lease: “We do not see how this Protectorate Agreement [of 1888], viewed in the light of the 1878 contract, can possibly divest the Sultanate of Sulu of the latter’s sovereignty or dominion. On the contrary, after 1888, the British North Borneo Company entered into a Confirmatory Deed with the Sultan of Sulu, thereby confirming and ratifying what was done in 1878. And we hold the view that far from repudiating the lease contract of 1878, the British North Borneo Company, said to be under British protection, confirmed British protection, confirmed and reiterated in 1903 the existence of lease relationship.” (Emphasis added.)
2.1.3. Overbeck and Dent as private individuals have no legal status in international law to assume the power of sovereignty involved in the cession of territory.
2.1.4. Overbeck and Dent therefore had nothing to transfer in terms of title to sovereignty over Sabah to the British North Borneo Company (BNBC).
2.1.5. By Proclamation of 25 November 1957, the Sultan of Sulu declared “The termination of the said lease in favour of Gustavus Baron de Overbeck and Alfred Dent, their heirs and assignees, effective the 22nd day of January 1958, and that from and after that date all the lands covered by the said lease shall be deemed restituted to the Sultanate of Sulu.”
2.2. When the British Government granted a royal charter to the BNBC, did it provide authorityfor the BNBC to acquire territory by title of sovereignty?
2.2.1. Lord Earl Granville, British foreign minister, in his letter of 7 January 1882 to British Minister Morier: “The British Charter therefore differs essentially from the previous Charters granted by the Crown to the East India Company, the Hudson’s Bay Company…, in the fact that the Crown in the present case assumes no dominion or sovereignty over the territories occupied by the Company, nor does it purport to grant to the Company any powers of Government thereover; it merely confers upon the persons associated the status and incidents of a body corporate, and recognizes the grants of territory and the powers of government made and delegated by the Sultan to whom the sovereignty remains vested. (Emphasis added.)
2.2.2. In response to the protest of Spain and the Netherlands in regard to the grant of BNBC Charter in North Borneo, Glanville replied: “The territories ceded to Mr. Dent will be administered by the Company under the suzerainty of the Sultans of Brunei and Sulu, to whom they have agreed to pay a yearly tribute. The British government assumes no sovereign rights whatever in Borneo. (Emphasis added.)
2.2.3. In making assurances to the Dutch Minister Count de Bylant, Glanville stressed that BNBC was purely a private commercial enterprise, declaring: “The Majesty’s Government have already explained to the Government of the Netherlands that the grant of the Charter did not in any way imply the assumption of sovereign rights in North Borneo. It is therefore unnecessary to pursue this discussion further.”
2.2.4. Reinforcing Glanville’s position, Julian Pauncefote, assistant permanent undersecretary of the British Foreign Office, declared: “We must be careful…to preserve the Sultan’s status as a Sovereign to the east coast of Borneo.” Further he said: “The sovereignty of North Borneo is vested in the Sultan of Sulu”; any stipulation Britain might make “respecting that territory must have the previous assent of the Sultan signified by him through the Company.” (Emphasis added.)
3. However, in derogation of the foregoing commitment and declarations, on 26 June 1946 the British Government entered into an agreement with the British North Borneo Company (BNBC) whereby “The company…transfers and cedes the Borneo Sovereign Rights to the Crown with effect from the day of transfer, to the intent that the Crown shall, as from the day of the transfer, have full sovereign rights over, and title to, the territory of the State of North Borneo and that the said territory shall thereupon become part of His Majesty’s dominions.” The agreement was entitled “Agreement for the Transfer of the Borneo Sovereign Rights and Assets from the British North Borneo Company to the Crown, 26th June 1946.”
3.1.Taking into account the said Agreement of 26 June 1946, the British Crown upon the advice of his Privy Council ordered as follows:
“1. This Order may be cited as the North Borneo Cession Order in Council, 1946, and shall come into operation on the fifteenth of July 1946.”
“2. As from the fifteenth day of July, 1946, the State of North Borneo shall be annexed to and shall form part of His Majesty’s dominions and shall be called, together with the Settlement of Labuan and its dependencies, the Colony of North Borneo.”
3.2. The colonization of North Borneo by the British Crown by means of Cession Order of 1946 appears to cede and transfer all “the rights, powers and interests” of BNBC in North Borneo which the British Government itself openly acknowledged as excluding the power of sovereignty and that territorial sovereignty remained with the Sultan of Sulu.
3.3. Hence, the legality of British annexation of North Borneo, including Sabah, persists as a fundamental issue in the Philippine claim to Sabah.
3.3.1.  Former American Governor-General in the Philippines, Francis Burton Harrison, described the annexation as “political aggression” and urged the Philippine Government to take action.
4. When Sabah was incorporated into the formation of the Federation of Malaysia, the illegality of annexing Sabah as a Crown Colony remains in Malaysia’s succession-in-interest from Great Britain.
