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Fears of resumption of clashes with Spain over net fishing in Gibraltar bay

Monday, August 20th 2012 - 22:28 UTC
Full article 63 comments

Spanish fishermen expressed perplexity at the announcement by the Gibraltar Government that it will not be granting permission for commercial fishing with nets to be carried out in Gibraltar waters. The controversy has caused several incidents in the bay between the Spanish Guardia Civil and Gibraltar Royal Police and there are fears of a resumption of the conflict. Read full article

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  • Britworker

    Good to see the Gibraltarians stanging up their rites and their territorial integrity.

    Aug 20th, 2012 - 10:41 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Betelgeuse

    Britworker
    You must be joking! It is the Spanish fishermen that are standing up for their rights to fish where they have always done so.

    You seem to have ignored the fact that Gibraltar is listed by the UN as a territory that needs to be decolonised by the UK.

    A coloniser cannot legally disrupt the territorial integrity of another State by implanting a population of its own choosing unto the territory it is colonising. In cases such as these, the implanted population has a right to have their 'interests' considered but they have no right to unilaterally determine the nationality of the land they live in. The UN has also confirmed Spain's assertions that the principle of territorial integrity complements and constrains the right to self-determination by the current occupants of the colony of Gibraltar.

    The UN has repeatedly invited the UK to participate in discussions to achieve the de-colonisation of Gibraltar. Unfortunately, the UK continues to rely on a discredited interpretation of the principle of self-determination to turn a deaf ear to those requests in a clearly self-serving way.

    Spain will continue to enforce Spanish and EU laws in the Bay of Algeciras and protect the rights of its fishermen in those waters. If the UK has a problem with this then perhaps it should honour its commitments under the Brussels process and meet with Spain to discuss the decolonisation of Gibraltar under the terms of the various resolutions the UN has passed on this issue.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 01:28 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Lord Ton

    Gibraltar is British - ceded by Treaty in 1713. Job done. There was no concept of 'territorial waters' in 1713, but when it became accepted, Gibralter was entitled just like all the rest.

    If Gib is listed as a Non-Self Governing Territory then its entitled to determine its own future. That, it has been doing for many decades.

    Britain has no obligation to either the UN's Declonisation Committee (which it withdrew from long ago) or the defunct Brussels process. Britain's duty is to support the people of Gibraltar and assist them towards whatever future they decide. More than likely they'll be a new nation before the turn of this century.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 02:56 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Marcos Alejandro

    What the hell, looks like every country in the world claims something stolen by the Brits.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 03:16 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Lord Ton

    Just the whining iberians !

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 05:36 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Faulconbridge

    Just the whining iberians...
    and people in places stolen by Iberians.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 05:57 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Room101

    The situation isn't as cut and dried as it appears: http://www.chronicle.gi/headlines_details.php?id=25741

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 07:45 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Beef

    What is Spain going to do about it while they continue to come cap in hand to the UK? A = Nothing.

    Seams to be a trend for the Spanish and their colonial descendants to lack a backbone. Perhaps they will go for a walk like the Ecuadorians or cry foul like the Argies.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 08:35 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • The Cestrian

    @2

    The UN Decolonisation committee should by now have taken both the Falklands and Gibraltar off their list as both territories have made it abundantly clear that they wish to remain British.

    The UN cannot usurp the wishes of those people's particularly as the right of self determination is enshrined within its own principles.

    Its high time both territories approached the UN about this.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 09:34 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Crackpot

    #2 and #4
    “....by implanting a population of its own choosing unto the territory it is colonising....”
    “...looks like every country in the world claims something stolen by the Brits.”

    And how do you think the Spanish ended up in Gibraltar in the first place? The town was founded by the Moors who were there for 800 years before the Spanish finally conquered it in around 1500 AD. Guess what happened then? The Moors were kicked out (in fact they were kicked out from the whole of Spain) and replaced with a Spanish population until Gibraltar was GIVEN to the British in around 1700. The British Gibraltarians (who have been there longer than the Spanish ever were) are no more implanted than anyone else who ever lived there.

    The only thing stopping Gibraltar from being decolonised (if you consider independence as the ultimate form of decolonisation) is the Spanish government. Spain has a legal right to Gibraltar if (and only if) the British decide to relinquish sovereignty.
    The situation is somewhat ananlogous to the Falklands Islands, as Argentina would also probably try to block independence, although (unlike in the case of Gibraltar) they have no legal right to do so.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 09:36 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • J.A. Roberts

    Crackpot, I very much doubt Spain has a legal right to Gibraltar if the UK decide to relinquish sovereignty. That would only be the case if the Treaty of Utrecht was still in effect, which it isn't. It was abrogated 100s of years ago. The UK/FCO always put that “first refusal to Spain” thing in just to keep the Spanish happy, a spot of diplomacy, but without any legal effect whatsoever.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 09:49 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Ken Ridge

    2 Betelgeuse
    You speak the tongue of a typical malvinist, please educate yourself before posting crap.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 10:28 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Clyde15

    In the meantime, there are more Spanish fishing boats off the Scottish coast than there are Scottish fishing boats. As a country we have to accept this under EU fishing policy. Why can't the Spanish next to Gib.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 10:41 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Steveu

    No doubt Spain will be giving back their two enclaves in Morocco then? ;-)

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 10:48 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • cLOHO

    and western sahara also on the African mainland...

