International Tribunal For The Law of The Sea
International Tribunal For The Law of The Sea
STATEMENT BY
Rdiger Wolfrum
PRESIDENT OF THE
INTERNATIONAL TRIBUNAL FOR THE LAW OF THE SEA
I. Introduction
Freedom of navigation is one of the oldest and most recognized principles in the legal
regime governing ocean space. It may safely be said that since it was enshrined in the
chapter De mare liberum (On the freedom of the sea) in the treatise actually it was a
legal opinion of Hugo Grotius De iure praedae of 1609 this principle constitutes one
of the pillars of the law of the sea and was at the origins of modern international law. 1 It
is still worth re-emphasizing the arguments Grotius advanced in defence of this
principle. Amongst other things, he stated that the sea was the fundamental avenue for
communication and cooperation among States and therefore such avenue should be
free and not controlled by one State in his time, this would have been Spain or
Portugal. He further argued that a resource or an area which could be used by all
without deterioration or depletion should not be monopolized by one State but should be
open to all. And finally he argued that a State could only claim an area which it was able
to administer and control effectively, emphasizing that no State could control the sea
permanently and effectively. This latter argument may not be as convincing today as it
was at the beginning of the 17th century. Still, it is worth remembering. In particular,
John Selden argued against the freedom of the sea as a principle in his treatise De
mare clausum of 1635 but in fact he meant the freedom to fish, also proclaimed by
Hugo Grotius, rather than the freedom of navigation.
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (hereinafter the Convention) 2
makes ample reference to the freedom of navigation, for example in article 36 (freedom
of navigation in straits used for international navigation), article 58 (freedom of
navigation in the exclusive economic zone), article 78 and article 87 (high seas). In this
context, the right of innocent passage in the territorial sea and through archipelagic
waters as specified in articles 17 to 26 and 52 of the Convention should also be
mentioned, as well as the freedom of transit passage in straits used for international
navigation (article 38 of the Convention). The three freedoms mean the same freedom
of movement of ships. What distinguishes them is the different influence coastal States
may exercise on the freedom of movement.
1
For the principle of freedom of navigation, see: M.A. Becker, The shifting public order of the oceans:
freedom of navigation and the interdiction of ships at sea, Harvard International Law Journal 46/1 (2005),
pp. 131-230; see also: C.-G. Hasselmann, Die Freiheit der Handelsschiffahrt: Eine Analyse der UN-
Seerechtskonvention, 1987.
2
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, December 10, 1982; ILM 21 (1982), pp. 1261-1354.
3
passage/transit passage which should be cause for concern as regards the legal
framework established by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea establishes a legal regime which
is based on maritime zones. Coastal States competences decrease, generally
speaking, as the distance from the coast increases and, additionally, they are less
comprehensive as regards navigation than as regards the exploration or exploitation of
the natural resources of the sea. In addition to this territorial or rather zone-based
jurisdiction, coastal States may exercise jurisdiction over foreign merchant ships on the
basis of international agreements and/or established international standards and
practices. Article 218 of the Convention, for example, accords to port States
jurisdictional power over vessels which is not rooted in the territorial principle.
Coastal States have jurisdiction to adopt laws and regulations relating to navigational
safety and vessel-source pollution from foreign ships in their exclusive economic zone
(legislative jurisdiction) where vessels enjoy the freedom of navigation and they
have far-reaching enforcement jurisdiction. The jurisdictional competences legislative
as well as enforcement jurisdiction of coastal States are broader as concerns their
territorial sea and archipelagic waters, although ships under a foreign flag enjoy the
right of innocent passage in these maritime areas.
As far as national legislation in the territorial sea is concerned, States can roughly be
divided into four categories. The first category includes those States which have closely
followed article 21, paragraph 1, of the Convention which allows coastal States to adopt
regulations relating to innocent passage. In the second category are those States
claiming prescriptive competences over a series of matters that deviate from article 21,
paragraph 1, of the Convention. The third group addresses their claims only in a general
way by stressing that foreign vessels shall observe promulgated laws and regulations.
The last category consists of those States which either have made no mention of
legislative jurisdiction in their legislation on the territorial sea or have not as yet enacted
any special laws and regulations.
Special regimes apply, however, for major international shipping routes through straits
used for international navigation even if such straits are within the territorial sea of the
coastal State. The transit passage regime implies that navigation is not governed by the
regime concerning innocent passage but by a particular regime which is more liberal as
regards navigation. The transit passage regime has been described as ranging between
the freedom of navigation and innocent passage. 3 Under the transit passage regime,
freedom of navigation and the right of overflight exist for vessels and aircraft operating
in their normal mode. While the coastal States jurisdictional powers are limited by the
Convention, they may still impose controls on navigation.