4.1. Through the Government of Malaya, the British Government announced that its territories in North Borneo, including Sabah, would form part of a new Federation of Malaysia.
4.2. The Philippines protested the British decision and called Britain’s attention to the sovereign rights of the Philippines over Sabah. After protracted negotiations, the British Government agreed to meet Philippine representatives to discuss the problem of North Borneo. Held in London in 1963, the negotiations proved to be inconclusive. In the meantime, the founding date of the new Federation was announced.
5. On the initiative of President Diosdado Macapagal, a Summit conference was convened in Manila from July 30 to August 5, 1963. In this conference, on 31 July 1963, President Soekarno of Indonesia, President Diosdado Macapagal and Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman of the Federation of Malaysia “approved and accepted the Manila Accord, paragraph 12 of which stipulates as follows:
“The Philippines made it clear that its position on the inclusion of North Borneo in the Federation of Malaysia is subject to the final outcome of the Philippine claim to Borneo. The Ministers took note of the Philippine claim and the right of the Philippines to continue to pursue it in accordance with international law and the principle of the pacific settlement of disputes. They agreed that the inclusion of North Borneo in the Federation of Malaysia would not prejudice either the claim or any right thereunder. Moreover, in the context of their close association, the three countries agreed to exert the best endeavors to bring the claim to a just and expeditious solution by peaceful means…of the parties’ own choice, in conformity with the Charter of the United Nations and the Bandung Declaration.” (Emphasis added.)
5.1 In the same Summit Conference, the three Heads of Government signed a Joint Statement on 5 August 1963, paragraph 8 of which reads:
“In accordance with paragraph 12 of the Manila Accord, the three Heads of Government decided to request the British Government to agree to seek a just and expeditious solution to the dispute between the British Government and the Philippine Government  concerning Sabah (North Borneo)…The three Heads of Government take cognizance of the position regarding the Philippine claim to Sabah (North Borneo) after the establishment of the Federation of Malaysia as provided under paragraph 12 of the Manila Accord, that is, that the inclusion of Sabah (North Borneo) in the Federation of Malaysia does not prejudice the claim or any right thereunder.” (Emphasis added.)6. Malaysia had repeatedly acknowledged the Philippine claim to Sabah and that it is a claim that should be settled as soon as possible, including the prospect of settlement in the International Court of Justice. On its part, the Philippines persistently offered the settlement of dispute arising from its claim to Sabah.
6.1. In February 1964, the Malaysian Prime Minister had the understanding with the Philippine President to discuss “as soon as possible the best way of settling the dispute, not precluding reference to the International Court of Justice.”
6.2. In August 1964, the two governments agreed in an exchange of aides memoir to a meeting of their representatives in Bangkok for the purpose of clarifying the Philippine claim and of discussing the means of settling the dispute.
6.3. In February 1966, in response to Malaysia’s diplomatic note reiterating its assurance to comply with the Manila Accord and the concomitant Joint Statement, the Philippines proposed that “both Governments agree as soon as possible on a mode of settlement that is mutually acceptable to both parties.”
6.4. In June 1966, the two Governments, in a joint communiqué, agreed once again to abide by the Manila Accord and the Joint Statement; they reiterated their common purpose to clarify the Philippine claim and the means of settling it.
6.5. In July 1968, the Philippine delegation presented the Malaysian delegation with a written question, “Will you discuss with the modes of settlement of our claim at the conference in Bangkok, irrespective of your own unilateral assessment of the sufficiency of the clarification given?” Malaysia’s answer was unqualifiedly in the affirmative.
6.6. In August 1968, again in a joint communiqué, the two Governments agreed that talks on an official level would be held as soon as possible regarding the Philippine claim to Sabah.
6.7. The foregoing undertakings assume significance for the reason that they are not unilateral acts of the Philippines; they are commitments jointly made by Malaysia and the Philippines. They repeatedly affirm Malaysia’s recognition of the existence of the Philippine claim to Sabah and its willingness to settle the dispute arising from this claim.
6.7.1. In complete disregard of its commitments, Malaysia has been in full retreat. It is now in denial of the existence of the Philippine claim to Sabah. In consequence, it rests its case on the illegality of the colonization of Sabah by the British Crown.
up forum march-april 2013 011-cropped
Haji Butu, W.C. Cowie, Sultan Jamal-ul-Kiram and Alexander Cook. Cowie, manager of the Company, sought to aid the Sultan Jamalul Kiram II to end the Mat Salleh revolt in North Borneo in 1898. (N. Tanling “Sulu and Sabah” p. 286). Alexander was the Officer-in-Charge of Sandakan. Photo from The Genealogy of the Sulu Royal Families (2003) by Sururul-ain Ututalum and Abdul-Karim Hedjazi, published by Professional Press (USA).
Photo by the UPSIO, with the assistance of the UP Institute of Islamic Studies Library

