Latest update April 23rd, 2024 12:59 AM
Sep 22, 2008 News
The book “Triumph of the United Nations Convention of the Laws of the Sea,” written by Sir Shridath Ramphal, was launched on Saturday evening at the Le Meridien Hotel, documenting the maritime demarcation between Guyana and Suriname.
Former Foreign Affairs Minister Rudy Insanally, who made brief remarks at the launching which was attended by scores of academia and diplomats, said that the book sought to immortalize the achievement.
According to Ramphal, who was the principal speaker, the book was about Guyana and Suriname and the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea; and, to an extent, it was more about the Convention than the countries. “That’s why it is called Triumph for UNCLOS.”
He noted also that the book was a vignette of the arbitral proceedings, and was now a part of West Indian history. “As such, it is a modest attempt to provide everyone easy access, in readable form, to the complex issues and weighty legal arguments at the heart of the Guyana-Suriname Maritime Arbitration; especially for the people of our two countries, but more generally as well.”
Ramphal impressed on the gathering that it was the danger of “this intellectual treasure” being lost to all but researchers that prompted him to undertake writing the book.
He noted that most international disputes are remembered in terms of ‘winners’ and ‘losers,’ and that in this case the thesis of the book is that the real winner was the system of international law that brought the two countries to the Arbitral Tribunal and to the peaceful resolution of their maritime dispute.
The historic award has now cleared the way for CGX to commence unrestrained exploration for oil in Guyana’s territorial sea.
In September last, the United Nations Arbitral Tribunal unanimously awarded Guyana close to a 13,000 square-mile swath of the Atlantic Ocean, paving the way for CGX to continue oil exploration after it was evicted in 2000 by a Surinamese gunboat.
The Arbitral Tribunal found that Suriname acted unlawfully when it expelled the CGX drilling rig, which was licensed by Guyana in 2000.
The tribunal was particularly critical of Suriname for resorting to the use of force in the eviction of the CGX oil rig.
The ruling saw CGX retaining 93 per cent of its Corentyne licence and all of its Georgetown licence.
LISTEN HOW JAGDEO WILL MAKE ALL GUYANESE RICH!!!
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