3
E.J. Molenaar, Coastal State Jurisdiction over Vessel-Source Pollution, 1998, p. 287.
4
III. Measures taken to enhance the safety of navigation and to protect the marine
environment
The ambiguity prevailing at the time concerning coastal States legislative competences
as regards innocent passage was meant to be clarified by article 21 of the Convention.
This provision tries to establish a delicate balance between the interests of international
navigation and the right of coastal States to regulate the passage of foreign ships in the
territorial sea. Only a handful of actions are qualified as not being protected under the
notion of innocent passage in article 19, paragraph 2, of the Convention, e.g., any act of
wilful and serious pollution contrary to the Convention (article 19, paragraph 2(h)). The
coastal State may regulate innocent passage in respect of a wide range of matters
under article 21, paragraph 1, of the Convention, in conformity with the Convention and
other rules of international law,. Paragraphs 1(a) and 1(b) of article 21 in particular refer
to the safety of navigation, the regulation of maritime traffic, and the protection of
navigational aids, while paragraph 1(f) relates to the preservation of the marine
environment and the prevention, reduction and control of pollution thereof. Paragraph
1(g) refers to article 245 of the Convention, which accords to coastal States an
exclusive right to regulate, authorize and conduct marine scientific research in their
territorial sea, and paragraph 1(h) refers to custom, fiscal, immigration and sanitary
matters. In short, article 19 of the Convention excludes certain actions from the
protection accorded by the notion of innocent passage, whereas article 21 of the
Convention opens the possibility for coastal States to limit further the freedom of
navigation.
However, this option is limited. According to article 21, paragraph 2, of the Convention,
national laws and regulations shall not apply to the design, construction, manning or
equipment of foreign ships unless they give effect to generally accepted international
rules and standards. This is a significant restriction concerning the prescriptive power of
coastal states. It reflects a basic concept incorporated throughout the Convention,
namely to protect the integrity of global maritime navigation and to minimize interference
from coastal State jurisdiction.
The rules concerning passage through archipelagic sea lanes are similar but not
completely identical. But here again the involvement of the IMO is required (article 53,
paragraph 9, of the Convention).
(b) Measures which may be taken on the basis of specific international instruments
International agreements, in many cases established under the auspices of the IMO,
mandate coastal States, including States bordering international straits, to adopt further
measures for the management and control of international navigation. Such measures
may be taken unilaterally or in conjunction with the IMO. This system is still in the stage
of development and some uncertainty exists in this respect.
Ships routing is governed by Regulation V/10 of the Annex to SOLAS, which was
incorporated in 1994. It is clear from the text that, on the one hand, the regulation tries
to emphasize the role of the IMO in the establishment of mandatory ships routing and,
on the other, it recognizes, albeit indirectly, that coastal States may also establish such
routing systems alone. This is all the more relevant when the systems are located within
the territorial sea. States are not under an obligation to submit the establishment of such
systems in the territorial sea to the IMO for adoption but they may do so. This is in line
with article 22 of the Convention. Although the involvement of the IMO is not mandatory,
its harmonizing role should not be underestimated.
4
Convention on the International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea (COLREG), October 20,
1972; BGBl. 1976 II, p. 1017.
5
International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL), November 2, 1973, as
amended by the Protocol June 1, 1978; ILM 12 (1973), pp. 1319-1444; ILM 17 (1978), p. 246 et seqq.
6
International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS), November 1, 1974; UNTS Vol. 1184
(1980), pp. 2-453.
7
Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and their
Disposal, March 22, 1989; ILM 28 (1989), pp. 657 et seqq.
8
See article 24, paragraph 1, of the Convention.
6
Apart from measures provided for in international conventions, certain restrictions upon
the freedom of navigation may be based upon measures taken by the IMO.
Through Annex 2 to IMO Resolution A.927(22), the IMO may designate Particularly
Sensitive Sea Areas (PSSAs). These are areas which need special protection through
the IMO owing to their recognized ecological, socio-economic or scientific significance
and because they may be vulnerable to damage as a result of international shipping
activities. The legal basis of such power of the IMO may be sought in articles 192 and
194 of the Convention as well as in article 211, paragraph 1, thereof. It is to be noted
that the designation of a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area as such has no binding effect.