GLOSSARY
cessionis the assignment of property to another entity. In international law it commonly refers to land transferred by treaty. Ballentine's Law Dictionary defines cession as "a surrender; a giving up; a relinquishment of jurisdiction by a board in favor of another agency". In contrast with annexation, where property is forcibly given up, cession is voluntary or at least apparently so.
communique An official announcement or statement, especially one made to the media
British crown - Monarchy of Britain

source(s): 
www.wikipedia.org (for the glossary)
http://www.up.edu.ph/an-outline-of-the-philippine-claim-to-sabah/ (for the Outline)

Posted by:
Hans Zachary A. Zamora
BSOT-1B


Saturday, June 20, 2015

The Philippine Claim Over the Spratly Group of Islands: An Application of Article 76 of the UNCLOS by Chimney M. Llanos

The Philippine Claim Over the Spratly Group of Islands: An Application of Article 76 of the UNCLOS*


“Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters… And God said, ‘Let there be an expanse between the waters to separate water from water.’ So God made the expanse and separated the water under the expanse from the water above it. And it was so.” 
- Genesis 1:2-7
The Spratly group of islands (hereafter referred to as Spratly) of the South China Sea is a ‘tinder box’of international conflict in the Asian region. An estimated 44 of the 51 small islands and reefs are claimed or occupied by the littoral states of Brunei, China, Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam. The vast natural resources contained in the area consist primarily of oil, natural gas, and seafood. The dispute is further fuelled by the growing attempts of incursion by China in the region, which is motivated by its expanding need to meet its energy demands. The overlapping sovereignty claims in Spratly have resulted in several military incidents since 1974 and in several countries awarding foreign companies exploration rights in the same area of the South China Sea. The foreboding diplomatic crisis is further emphasized by the diplomatic protest filed by the Philippines against China in 1999 when the latter established military fortifications in Mischief Reef. In 1992, sovereignty and exploration disputes were thought to be resolved with the drafting of the ASEAN declaration, which committed members to resolve disputes peacefully and to consider joint exploration of the territory. Military aggression and exploration endeavors conducted by China since 1992, however, have brought into question the validity of the 1992 joint declaration and raises the question of what long-term, peaceful solution could prevent the region from erupting into a continuum of military incidents over sovereignty rights to the natural resource-rich Spratly Islands.
The problem that the Philippine government faces is establishing within the international community of States its rightful claim over the islands of Spratly. While diplomatic attempts to assert Philippine sovereignty have been initiated as early as the 1970’s, it is only recently upon ratification of the Philippines of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (hereinafter referred to as “UNCLOS”) that an internationally recognized legal framework for resolving the competing claims has buoyed the Philippines claim to new heights.
With the force of customary law, Article 76 of UNCLOS has shifted the basis of the Philippine claim on Spratly from historical evidence to empirical scientific foundations. As the islands in Spratly are small in size and cannot support economic life of their own, and worse, many are reefs and other features that are not above water all the time, they are unlikely to be conferred continental shelf or Exclusive Economic Zone status.
The Philippine’s claim is based mainly on Article 76 of the UNCLOS as it provides the framework for establishing the rights granted in Article 77 to littoral states affected by the controversy. UNCLOS compartmentalized the ‘common heritage of man’ into various maritime zones consisting of the territorial sea, contiguous zone, exclusive economic zone, and the high seas.
Due to the highly technical nature of the provisions of UNCLOS, the paper will focus on the legal regime of the extended continental shelf and will briefly discuss the other maritime zone regimes to the extent necessary in understanding the application of Article 76 of UNCLOS.  Furthermore, while most literature on the subject matter of the Spratly conflict advocates diplomatic solutions to be adopted by the littoral states, the paper will limit its discussions to the legality of the Philippines claim.  While a diplomatic approach to a geopolitical conflict may ultimately be resorted to, the interests of the Philippines will be best served by making its legal position the bedrock for any diplomatic solution or future international arbitration.
While there have been several scientific research and political papers written on the Philippine claim on Spratly, there has been a dearth of research work on the legal aspect of the claim; the least of which is the availability of legal opinions on the application of Article 76 as the basis of the claim.
The paper will also discuss the other bases for the claim of the Philippines namely: discovery, proximity, and national security. The merits and weaknesses of these other bases for the Philippine claim will be discussed in order to provide a contrast with Article 76.
Finally, the paper will make recommendations in the area of legislation and executive actions required to establish the Philippine claim on Spratly based on Article 76.

It is said that the history of the sea has been dominated by a central and persistent theme: the competition between the exercise of governmental authority over the sea and the idea of the freedom of the seas. This is the balance that UNCLOS is envisioned to maintain. Having been in effect for more than two decades, the UNCLOS now encompasses the normative law that governs maritime disputes between States.  Among its ground breaking features is its compartmentalization of the various maritime zones into cohesive legal regimes. As it applies to the Spratly, the legal regime of the continental shelf embodied in Articles 76 to 84 provides the answer in resolving the contending sovereignty claims over it.
In order to facilitate the resolution of the conflicting claims, the UNCLOS has established the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (CLCS). As a pre-requisite to the granting of the claim, each coastal state must submit to the CLCS the necessary scientific information gathered according to the guidelines set by Article 76 and its annexes. The deadline for the submission has been set to May 2009. However, the Philippines is lagging behind with the other littoral claimants in finalizing, solidifying, and articulating its legal claim to the Spratly.

At least 6 countries have set up military installations in the various islands of the Spratly. The escalating tension in the region is brought about by the absence of any formal or internationally recognized adjudication of the claims. As such, claims were based on various pseudo norms and principles such as discovery, proximity, and national security.
While most of the claimants have relied on historical precedents to bolster their claims, Article 76, which covers the definition of the outer limits of the continental shelf of a coastal state, provides the Philippines with the strongest scientific and legal basis for its claim and Article 77 provides it patent rights over the Spratly.  The problem before us is how to use Article 76 of the UNCLOS in winning the claim over the Spratly.

