Cape Times

Somalia wins sea border battle

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THE HAGUE: The UN’s top court awarded Somalia control of most of a potentiall­y oil and gas-rich chunk of the Indian Ocean yesterday after a bitter legal battle with neighbouri­ng Kenya over their sea border.

The Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled there was “no agreed maritime boundary” and drew a new border close to the one claimed by Somalia, although Kenya kept a part of the 100 000km² area, Chief Judge Joan Donoghue said.

Kenya, which had claimed the entire area off the East African coast, said last week that it would refuse to recognise the jurisdicti­on of the “biased” Hague-based court.

Kenya said in addition to withdrawin­g its participat­ion from the current case, it had joined many other members of the UN in withdrawin­g its recognitio­n of the court’s compulsory jurisdicti­on.

“The delivery of the judgment will be the culminatio­n of a flawed judicial process that Kenya has had reservatio­ns with, and withdrawn from, on account not just of its obvious and inherent bias but also of its unsuitabil­ity to resolve the dispute at hand,” Kenya’s foreign office said.

The court’s decision, which is final, could have far-reaching consequenc­es for the future of relations between two key countries in one of the world’s most troubled regions.

Somalia dragged Kenya to the ICJ in 2014 over the disputed patch of sea.

At the heart of the dispute is the direction that the joint maritime boundary should take from the point where the land frontiers meet on the coast.

Somalia insisted the boundary should follow the orientatio­n of its land border and thus head out in a 200 nautical mile line towards the south-east.

But Kenya said its boundary runs in a straight line due east – a delineatio­n that would have given it a big triangular slice of the sea.

The court in the end drew a line passing closer to the boundary claimed by Somalia.

Nairobi says it has exercised sovereignt­y over the area since 1979, when it proclaimed the limits of its exclusive economic zone – a maritime territory where a state has the right to exploit resources.

The contested 100 000km² area is believed to contain rich gas and oil deposits, and also has important fishing rights.

Nairobi has already granted exploratio­n permits to Italian energy giant ENI but Somalia is contesting the move.

Rulings by the ICJ, which was set up after World War II to resolve disputes between UN member states, are binding and cannot be appealed.

The court has no overt means of enforcing judgments but can refer violations to the UN.

In a similar maritime border dispute between Colombia and Nicaragua, the case went back to court in September after Nicaragua accused Colombia of flouting a 2012 judgment by the court in its favour.

Kenya pulled out of hearings in the Somalia case in March, after unsuccessf­ully arguing that the court did not have competence over the case.

Just over two weeks ago, Nairobi notified the UN secretary-general that it was withdrawin­g its 1965 declaratio­n accepting the ICJ’s compulsory jurisdicti­on.

The Kenyan foreign ministry accused the court of “obvious and inherent bias”.

“As a sovereign nation, Kenya shall no longer be subjected to an internatio­nal court or tribunal without its express consent,” the Kenyan foreign ministry said.

The sea boundary row started in 2012 after Somalia accused Kenya of illegally awarding exploratio­n rights in the waters to multinatio­nals Total and Eni.

Eni declined to comment on the case yesterday and Total did not immediatel­y respond to questions from Reuters.

The extent of the hydrocarbo­n reserves in the disputed waters is unknown, but Kenya awarded the licences at a time when the East African coast was emerging as one of the world’s hottest oil exploratio­n prospects.

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