Speaking to Vietnam News Agency
correspondents in France, Professor Pierre Journoud from Paul-Valery University
3 highlighted the significance of the ruling as it rejected China’s claims of
“historical rights” in the East Sea.
Closer cooperation is necessary among relevant parties to solve the issue, he
said.
The expert predicted that involved countries will have to join long-lasting
negotiations if they want to prevent disputes and wars from occurring.
Journoud, who is also a researcher of t he Institute of Strategic Studies at the
French military school (IRSEM), cited successful negotiations for the
delimitation of the Gulf of Tonkin between Vietnam and China, which resulted in
the signing of an agreement between the two sides in 2000.
Similar negotiation models should be expanded in other waters in Southeast Asia,
he said.
Regarding the viewpoint of France and the European Union (EU) on the issue,
Journoud said both his country and the EU support international law, especially
the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).
France has called on all involved parties to enhance negotiations, he said,
suggesting the EU and France use their experience in settling conflicts to help
tackle conflicts in the East Sea.
On July 12, the PCA issued a ruling on the case brought by the Philippines
against China’s nine-dash line claim in the East Sea, saying China’s claims to
historic rights for waters within the nine-dash line are contrary to the 1982
UNCLOS.
The Hague Tribunal also found no legal basis for China to claim historic rights
to resources within the nine-dash line.
The country has no historic title over waters of the East Sea. At the same time,
China has caused permanent and irreparable harm to the coral reef ecosystem on
the Truong Sa archipelago, the court said.
VNA