 United Nations Convention On The Law Of The Sea
Public international law regulates the relations among the States, through treaties and customary norms. The international law of the sea is one of the key areas of public international law and the UNCLOS is its cornerstone.
After 14 years of negotiations to which more than 150 countries representing all regions of the world participated, UNCLOS was finally concluded on 10 December 1982 in Montego Bay, Jamaica. It is commonly referred to as a “Constitution for the Oceans,” as it addresses every aspect of the uses and resources of the sea. It represents one of the most complex and innovative efforts to codify international law since World War II. UNCLOS comprises 320 articles with 9 highly complex annexes and a number of Conference Resolutions. It entered into force only in 16 November 1994, since the United States and other industrialized countries expressed objections on Part XI of the UNCLOS, relating to the deep seabed mining regime. In order to resolve that impasse, in the 1990’s, the United Nations Secretary General sponsored a series of consultations that led to the adoption of the 1994 “Agreement relating to the implementation of Part XI of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea” where State parties undertook to implement Part XI of the Convention in accordance with the provisions of the agreement. The adoption of the agreement made possible the entry into force of the Convention.
UNCLOS represents a commitment of the international community to the rule of law in the conduct of maritime affairs. It is a response to the need expressed by many States to elaborate a new and comprehensive regime for the law of the sea as well as an effort to achieve a “just and equitable international economic order”. Having been ratified by 152 States (as of December 1, 2006), its universality is supposed to greatly increase order and predictability, narrow the scopes of disputes to more manageable proportions and provide the legal means to resolve them. It is supposed to bring considerable stability to State relations with respect to ocean affairs and the law of the sea. In short, the universality of UNCLOS should help foster a stable regime required for effective ocean governance to promote peace and security, equity, and sustainable development.
The drafters of UNCLOS recognized that all problems concerning oceans are closely related and should be dealt with in a cohesive and holistic manner. UNCLOS, therefore, deals with (i) limits and legal regimes of the various maritime zones (including the continental shelf); (ii) rights of navigation; (iii) peace and security; (iv) conservation and management of living and marine resources; (v) protection and preservation of the marine environment; (vi) scientific research; (vii) activities on the seabed beyond the limits of national jurisdiction; and (viii) the settlement of disputes. In addition, UNCLOS established three bodies: the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (hereinafter referred to as “CLCS”), the International Seabed Authority (hereinafter referred to as “ISA”), and the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (hereinafter referred to as “ITLOS”).
UNCLOS is one of the most important and most widely ratified multilateral treaties. As a treaty, UNCLOS has often been referred to as a “package deal” because of the circumstances in which it was negotiated, including the many different issues covered, as well as the conflicting interests cutting across traditional political and regional alignments that it sought to balance in light of the great number of States that participated. These participating States are bound by the rights and obligations enunciated in the UNCLOS, and must be performed by them in good faith.  Article 300, Part XVI of the UNCLOS provides:
States Parties shall fulfill in good faith the obligations assumed under this Convention and shall exercise the rights, jurisdiction and freedoms recognized in this Convention in a manner, which would not constitute an abuse of right.
Moreover, UNCLOS, with the exception of Part XI, is generally considered to represent a codification of customary international law and its progressive development. Since the negotiations proceeded on the basis of consensus, it was much easier during the twelve years before UNCLOS entered into force for most of its provisions to become accepted as representing customary law.
Customary international law, as described by the Statute of the International Court of Justice is “a general practice accepted as law.”  The existence of a rule of customary international law requires the presence of two elements, namely State practice (usus) and a belief that such practice is required, prohibited, or allowed, depending on the nature of the rule, as a matter of law (opinio juris sive necessitates). Customary international law is therefore obligatory, and is binding on all States.[35] As most provisions of UNCLOS, specially the most important provisions, are codifications of customary international law they should be binding on all States, including the non-parties to it.

