STRAIT USED FOR INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION UNDER THE UNCLOS 1982
REGIME
(A comment on the article “Gaining command and Control of the Northwest Passage :
Strait talk on sovereignty” by Christopher Mark Macneill)
Written by : Ahmad Rawi
The writer can be contacted at
[email protected] : UNCLOS 1982 is an attempt by the international community to codified the common
principles governing the use of the sea by nations. Central to UNCLOS 1982 is its theme to
formulate a set of guidelines acceptable by nations governing their claims of extension of
sovereignty on land to that vast body of water adjacent to them. In this regard, UNCLOS 1982
and its predecessors can be regarded as a success in providing nations with a common platform
to begin with and a common body of reference to guide them in disputes over sovereignty on sea.
This paper will look into the treatment of straits used for international navigation under the
UNCLOS 1982 and the attendant duties and rights accorded to the littoral states having
jurisdiction over such straits.
Keywords : UNCLOS 1982, international straits used for navigation
Introduction
Passage through international straits has always been one of the many controversial issue in
maritime navigation1. The issue is complicated further by lack of definition in UNCLOS 1982 of
what a strait, and in particular a strait used for international navigation, is2. The crux of the
controversy stemmed from the straits coastal states desire to maintain their sovereignty over such
1 Martin, A.G.L.,’ International Straits: Concept, Classification and Rules of Passage’, 2010 Springer – Verlag Berlin Heldelberg p. xix
2 Ibid,p. xvii1
straits and the economic and strategic interests of states whose ships use such straits for
international navigation to have their ships movement proceeds unhindered. This paper will
attempt to provide a summary analysis of UNCLOS 1982 straits regime i.e. straits use for
international navigation.
The Legal Framework of Straits Used for International Navigation under UNCLOS 1982
UNCLOS 1982 has been criticized for its lack of clear definition of what ‘straits used for
international navigation’ is. The Convention does not specify which straits come within the
scope of Part III of UNCLOS 1982. In fact, the Convention does not define what straits used for
international navigation and which are not3. According to an author, the term ‘strait’ in UNCLOS
1982 bears its ordinary linguistic meaning i.e. a narrow natural passage or arm of water
connecting two larger bodies of water4, and the rights of coastal and flag states in relation to a
strait are determined, not by the linguistic definition of a strait as such, but by the legal status of
the water constituting the strait and its use by international shipping5. Going by this approach, the
term ‘straits used for international navigation’ in Art. 34 UNCLOS 1982 shall assume its
ordinary linguistic meaning, with factual use of the strait as passage for international ships being
the most important criterion to qualify it as such under Art. 34.
Under the customary law of the sea, ships, whether merchants’ or warships, had a right of
innocent passage through international straits which could not be suspended by the coastal
states6. In the Corfu Channel Case, the United Kingdom asserted its right to passage through
international straits by sending a naval fleet to the Corfu Channel, without complying with
Albania’s regulations requiring prior authorization. Albania claimed that its sovereignty had been
violated by the passage. Albania argued that the United Kingdom’s warships had no right of
3Martin, A.G.L., ‘International Straits : Concept, Classification and Rules of Passage’, 2010 Springer Verlag Berlin Heidelberg p. 41
4 Churchill, R.R. & Lowe, A.V.,’The Law of The Sea’,1983 Manchester University press UK P. 81
5 Ibid
6 Supra, note 3, p. 822
passage in the Corfu Channel since the strait legal status is not that of a strait used for
international navigation. Albania contended that Corfu Channel was only an alternative route
between the Adriatic and the Aegean Sea and was used almost exclusively by local traffic. The
International Court of Justice (ICJ) rejected this argument and held that the decisive criterion to
determine whether a strait is an international strait used for navigation consists of two factors i.e.
firstly, its geographical situation which connect two parts of the high seas and secondly, the fact
of its being used for international navigation7.
UNCLOS 1982 creates a new regime of passage through international straits with the creation of
right of ‘transit passage’ contained in the Second Section of Part III (articles 37–44). This right is
more liberal than right of innocent passage accorded to ships in coastal states territorial water
and leaned more toward the concept of freedom of high sea8. Two of the main difference
between the regime of innocent passage and the regime of transit passage through international
straits are transit passage allows overflight of aircraft, which is not allowed by the regime of
innocent passage and no obligation for submarines to sail on the surface and fly their flag.
According to Art. 37 of UNCLOS 1982, this new regime is applied to straits which are used for
international navigation between one part of the high seas or an exclusive economic zone and
another part of the high seas or an exclusive economic zone.