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 11:39 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Steveu

    @10 It's interesting that both Spain and Argentina have no claim over their neighbours by virtue of treaties that they signed (I'm not suggesting in the case of the FI that Argentina ever had a realistic claim in any case)

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 11:52 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • EnginnerAbroad

    @2

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 12:16 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Crackpot

    #11 J.A. Roberts: “I very much doubt Spain has a legal right to Gibraltar if the UK decide to relinquish sovereignty”

    True, but at least they have some legal basis for a claim, even if the Treaty is outmoded and full of bizarre components that are totally unsuitable today (eg, no Jews allowed). Both the UK and Spain cherry pick the bits of the Treaty that suit them best. Probably time for a new treaty that allows the option of full independence without hindrance from Spain. In reality, Spain is well aware that nothing will ever happen in Gibraltar apart from continuing with the status quo (with the UN eventually accept the the idea that a territory can be considered decolonised, but still retain UK sovereignty, as long as that is what the inhabitants want; same will happen with the Falklands) or full sovereignty. A transfer of sovereignty will never happen (the era of passing territories back and forwards between nations is long gone). It's not a terribly emotive issue in Spain (where I am at the moment) - they just deal with it like a modern, grown up country should (most of the time, anyway; the issue of them thinking Gibraltar has no territorial waters is just bizarre).

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 12:25 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • EnginnerAbroad

    Apologies to all for the above post, accidently pressed the return key.

    @2
    “Unfortunately, the UK continues to rely on a discredited interpretation of the principle of self-determination”

    How are you interpreting “discredited”. The UN I am afraid very much disagrees with you.

    The Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples says that all peoples have the right to self-determination.

    According to General Assembly resolution 1541 (XV) of 1961, there are three ways in which a Non-Self-Governing Territory can exercise self-determination and reach a full measure of self-government:
    By free association with the administering Power or another independent State as a result of a free and voluntary choice by the people of the Territory expressed through an informed and democratic process;
    By integrating with the administering Power or another independent State on the basis of complete equality between the peoples of the Non-Self-Governing Territory and those of the Independent State;
    By becoming independent.

    Whichever option the people of each Non-Self-Governing Territory freely elect, once they understand the possibilities and the special characteristics of their homeland.
    The mandate of the Committee of 24 is based on the principle that the result of the decolonization process would be one of the three above mentioned options (free association, integration with an independent State or independence).

    Taken directly from http://www.un.org/en/decolonization/questions_answers.shtml

    In addition you will find a resolution passed by the general council of the UN in 2008 reiterated that self determination holds precedence even in cases of sovereign integrity and when a sovereignty dispute exists. http://www.un.org/en/decolonization/questions_answers.shtml

    Seems to me like the British view of Self determination is more credited than discredited as you claim.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 12:35 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • J.A. Roberts

    “Probably time for a new treaty that allows the option of full independence without hindrance from Spain”

    It already exists, and has done since 1948, signed and ratified by both the UK and Spain. It's called the UN Charter. I just wish Spain would man up and deal with the fact that Gibraltar's future is not a matter for Spain (or the UK for that matter), but for the Gibraltarians.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 12:37 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Lord Ton

    There is NO interpretation of Self-determination. There is NO definition. The matter was considered in 1952, and the term was left open-ended and undefined, quite deliberately.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 12:44 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • EnginnerAbroad

    @21

    Check out the links above from the UN, althougth there has never beena formal defintion there are accepted ways as to how a people claim self determination and that it holds prescedence even in cases of dispute.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 12:52 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Simon68

    2 Betelgeuse (#)
    Aug 21st, 2012 - 01:28 am

    You say: “In cases such as these, the implanted population has a right to have their 'interests' considered...”

    Have a look at: http://www.gibyellow.gi/

    Check out the number of Gomez, Fernandez and Gonzalez (80, 16, 65 respectively), does this look like an “implanted” population of jingoistic Brits?

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 01:34 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Conqueror

    @1 They are “rights” not “rites”. “Rites” are what CFK performs to try to call up evil spirits before she opens her le...sorry, mouth.
    @2 Unfortunately for your state of abysmal ignorance, Spain ceded Gibraltar IN PERPETUITY. That means FOREVER. In 1713, there were no such things as “territorial waters” except where there was a gun. Let's list some countries that have been “colonised”, have “implanted” populations and should only have their “interests” considered. Argieland, Australia, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, Guyana, New Zealand, Paraguay, Peru, South Africa, Uruguay, USA, Venezuela,
    You seem to have ignored the fact that the UN Decolonisation Committee is totally discredited. Apart from those states that think they can use it.
    Have you ignored the fact that NO country had legally recognised territorial waters until the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea 1973-1982. So Spain can shove the Treaty of Utrecht up its jacksie. UN resolutions. Non-binding. But right at the top of the list of important considerations is the wishes of the people of Gibraltar. Britain defends. Spain sinks. Does anybody know the depth of “The Bay”? But Spanish wrecks on the bottom will make wonderful starts for reefs. The “Linea fish fleet” reef, the “Algeciras fish fleet” reef, the “Guardia Civil” reef, the “Spanish Customs” reef, the “Spanish Navy” reef.
    What a pity there are so many Spanish wankers that are indistinguishable from argie wankers. But there is hope. Argie wankers are clearly an “implanted population” and need to be returned whence they came. That should give Spain something to think about. And maybe Italy as well! Can we just think about how they'll enjoy a 42 million increase in their populations! And all that lovely land in South America. Just made for the Falkland Islanders to expand into! Spain and Italy could turn into European equivalents of India. The paddy fields. The carpets of bodies sleeping on the pavements!