The Potential Of Spratly
The South China Sea is defined by the International Hydrographic Bureau as the body of water stretching in a Southwest to Northeast direction, whose southern border is 3 degrees South latitude between South Sumatra and Kalimantan (Karimata Straits), and whose northern border is the Strait of Taiwan from the northern tip of Taiwan to the Fukien coast of China. It encompasses a portion of the Pacific Ocean stretching roughly from Singapore and the Strait of Malacca in the southwest, to the Strait of Taiwan (between Taiwan and China) in the northeast. The area includes more than 200 small islands, rocks, and reefs, with the majority located in the Paracel and Spratly Island chains. The Spratlys links the Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean. Despite the fact that the archipelago is spread over 160,000 to 180,000 square kilometers of sea zone, the total landmass of the Spratly Islands total land area of 10 square kilometers only. All its islands are coral, low and small, about 5 to 6 meters above water.
The land is not arable, does not support permanent crops, and has no meadows, pastures or forests. Many of these islands are partially submerged islets, rocks, and reefs that are little more than shipping hazards not suitable for habitation. The Spratly Islands have not been occupied by humans until recently. Countries with territorial claims use military means –airstrips and armed forces — to reinforce their claims. The islands are important, however, for strategic and political reasons, because ownership claims to them are used to bolster claims to the surrounding sea and its resources.
The South China Sea is rich in natural resources such as oil and natural gas. One study conducted by China estimated oil reserves in the South China Sea to be larger than Kuwait’s present reserves. Oil and natural gas reserves in the Spratly region are estimated at 17.7 billion tons; Kuwait’s reserves amount to 13 billion tons. The Spratly reserves place it as the fourth largest reserve bed worldwide. These resources have garnered attention throughout the Asia-Pacific region. East Asia’s economic growth rates had been among the highest in the world and this economic growth will be accompanied by an increasing demand for energy. Over the next 20 years, oil consumption among developing Asian countries is expected to rise by 3.0% annually on average, with more than one-third of this increase coming from China alone. If this growth rate is maintained, oil demand for these nations will reach 33.6 million barrels per day by 2025.
Almost all of this additional Asian oil demand, as well as Japan’s oil needs, will need to be imported from the Middle East and Africa, and to pass through the strategic Strait of Malacca into the South China Sea. Countries in the Asia-Pacific region depend on seaborne trade to fuel their economic growth, and this has led to the sea’s transformation into one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes. In addition, the South China Sea region contains oil and gas resources strategically located near large energy-consuming countries.
Over half of the world’s merchant fleet sails through the South China Sea every year. The economic potential and geopolitical importance of the South China Sea region has resulted in jockeying between the surrounding nations to claim this sea and its resources for themselves.

The History Of The Philippine Territory And Philippine Claim to The Spratly
Article III of the Treaty of Paris entered into by Spain and the United States on December 10, 1898 principally defined the territorial limits of the Philippines. The treaty sets forth in exact metes and bounds the territory of the Philippines taking into consideration the unity of land and water that inheres in the concept of an archipelago. The subsequent Constitutions of the Philippines have adapted the historical and political boundaries of the Philippines as set in the Treaty of Paris. As shown in Figure 1.0, Spratly is not included within the political boundaries of the Philippines set forth in the Treaty of Paris.

Evolving Boundaries of the Philippine Territory
During World War II, Japan occupied both the Paracels and Spratlys Islands in 1939, shortly after they controlled Hainan Island. The Japanese used Itu Aba, the largest island in the Spratly, as a submarine base and a springboard for its invasion of the Philippines. In 1947, a year after gaining independence, the Philippine Secretary of Foreign Affairs called for the territory occupied by Japan during the World War II to be awarded to the Philippines. On 7 April 1949, the Chinese Republican Legation in Manila informed the Philippine government that the Chinese were garrisoning Itu Aba in an effort to block the traffic of arms through Hainan to Communist forces. However, the Philippine government continued to express concern and discussed inducing Filipinos to settle in the Spratly islands. In the same month, the Philippines sent its navy to explore the Spratlys. An article published in Manila Bulletin on 15 May 1950 said that the Philippine government should occupy the Spratly Islands together with the United States because it was closer to Palawan compared to China and Vietnam. On May 17, President Quirino of the Philippines said that if the Chinese Kuomingtang (Nationalist Party) troops really occupied the Spratlys, then the Philippines did not need to occupy them. However, if the islands fell into the communist enemy’s hands, Philippine security is threatened. It was then said that the Spratlys should belong to the nearest country according to international law – which is the Philippines. The Philippines did not make a claim to the islands during the 1951 Treaty of San Francisco. However, the Philippines interpreted the Japanese renunciation of the Spratly islands in the resulting treaty as to transforming the area into res nullius and making it open to acquisition.
In 1956, Tomas Cloma together with his brothers and 40 crewmen explored the Spratly and claimed to have “discovered” and occupied 53 islands and reefs of the Spratly. They proclaimed “formal ownership” over them and renamed these islands and reefs the Kalayaan (Freedomland) Island Group. In October 1956 Cloma traveled to New York to plead his case before the United Nations and the Philippines had troops posted on three islands by 1968 on the premise of protecting Kalayaan citizens.
In early July 1971, the Philippine government alleged that the Taiwanese troops on the Itu Aba Island “fired on a boat carrying a Philippine congressman”.  After this the Philippine government announced on 10 July 1971 that “it had sent a diplomatic note to Taipei asking that the Chinese garrison be withdrawn from Itu Aba”. The diplomatic note states: (1) The Philippines has legal title to the 53 islands and reefs once occupied by Tomas Cloma because the area was terra nullius at the time of its occupation and was “acquired according to the modes of acquisition recognized under international law, among which are occupation and effective administration”; (2) the presence of the Chinese forces in Itu Aba constituted a threat to the security of the Philippines; (3) Chinese occupation of some islands in Spratly group constituted a de facto trusteeship on behalf of the World War II allies which precluded the garrisoning of the islands without the allies’ consent; and (4) the Spratly group is within the archipelagic territory of the Philippines. Meanwhile, the Philippines sent its navy to occupy Thitu Island and Nanshan Island.
In April 1972, the Philippine government incorporated the “Kalayaan” group into Palawan Province as a municipality and was administered as a single “poblacion” (township), with Tomas Cloma as the town council Chairman.
In February 1974, the Philippine government stated that the Philippine forces had occupied five islets in the Spratlys. It justified its occupation of the Spratly Islands as “the strategic importance of the Kalayaan area to the Philippine security”.
By 1978, the Philippines occupied two more islands; later, it further occupied Siling Jiao (Commodore Reef); in 1980, it occupied Liyue Tan (Reed Bank). On June 11, 1978, Filipino president Marcos signed Presidential Decree 1596 which claimed the Kalayaan group. The 1978 decree omitted Spratly Island and included Amboyna Cay which was not claimed by Cloma. It also said that “some countries claimed some parts of this area but they had given up and thus the claims are not valid anymore…” On 17 July 1978, Presidential Decree (PD) 1599 was issued, proclaiming that the Kalayaan Group was within the Philippine EEZ (Exclusive Economic Zone). More recently in 2005, a cellular phone base station owned by Smart Communications was erected on Pag-asa Island.