Article 38 of UNCLOS 1982 defines the meaning of the right of passage in transit as the
exercise in of the freedom of navigation and overflight solely for the purpose of continuous and
expeditious transit of the strait between one part of the high seas or an exclusive economic zone
and another part of the high seas or an exclusive economic zone and include the continuous and
expeditious transit through the strait for the purpose of entering, leaving or returning from a State
bordering the strait, subject to the conditions of entry to that State.
7 Supra, note 4, p. 82
8 Supra, note 3, p. 1513
As provided by Art. 38, the beneficiaries of the rights of transit passage extends to all ships and
aircrafts without discriminations in term of nationalities or ownership or types. According to an
author, there is a universally accepted doctrine that transit passage is accorded to all ships and
aircraft in its absolute form without any need for prior notification or prior authorization from the
littoral states and without any delimiting factors e.g. harmful cargoes, nuclear powered etc9.
Art. 38.2 provides that this absolute right however, must be exercised not in derogation of the
objective of the ship passage i.e. to traverse the strait continuously and expeditiously from one
part of high sea/exclusive economic zone to another part of high sea or exclusive economic
zone(also known as lateral passage). The second paragraph of Art. 38.2 further extend this right
to vertical passage of a ship in a strait for the purpose stated in that paragraph. The said
paragraph, known as ‘Singapore Clause’ states that right of transit passage (and not that of
innocent passage) is also accorded to ships traversing the strait for the purpose of entering,
leaving or returning from a state bordering the strait (though technically by that act they have not
navigate the strait continuously and expeditiously from one part of the high sea to the other)10.
States Practice
Article 44 of UNCLOS 1982 provides that states bordering straits shall not hamper transit
passage and that there shall be no suspension of transit passage. In practice, states party to the
Convention and non-party states alike, however, have always apply arbitrary restrictions on right
of transit passage.
In September 1988, Indonesia announced temporary closure of Sunda and Lombok Strait for
Indonesian Navy live firing exercise and effectively suspense transit passage, an act which
seemed to violate its obligation not to defeat the object and purpose of a treaty prior to its entry
into force (Indonesia had already been the 26th ratifying State to UNCLOS 1982 at that time)11. 9 Supra, note 3, p. 152
10 Supra, note 3, p. 155
11 Kim, Y.K.,’Transit Passage Regime Controversy Revisited: An Appraisal and Analysis on the Legal Ambiguities and Recent Trends’, Korea Journal of International Law volume 37(1992) No.1. p. 91.
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Oman and Yemen bordering the strait of Hormuz and Babel Mandeb respectively,
emphasized that the application of the transit passage provisions does not preclude a coastal state
from taking such appropriate measures as are necessary to protect its peace and security. Spain
(bordering the strait of Gibraltar) interpreted that the regime established in Part III of the
Convention is compatible with the right of the coastal state to issue and apply its own air
regulations in the air space of the straits used for international navigation so long as this does not
impede the transit passage of aircraft. Iran, bordering the strait of Hormuz clarified that it would
only give right of transit passage to states which are parties to UNCLOS 1982 whereas Egypt
and Israel assert their rights to impose security measures on passage through Strait of Tiran and
Gulf of Aqaba12.
The ‘strait used for international navigation’ is in principle a legal status created by the
Convention (UNCLOS 1982) and right of transit passage accorded to ships traversing such strait
can be evaded by showing circumstances which bring into operation Art. 36 of UNCLOS 1982.
Art. 36 of UNCLOS 1982 provides that right of transit passage does not apply to ships using
international strait where there exist through the strait a route of similar convenience. For this
reason, the states bordering the entrances to the Baltic Sea (at present Denmark, Germany and
Sweden), have refrained from extending their territorial seas in some of their coastal areas to 12
nautical miles, leaving an exclusive economic zone (EEZ) corridor (the route of similar
convenience referred to in Art. 36). This was done to prevent the creation of new straits in the
sense of Part III of the UNCLOS 198213.
12 Ibid
13 Elferink, A.G.O.,’ The Regime of Passage of Ships through the Danish Straits’, p.3.paper presented at the International Conference ‘The Passage of Ships through Strait’s, Defense Analyses Institute, Athens, October 23, 1999, available online at http://www.law.uu.nl/english/isep/framenilos.asp
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The Northwest Passage : New Strait Used for International Navigation?
Global warming crisis, which belongs to the concern of the likes of scientists and
environmentalists, now has a spillover effect on international law jurists and has the potential of
limiting one nation of sovereignty over part of the frozen sea claimed as theirs.
Northwest Passage is situated on that body of frozen sea which lies north of Canada in the Arctic
Archipelago. Historically, Canada has always asserts their sovereignty over the territory known
as Arctic Archipelago adjacent to the northern mainland Canadian coastline, citing cession of the
land to Canada by the Indigenous people and the British Crown sovereign.
