With its dubious historic claims,
At the regular press conference of the Chinese Foreign
Ministry on Monday, spokesman Qin Gang said: "After considering the
relevant content in the press conference held by the Vietnam Ministry of
Foreign Affairs last Friday (May 23), I find it funny and ridiculous. Much of
the historical evidence indicates that the
He also said: From the second century BC, the Han
Dynasty and the Chinese conducted maritime operations in the
To clarify the fallacious arguments of Chinese, we
talked with Dr. Tran Cong Truc, former Head of the Government’s Frontier
Committee.
Dr. Truc emphasized that the Chinese side is completely
wrong. Why? "Yes, the Chinese claim that they have historical evidence
to prove that Xisha (Hoang Sa Archipelago of Vietnam) and Nansha (
He continued: “We have also done a lot of analysis and
evaluation of this issue.
He said: “To be able to clearly determine whether that
theory of
“There are islands in the
"The argument that
To assert and defend their claims, both
"
According to Dr. Truc, at the present time, to assess
in an objective and scientific manner the legal points used by the parties in
sovereignty disputes, we need to understand some of the main content of the
principles determining the acquisition of national territory in international
law.
Dr. Truc stated: “In the long history of the
development of international law, the principles and legal norms on the
establishment of sovereignty have been formed on the basis of international
practice, including methods of acquisition of territory. From the sixteenth
century, the development and growth of the countries like the
“In that context, the maritime powers found the legal
principles applicable to the acquisition of territory to the territory that
they had just discovered. That is the principle of ‘right by discovery’. This
principle gives priority of occupation of a territory to the nation that
discovered that territory first. However, in practice, the principle of ‘the
right by discovery’ has never brought sovereignty to a country that
discovered the new territories. Because it is not possible to determine what
‘discovery’ is, the legal value of the discovery, who was the first to
discover it, and what is taken to mark that behavior of discovery. Therefore,
the concept of discovery was quickly supplemented by the idea of nominal
occupation, meaning that the country discovering a new territory must leave
traces of its presence there.
“However, the principle of nominal occupation could not
fundamentally resolve complicated disputes between the powerhouses for the
‘promised lands’, especially the territories of
“Therefore, after the conference on Africa in 1885 of
13 European countries and the
Principles of "Effective
Occupation"
Article 3, Article 34 and Article 35 of The Treaty of
Berlin signed in 1885 determines the content of the principles of Effective
Occupation and the essential conditions for the Effective Occupation as
follows:
First: There must be notification of an occupation to
the nations joining this treaty.
Second: Maintaining the territories in which a power
has claimed occupation is sufficient to ensure that the occupation is
respected.
According to Dr. Truc, the Declaration of the Lausanne
Institute of International Law in 1888 emphasized: "Every occupation
that wants to make nominal sovereignty ... must be true, i.e., real, not
nominal". This statement made the principle of effective occupation of
the Berlin Treaty has the common values in international law, allowing for sovereignty
disputes between countries all over the world to be considered and resolved.
The main contents of the effective occupation principle
in international law include the following factors:
First: The establishment of territorial sovereignty
must be conducted by the state.
Second: The occupation must be conducted peacefully on
a derelict territory (Res nullius) or on a territory abandoned by a country
that had previously owned it (derelicto).
Third: The use of force to occupy the territory is
unlawful. The occupying state must enforce its sovereignty in the necessary
levels, at least appropriate with the natural conditions and population of
that territory.
Fourth: The exercise of sovereignty must be continuous
and peaceful.
Now, although the Saint Germain Convention of 1919
declared the Berlin Treaty void on the basis that the world no longer had
derelict territories, lawyers and international tribunals have continued to
apply its principles to resolve sovereignty disputes over islands.
For example, the La Haye International Tribunal in
April 1928 applied these principles to resolve disputes between
More recently, the International Court of Justice
decided in favor of
Nguyen Hoa,
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Chủ Nhật, 1 tháng 6, 2014
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