The Overlapping Sovereignty Claims
Centuries-old evidence of discovery are used as basis to lay claim to title to the Spratly islands. Claims are also based on occupation, and rights over continental shelf delimitation as defined under the UNCLOS. However, sovereignty over the Spratlys has been fiercely contested only since World War II, with the withdrawal of Japanese and French forces that had occupied some islands. Only China, Taiwan, and Vietnam claim all of the Spratly islands.

 Conflicting Claims Over Spratly Islands
China’s assertions of sovereignty in the South China Sea rest on historical claims of discovery and occupation. The Chinese case is well documented, going back to references made in Chou Ch’u-fei’s Ling-Wai- tai-ta during the Sung dynasty (12th century) and in the records of Chinese navigators during the Qing dynasty (18th century). In 1992, China passed a special territorial sea and contiguous zone act to legalize its claims to the Spratlys. Article 2 of this legislation specifically identifies both the Paracels and Spratly archipelagos as Chinese territory. To uphold this claim to title, since 1988 China has deployed some 260 marines in garrisons on seven of the Spratly islets.
On the other hand, Taiwan’s claims, which mirror that of China’s, are based on its longstanding historic ties to the islands. Taiwan was the first government to establish a physical presence in Spratly following the Japanese departure after World War II. Taiwan announced its claim to the atoll in 1947 and has occupied the largest island of the Spratlys, Itu Aba, constantly since 1956. From the mid-1950s through the late 1980s, Taiwan maintained a force of some 500 soldiers on Itu Aba, although by 1999 the number of troops had been reduced to about 110.
The legal grounds for Vietnam’s claims to the South China Sea islands flow from historic activities during the Nguyen dynasty (17th–19th centuries). Maps and other supporting historical evidence for Vietnam’s claims were compiled and set out by the government in two white papers, Vietnam’s Sovereignty Over the Hoang Sa and Trung Sa Archipelagoes, issued in 1979 and 1982, respectively. Vietnam asserts that “it has maintained effective occupation of the two archipelagos (Paracel and Spratly islands) at least since the 17thcentury when they were not under the sovereignty of any country and the Vietnamese State has exercised effectively, continuously and peacefully its sovereignity over the two archipelagos until the time when they were invaded by the Chinese armed forces.”
Vietnam also bases its claims to sovereignty over the Spratlys by right of cession from a French claim to the islands first made in 1933. In any event, Vietnam moved in 1975 to secure its claim to possession of the Spratlys when it occupied thirteen islands of the group. In September 1989, Vietnam occupied three more islets, and has since taken at least nine additional atolls. By 1999, Vietnam had stationed 600 troops on at least twenty-seven Spratly land formations.
Malaysia has claimed sovereignty over twelve islands in the Spratly group, basing its claims to certain islands on ocean law principles associated with prolongation of a continental shelf seaward based on UNCLOS. Malaysia is the most recent claimant to occupy part of the Spratlys militarily. In late 1977, Malay troops landed on Swallow Reef. Since then, about seventy soldiers have been stationed on three of the twelve islets claimed by Malaysia.
Brunei has only one claim to the Spratly group – the naturally submerged formation known as Louisa Reef. The legal premise for substantiating Brunei’s claim flows from continental shelf provisions in the UNCLOS. Brunei remains the only claimant without a military presence in the Spratly Islands. Even so, Louisa Reef is also claimed by Malaysia, which took possession of it in 1984.
Indonesia is not a claimant to any of the islands or rocks in the Spratlys. However, the Chinese and Taiwanese claims, depending on their nature and interpretation, could also intrude upon the Indonesian EEZ and continental shelf as defined under UNCLOS and as demarcated in the Indonesian-Malaysian Agreement of 1969.

In sum, the Spratlys situation remains complicated by competing claims and military clashes. In March 2005, a memorandum of understanding was signed by China, the Philippines, and Vietnam to resolve the energy exploration issues among the three countries in the South China Sea. The country agreed to do seismic surveys in the area which includes the Spratly Islands, without giving up their respective territorial claims. The Philippine National Oil Company, China National Offshore Oil Corporation, and PetroVietnam agreed to design seismic oil exploration for a three-year program covering a 55,000 square mile area. The three companies are sharing the $15 Million project cost. The Chinese seismic vessel Nanhal is gathering the data. The seismic data is sent to Vietnam for processing. Then the data is analyzed by experts in the Philippines.