Geographically, the Northwest Passage remains frozen for much of the year and thus
inaccessible by ordinary ships though it provides the shortest route between Asia and Europe.
With the rapid and expansive melting of Polar ice, the day is not long before Northwest Passage
will be available year round as shipping lane.
The Arctic region adjacent to Canadian coast is not disputed as Canadian water. The real issue is
over the question of navigation or the legal status of those waters. Canada considers them to be
internal water and thus Canada has the unfettered capacity to regulate them as they would have
for any land territory14.
This view is not shared by the United States’ , which take the stance that the Northwest Passage
is an international strait, as defined by UNCLOS Article 37 and thus the bordering states have no
rights of control to prevent the innocent passage of ships through this strait15.
14 Bernier, M.,” Arctic Sovereignty : House of Commons’ Report of the Standing Committee on National Defence’, (2010) Public Works and Government Services Canada, Ontario P.7
15 Kennair, J., ‘An inconsistent truth : Canadian foreign policy and the Northwest Passage’, Vermont Law Review, Vol. 34:015 p. 20
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Canada maintained that the Northwest Passage is an internal waterway and based their claim on
two cases : The Norwegian Fisheries Case (1951) and The Corfu Channel (1949). In the
Norwegian Fisheries case, the issue was whether a fjord in Norway’s northern regions was part
of its internal waters or part of international waters. The ruling on the case, however, made the
point that if a straight line was drawn from two separate headlands, it would in fact be an internal
waterway. Furthermore, if waters were part of a state’s historic waters, then they were also
internal waters. The test for historic waters was established as follows:
1. that there was an exclusive exercise of a state’s authority over the waters;
2. that the state had a long usage of those waters; and
3. that there was acquiescence to this by other states.
Canada in 1963 used this reasoning, and based upon the straight baselines claimed the Arctic
Archipelago in the North Pole, to assert that the Northwest Passage was an internal waterway.
This archipelago, accepted to be under sovereign control of Canada, constituted the headlands
needed to draw the separating the Northwest Passage from the high seas (The Arctic Ocean).
Furthermore, because there had been few ships capable of navigating the waters due to its ice
cover most of the year, Canadian icebreakers were the most frequent vessels to traverse the
Northwest Passage. The only test that could not be proclaimed was that of acquiescence by other
states, as it concerned the waterway itself, and the US does not acquiesce to Canada claim.
Nevertheless, in 1975, Canada’s Secretary of State reasserted Canada’s claim that the Northwest
Passage was not an international strait, but an internal waterway16.
The definition of an international strait would be codified in the 1958 UNCLOS treaty, but the
test for it was established in the Corfu Channel case (1949) referred above. According to the
Corfu Channel there are two test criteria to determine an international strait—they are the
geography associated to the waterway and its functionality as an international waterway (used by
many vessels). Canada asserted that till date, few ships have actually, or officially, made the
journey through the Northwest Passage because of the adverse conditions in the Canadian
Arctic17. For the time being, the issue is still not resolved.
16 Ibid7
Conclusion
Despite codification of principles of law of the sea into UNCLOS 182, it is clear that the
Convention does not answer all the issues relating to the legal status of strait used for
international navigation. States practices also varies and run counter to the Convention. In
relation to legal status of strait used as international navigation, lack of precise criteria on what
constitute such strait has led many states to offer their own presumptive interpretation, almost
invariably unilaterally.
REFERENCES
1. Martin, A.G.L.,’ International Straits: Concept, Classification and Rules of Passage’, 2010 Springer – Verlag Berlin Heldelberg
2. Churchill, R.R. & Lowe, A.V.,’The Law of The Sea’,1983 Manchester University press UK
3. Kim, Y.K.,’Transit Passage Regime Controversy Revisited: An Appraisal and Analysis on the Legal Ambiguities and Recent Trends’, Korea Journal of International Law volume 37(1992) No.1.
4. Elferink, A.G.O.,’ The Regime of Passage of Ships through the Danish Straits’, p.3.paper presented at the International Conference ‘The Passage of Ships through Strait’s, Defense Analyses Institute, Athens, October 23, 1999, available online at http://www.law.uu.nl/english/isep/framenilos.asp
17 Supra,note 15, p.268
5. Bernier, M.,” Arctic Sovereignty : House of Commons’ Report of the Standing Committee on National Defence’, (2010) Public Works and Government Services Canada, Ontario
6. Kennair, J., ‘An inconsistent truth : Canadian foreign policy and the Northwest Passage’, Vermont Law Review, Vol. 34:015
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