However, the PSSA Guidelines 9 require the adoption by the IMO of associated
protective measures. The type of measures that may be adopted is left to the IMO. To
date the IMO has prescribed ships routing measures and ships reporting systems
under SOLAS, under MARPOL and a range of other measures adopted through its own
resolutions. Insofar as such measures are based upon existing international
agreements, the resulting infringements upon freedom of navigation may be considered
justified. 10 But the view is also held that whatever is decided by the IMO is to be
considered as conforming to the Convention. 11
9
See: International Maritime Organization/Marine Environment Protection Committee, Particular Sensitive
Sea Areas, Compilation of official guidance documents and PSSAs adopted since 1990, 2007 edition.
10
Regarding PSSAs see: J. Roberts / M. Tsamenyi / T. Workman / L. Johnson, The Western European
PSSA Proposal: a politically sensitive sea area, Marine Policy 29 (2005), pp. 431-440; K.M. Gjerde,
Protecting Particularly Sensitive Sea Areas from Shipping: A Review of IMOs New PSSA guidelines, in:
H. Thiel / J.A. Koslow (eds.), Managing Risks to Biodiversity and the Environment on the High Sea,
Including Tools Such as Marine Protected Areas Scientific Requirements and Legal Aspects,
Proceedings of the Expert Workshop held at the International Academy for Nature Conservation, BfN-
Skripten 43, German Federal Agency for Nature Conservation, 2001, pp. 123-131.
11
See DOALOS LEG 87/16/1WP.3.
7
These are not the only examples where States may be seen to attempt to limit the
freedom of navigation, either through legislative or enforcement measures beyond that
which is foreseen in articles 211 and 220 of the Convention.
The 2005 Protocol 14 to the 1988 Rome Convention (SUA Convention) 15 is one of those
recent legal instruments which may, in the future, provide a basis for limiting the
freedom of navigation.
The Protocol introduces a new article, article 8bis, concerning the procedures to be
followed if a State Party desires to board a ship flying the flag of another State Party,
outside the territorial sea of any State, when the requesting Party has reasonable
grounds to suspect that the ship or a person on board the ship is, has been, or is about
to be, involved in the commission of an offence under the Convention. The authorization
12
See page 3, Note by Denmark Mandatory Pilotage in Certain Areas of the Baltic Sea of 11 May 2001;
Helsinki Commission Baltic Marine Environment Commission, Expert Group to prepare for the
Extraordinary HELCOM Ministerial Meeting, First Meeting Copenhagen, Denmark, 21 May 2001;
HELCOM EXTRA PREP 1/2001, Document No. 7.
13
For details see: R.C. Beekman, PSSAs and Transit Passage Australias Pilotage System in the
Torres Strait Challenges the IMO and UNCLOS, Ocean Development and International Law 38 (2007),
pp. 325-357.
14
Protocol of 2005 to the Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts Against the Safety of Maritime
Navigation, October 14, 2005. This international agreement, which supplements the Rome Convention,
was developed in direct response to the events of 11 September 2001. For its legislative history see: C.
Tiribelli, The time to update the 1988 Rome Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts Against the
Safety of Maritime Navigation, Sri Lanka Journal of International Law 18 (2006), pp. 149-166.
15
IMO Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts Against the Safety of Maritime Navigation and
Protocol for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts Against the Safety of Fixed Platforms on the Continental
Shelf, March 13, 1988, entered into force on March 1, 1992; IMO Doc SUA/CONF/15; ILM 27 (1988), pp.
672-684.
8
and cooperation of the flag State is required before such boarding can take place. 16
Such authorization may be made in general or on an ad hoc basis.
To take appropriate actions to (1) stop and/or search in their internal waters,
territorial seas, or contiguous zones (when declared) vessels that are reasonably
suspected or carrying such cargoes to or from states or non-state actors of
proliferation concern and to seize such cargoes that are identified; and (2) to
enforce conditions on vessels entering or leaving their ports, internal waters or
territorial seas that are reasonably suspected of carrying such cargoes, such as
requiring that such vessels be subject to boarding, search, and seizure of such
cargoes prior to entry.
As long as the interception of a vessel under a flag different from the intercepting State
takes place in the internal waters of and by the coastal State concerned, such act
cannot be contested from the point of view of the law of the sea. The situation is more
complicated in the territorial sea. According to article 25 of the Convention, coastal
States may take action only against passage which is not innocent. The provisions of
the Convention concerning innocent passage are to be considered customary
international law.
16
Article 8bis paragraph 4(b) of the 2005 Protocol.