Article 76 as Basis for the Philippine Claim on Spratly
As man’s technology enabled him to exploit the historically inaccessible seabed and subsoil lying beyond the territorial sea, so did the interests of States to appropriate for themselves these areas rich with minerals and other resources. The need to regulate this once invisible realm of humanity can be traced back to the “continental shelf” doctrine proclaimed by U.S. President Harry Truman in 1945, where he pronounced the US government’s claim of sovereignty to the natural resources and sea bed of the continental shelf beneath the high sea but contiguous to the coast of the United Sates.
Truman’s proclamation started the flow of customary international law on the continental shelf that was officially recognized by the international community in the 1958 Convention on the continental shelf and in the 1969 North Sea Continental Shelf Cases as well as the 1978 Aegean Sea Continental Shelf Cases all decided by the International Court of Justice (ICJ). In fact, the ICJ had the occasion to assert the customary nature of the doctrines governing the continental shelf. The ICJ stated:
For to become binding, a rule or principle of international law need not pass the test of universal acceptance. This is reflected in several statements of the Court, e.g.: ‘generally … adopted in the practice of States’ (Fisheries, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1951, p. 128). Not all States have, as I indicated earlier in a different context, an opportunity or possibility of applying a given rule. The evidence should be sought in the behavior of a great number of States, possibly the majority of States, in any case the great majority of the interested States.
Hence, Articles 76 to 84 of UNCLOS embodied the customary international law pertinent to the determination of the validity of States claims over its continental shelf. The pertinent provisions of UNCLOS now prevail over the 1958 Convention on the Continental Shelf.

 The Legal Regimes Of UNCLOS
One of the unique features of UNCLOS is the introduction of several legal regimes corresponding to each maritime zone that determine the jurisdictional and sovereignty rights of a coastal state. These legal regimes are (i) internal waters (article 8); (ii) territorial sea (articles 2-32); (iii) contiguous zone (articles 33 and 303); (iv) exclusive economic zone (EEZ) (articles 55-75); and (v) continental shelf (articles 76- 84). Beyond the maritime zones are the (i) high seas (articles 86-120) and (ii) international seabed area (articles 133-191).

