Subject: Re: [BoundaryPoint] territorial sea enclaves
Date: Mar 14, 2001 @ 22:34
Author: michael donner (michael donner <m@...>)
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a very remarkable & timely set of geographical & legal circumstances
i would add
& with the box seats you bring to us & us to history in the making

m


>
>Although the maritime areas pertaining to St Pierre & Miquelon and the
>Channel Islands are both surrounded by the maritime zones of another state,
>neither's territorial sea is completely surrounded by another state's
>territorial sea. Whether this makes them true enclaves clearly depends on
>your definition of the term....
>
>Since islands are generally entitled to territorial sea, continental shelf
>and EEZ in the same way as mainland territory, it would actually need a
>pretty remarkable set of geographical and/or legal circumstances to create a
>situation in which an area of territorial sea belonging to one country lies
>wholly within that of another. Curiously, this very thing may happen on
>Friday afternoon, when the International Court of Justice will finally
>announce its decision in the case between Qatar and Bahrain concerning
>sovereignty over the Hawar Islands and the maritime boundary between the two
>countries. If, as many commentators believe likely, the islands are awarded
>to Bahrain but are only given a three nautical mile territorial sea (and no
>continental shelf or EEZ) the territorial sea of the Hawar group would - at
>least in theory - be totally surrounded by the territorial sea of Qatar.
>
>m a r t i n
>
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