17
See, regarding this initiative: M. Byers, Policing the High Seas: The Proliferation Security Initiative, AJIL
98 (2004), pp. 526 et seqq.; C. Schaller, Die Unterbindung des Seetransports von
Massenvernichtungswaffen, SWP-Studie, 2004; W. Heintschel von Heinegg, The Proliferation Security
Initiative Security vs. Freedom of Navigation, Israel Yearbook on Human Rights vol. 35 (2005), pp. 181
et seqq.; M. Malirsch / F. Prill, The Proliferation Security Initiative and the 2005 Protocol to the SUA
Convention, ZaRV 67 (2007), pp. 229-240; J.I. Garvey, The International Institutional Imperative for
Countering the Spread of Weapons of Mass Destruction: Assessing the Proliferation Security Initiative,
Journal of Conflict & Security Law 10 (2005), pp. 125-147; S.E. Logan, The Proliferation Security
Initiative: Navigating the Legal Challenges, Journal of Transnational Law & Policy 14 (2004-2005), pp.
253-274.
18
Available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/09/20030904-11.html (last visit in April
2008).
9
It has been argued that passage can be considered to be not innocent if the conditions
of S/RES/1540 (2004) of 28 April 2004 are met. 23 It has further been argued that States
may, on the basis of S/RES/1540, enact national legislation declaring the transport of
weapons of mass destruction through their territorial sea a criminal offence which would
allow the coastal State concerned to take action, as prescribed in article 27,
paragraph 1, of the Convention. Certainly S/RES/1540 provides that the proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction constitutes a threat to international peace. Even if it is
accepted that the Security Council may exercise such quasi-legislative power, this does
not render the transit of such material automatically non-innocent. 24
19
It is astonishing that this article is rarely referred to and that it is rarely stated that this is an article
insisted upon by the United States.
20
W. Heintschel von Heinegg (see note 17) at p. 193; S.E. Logan (see note 17) at p. 263.
21
Article 27 paragraph 1(b) of the Convention.
22
Article 27 paragraph 1(a) of the Convention.
23
W. Heintschel von Heinegg (see note 17), at p. 194.
24
See the definition in article 19 of the Convention.
10
The legal situation in respect of international straits raises particular problems, given the
enhanced status of international navigation.
Whether ships carrying weapons of mass destruction which are not targeted against a
particular State may be interdicted on the high seas by warships of another State
without the consent of the flag State concerned is a matter of controversy. 25 The
exclusive jurisdictional relationship between a flag State and one of its vessels on the
high seas is well-rooted in customary international law. In the Lotus case, the
Permanent Court of International Justice held that vessels on the high seas are subject
to no authority except that of the State whose flag they fly. 26 Article 92 of the
Convention codifies this principle. Several exceptions are provided for: a waiver by the
flag State if the vessel is without nationality, or if the vessel is engaged in piracy, slavery
or unauthorized broadcasting. 27 Accordingly, there is a strict limit against boarding and
inspection of a vessel under a flag different from that of the investigating vessel.
Measures taken in the face of the threat of terrorism may result in a temporary limitation
of the freedom of navigation. Several Security Council resolutions, in particular
S/RES/1373 (2001), form the necessary international law basis for maritime interception
operations undertaken by various naval units in the Indian Ocean and off the coast of
Somalia. Flag States may not object to ships under their flags being investigated by
warships of other States, as long as the measures taken are proportionate.
since container ships which have not undergone this procedure face repercussions in
U.S. ports.
V. Tentative conclusions
As indicated in the introduction, measures having the effect of or even intending to limit
the freedom of navigation, transit passage or innocent passage are being taken
multilaterally, namely by the IMO and the Security Council, on the basis of bilateral
arrangements as well as unilaterally. There is no doubt that the objectives pursued,
namely the protection of the marine environment and protection against the proliferation
of weapons of mass destruction and against terrorism are at least in principle valid
ones. Nevertheless, there are some concerns. It is worth considering whether the IMO
or the Security Council really has a sound legal basis for acting as legislators, a function
they exercise de facto in the cases mentioned in the context of this presentation. I hope
I have been able to demonstrate that multilateral actions are being supplemented by
measures taken on the basis of bilateral arrangements (PSI, Container Security
Initiative, agreements on the interception of vessels) or even unilaterally (unilaterally
declared mandatory pilotage). The reasons for such supplementary measures are
dissatisfaction with the results achieved multilaterally and the desire for unilaterally
tailored solutions. For vessels, this mixture of restrictions which seem to lack coherence
is difficult to cope with. At present, the limitations faced may still be tolerable but if this
trend prevails and there are clear indications that it will a reassessment may be
called for.