The Maritime Regimes of UNCLOS
Defining The Baseline
The baseline is a line drawn by joining a set of points called basepoints which represent areas exposed during low-low tide conditions. It is a prescribed line where all maritime zones will be measured seaward of the coastal state. UNCLOS defines three principal types of baselines from which the coastal state can use to define its coastal limits to its maximum advantage, whether using only one type or combination of the following: Normal baseline (Article 5), Straight baselines (Article 7) and Archipelagic baseline (Article 47). After defining the baseline, other maritime zones can now be defined as follows: territorial sea (12nautical miles or “nm”) (Article 3), contiguous zone (24nm) (Article 33), exclusive economic zone (200nm) (Article 57), mandatory continental shelf (200nm) (Article 76), and the extended continental shelf (beyond 200nm) (Article 76).
C. The Continental Shelf Regime
Article 76(1) of UNCLOS defines the continental shelf of a coastal state as comprised of the seabed and subsoil of the submarine areas that extend beyond its territorial sea throughout the natural prolongation of its land territory to the outer edge of the continental margin or a distance of 200 nautical miles from the archipelagic base lines. All maritime zones are defined by breadth criteria as shown in Figure 4.0. The continental shelf regime is defined and contained in Part VI (Articles 76 to 84) and Annex II of UNCLOS and it prevails over the 1958 Convention on the Continental Shelf.
The concept of Philippine sovereignty over its continental shelf existed and is incorporated as early as the 1935 Philippine Constitution, amplified in the 1973 Philippine Constitution, and perpetuated in the 1987 Philippine Constitution. The terms sub-soil, seabed, and other submarine areas over which the Philippines have sovereignty refers to its continental shelf and is a strong indication of the Philippine government’s intention to protect its interest, which would naturally include Spratly by virtue of its geology.
 Rights Conferred By UNCLOS To Coastal States
There is a difference between claims based on sovereignty and claims based on Article 77. The first would confer to successful claimants’ sovereignty over the resources as well as on the air, water, and subsoil of the area claimed. It gives full jurisdiction and control over the area. On the other hand, Article 77 confers only rights as provided by the UNCLOS, which are as follows:
1. The coastal State exercises over the continental shelf sovereign rights for the purpose of exploring it and exploiting its natural resources.
2. The rights referred to in paragraph 1 are exclusive in the sense that if the coastal State does not explore the continental shelf or exploit its natural resources, no one may undertake these activities without the express consent of the coastal State.
3. The rights of the coastal State over the continental shelf do not depend on occupation, effective or notional, or on any express proclamation.
4. The natural resources referred to in this Part consist of the mineral and other non-living resources of the sea-bed and subsoil together with living organisms belonging to sedentary species, that is to say, organisms which, at the harvestable stage, either are immobile on or under the sea-bed or are unable to move except in constant physical contact with the sea-bed or the subsoil.
The rights above stated will accrue to the features directly connected and contained in the continental shelf. The sovereign rights for the purpose of exploring and exploiting the natural resources of its continental shelf granted above is now considered customary international law.
E. The Determination Of The Extended Continental Shelf
As discussed above, Article 76 deals with the operational aspects of the delineation of the continental shelf’s outer limits beyond the 200 nautical miles from the baseline from which the breadth of the territorial sea is measured. The continental shelf of a coastal State contains the sea-bed and subsoil of the submarine areas that extend beyond its territorial sea throughout the natural prolongation of its land territory to the outer edge of the continental margin or to a distance of 200 nautical miles from the baselines from which the breadth of the territorial sea is measured where the outer edge of the continental margin does not extend up to that distance. After determining the delineation of the Philippine’s continental shelf, the outer limits of the extended continental shelf must be ascertained. UNCLOS provided for the means to approximate the outer limits of the extended shelf by using the following formula:
(a) For the purposes of this Convention, the coastal State shall establish the outer edge of the continental margin wherever the margin extends beyond 200 nautical miles from the baselines from which the breadth of the territorial sea is measured, by either:
  (i) a line delineated in accordance with paragraph 7 by reference to the outermost fixed points at each of which the thickness of sedimentary rocks is at least 1 per cent of the shortest distance from such point to the foot of the continental slope; or
  (ii) a line delineated in accordance with paragraph 7 by reference to fixed points not more than 60 nautical miles from the foot of the continental slope.
 (b) In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the foot of the continental slope shall be determined as the point of maximum change in the gradient at its base.
The concept of the extended continental shelf was brought about by the differences in topologies of various continental shelves. Figure 5.0 below shows the difference between the mandatory continental shelf and the extended continental shelf.
 Types of Continental Shelves
The outer limits of the extended shelf established above are subject to the following conditions:
The fixed points comprising the line of the outer limits of the continental shelf on the sea-bed, drawn in accordance with paragraph 4 (a)(i) and (ii), either shall not exceed 350 nautical miles from the baselines from which the breadth of the territorial sea is measured or shall not exceed 100 nautical miles from the 2,500 metre isobath, which is a line connecting the depth of 2,500 metres.
The outer limits of the extended shelf are further limited by:
Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 5, on submarine ridges, the outer limit of the continental shelf shall not exceed 350 nautical miles from the baselines from which the breadth of the territorial sea is measured.
In sum, to locate the extended continental shelf, one must first determine the archipelagic baseline. The territorial sea begins from the baseline up to 12 nautical miles seaward. The contiguous zone, however, is between 12 and 24 nautical miles from the baseline. Then the EEZ is determined by measuring 200 nautical miles from the baseline.  The mandatory continental shelf lies below the EEZ consisting of the seabed and its subsoil. The extended continental shelf is then measured using Article 76(4, 5) but only up to 350 nautical miles from the baseline as stated in Article 76(6). Essentially, the extended continental shelf may be found between the EEZ and 350 nautical miles from the baseline of the coastal state.

Application To The Philippine Claim On Spratly
Spratly is outside the 200 nautical mile EEZ of the Philippines but is within the 350 nautical mile limit set by Article 76 (6). As such, the Philippine claim on Spratly may easily be established through determining the outer limits of its extended continental shelf.
The claim of the Philippines is sufficiently supported by the necessary geological and topological surveys done through remote sensing imagery and sea based survey. The bathymetric map, infra shows exactly where the Spratly is and how it straddles the continental shelf of the Philippines as depicted by the light blue color on the map.

 The Extended Continental Shelf
The Spratly is undisputedly within the extended continental shelf of the Philippines located between its established EEZ and 350 nautical miles from EEZ. Based on the voluminous scientific studies in the South China Sea incorporating bathymetric, paleontologic, and geophysical information, the geology of the “Dangerous Grounds” or Spratly is the same with Palawan microcontinental block.
Figure 7.0 infra, shows the evolution of the continental shelf of the South China Sea and how the shelf was formed. At “d3” is where the current geological formation of Spratly can be found on top of the Philippine continental shelf.
 Several well data (Figure 8.0) indicate that Spratly (KIG) is underlain by similar lithologic formations, therefore, it can be argued that Spratly is the submerged natural extension of the Palawan landmass.

Procedure For Filing The Philippine Claim With UNCLOS
The Philippines must submit to the Secretary General of the United Nations the charts and otherrelevant information, including geodetic data, permanently describing the outer limits of its continental shelf. The Philippines is also required to provide to the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (CLCS) all information on the limits of the continental shelf beyond the 200 nautical miles from the baseline from which the breadth of the territorial sea is measured and theCLS will make recommendations to the coastal States on matters related to the establishment of the outer limits of the continental shelf. Where a coastal State intends to establish the outer limits of its continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles from the baselines from which the breadth of the territorial sea is measured, it shall submit particulars of such limits to the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (CLCS) along with supporting scientific and technical data as soon as possible.

source: http://plj.upd.edu.ph/the-philippine-claim-over-the-spratly-group-of-islands-an-applications-of-article-76-of-the-unclos/