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Judi Lynn

(160,527 posts)
Sun Feb 16, 2014, 05:39 PM Feb 2014

Chile-Peru border dispute: back on

Chile-Peru border dispute: back on
Submitted by WW4 Report on Sat, 02/15/2014 - 21:00 Andean Theater

Chile's President Sebstián Piñera filed an official complaint Feb. 12 laying claim to 3.7 hectares (nine acres) of desert on the border with Peru—re-opening the border conflict between the two nations after a January ruling at The Hague had resolved a long-standing dispute on the maritime boundary. The International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled that Chile could maintain its sovereignty of fishing waters near the coast but granted Peru control of deeper waters to the southwest. After the ruling, Peru's government released a map designating the contested land triangle as its own—which was immediately rejected by Santiago, citing a 1929 treaty. Piñera's formal assertion of sovereignty over the contested strip follows friction with Peru's President Ollanta Humala at Pacific Alliance summit in Colombia earlier in the week. Following the meeting, Piñera publicly broached withdrawing from the Pact of Bogotá, the regional treaty granting the ICJ jurisdiction in international disputes.

The future of the dispute will fall to Chile's president-elect Michelle Bachelet, who takes office on March 11. José Antonio García, one of the Peruvian representatives during the ICJ case, charged that Piñera's move was a play to nationalism to boost his ratings in the final weeks of his term. "He wants to leave office throwing a tantrum, as this grand defender of his nation," he told Lima's La República.

The new dispute is rooted in the geographical details of the ruling. The ICJ found that the maritime boundary is to follow a parallel out from "border marker number one," located about 320 meters inland. From this point, a line was drawn straight out to sea for 80 nautical miles. However, the land border slopes to the southwest from border marker number one, ending at the Punto Concordia—according to Peru. Because the terrestrial border is not parallel to the new maritime border, a triangle of land under Peru's control is now claimed by Chile.

If the land does belong to Peru, it is now a "dry coast"—bordering sea waters under another nation's sovereignty. But Peru's chief negotiator in the ICJ case, Allan Wagner, said: "The court ruling was over the maritime border and not over the land border. There is no way the two can be tied." (Santiago Times, Feb. 13; WSJ, Jan. 29; Peru This Week, Jan. 28)

More:
http://ww4report.com/node/13018

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