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 04:27 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • aussie sunshine

    man!! this is what the UK does not need..another front opened.
    The UK does not need a confrontation with Spain right now. They should tell Gibraltar to lay low.The International image of the Uk is deteriorating from The Americas to Asia and including Northern Ireland where the new IRA is making a comeback. Include Russia where diplomatic relations are at the lowest level.
    @24 I see you still haven´t seen a shrink. Make a date as soon as possible before your mental situation deteriorates.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 04:40 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • cLOHO

    25 ... Apart from a squabble with a tinpot SA country over them harbouring a rapist and another spat with another tinpot country trying to steal the falkland islands I don't really see uk is seen in a negative way. The olympics have been a huge success welcoming the world and hosting them in a party of sport. the real IRA isn't making a comeback only a troll pretending to be from a former colony would make that mistake. pretend to be a citizen of a former colony nice one like the angle very clever.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 05:40 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • briton

    the world is a dangerouse place, and getting worse,

    spain is playing with fire,

    she is using gibralter to cover her own mess,
    its as simple as that.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 07:25 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • aussie sunshine

    It takes two to tango. So I say if Gibraltar keeps on harassing the Spanish fishermen then I recommend to the Spanish Authorities to keep the Gibraltans 5 or 6 hours at the border crossing and if they carry on extend the waiting period at the border to 10 hours simple as that no more f----* around with these lot.

    Aug 21st, 2012 - 10:35 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Betelgeuse

    @19 EnginnerAbroad

    You're correct about the fact that the UN has stated that 'all peoples have the right to self-determination'. However, the germane question here is whether the current occupants of Gibraltar are 'a people' or not. There are a number of reasons which preclude the granting of that status. Firstly, they are not a population indigenous to Gibraltar, but were gradually settled there by Britain after it had expelled the Spanish population that lived there. Moreover, they are not sufficiently distinct from the British metropolitan population to be considered ‘a people’. Their status as ‘a people’ has never been recognized by the UN, who have consistently called them a ‘population’ but never a ‘people’.

    Even if they were 'a people', this would not automatically give them a right to self-determination that could override the territorial integrity principle that applies to colonial enclaves (see @2).

    In addition to the several UN resolutions requiring Gibraltar’s decolonisation, there is also the fact that the current trend in international State practice is for colonial enclaves to return to the mainland, irrespective of a valid treaty cession (see the following recent examples: Goa; Hong Kong; Macau; and Walvis Bay).

    This trend is supported by current ICJ case law. For example, in the Western Sahara case the ICJ found that some pre-existing legal ties of a third state to the territory colonized by some other state could in principle affect the decolonization of the territory (see para. 162 in particular).

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 02:15 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Lord Ton

    Enginneer Abroad - I spend half my life looking at the UN - so let me repeat THERE IS NO LEGAL DEFINITION FOR THE TERM 'SELF-DETERMINATION” - IT REMAINS UNDEFINED. IT REMAINS OPEN-ENDED !!

    Got it ?

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 06:01 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Betelgeuse

    @23

    The demographics of Gibraltar reflects Gibraltarians' racial and cultural fusion of the many European and non-European immigrants who were encouraged by the UK to move to Gibraltar.

    The majority are British, Genoese and other Italians, Maltese, Jews and Portuguese.

    They are the descendants of economic migrants that were encouraged by the British to move to Gibraltar to service its naval base after the Spanish population living there was displaced by the British in 1704. They fully meet the definition of a non-indigenous transplanted population.

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 06:51 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • HansNiesund

    @28

    Same proposal as General Franco's. I didn't know you were a fan.

    @31

    If that is the definition of a non indigenous transplanted population, it applies equally to all former colonies.

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 06:58 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Lord Ton

    And the term 'transplanted' has no meaning/ places no restriction on the eercise of self-determination. Nowhere in the UN Charter does it say “except for transplanted populations”. Nowhere.

    The people of Gibraltar have the right to determine their own future; just as the people of the Falkland Islands have the right to determine their own future; just as the people of Bermuda have the right to determine teir own future; just as the people of Catalonia have the right ...... etc, etc.

    The term remains undefined, unlimited, unconditional.

    In 1952 it was quite obvious to the members of the UN that everyone had a different idea of what the term meant. So it was left as it was.

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 07:40 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Clyde15

    #28
    They tried this about 40 years ago when they closed the border.
    All that happened was that the Spaniards in La Linea lost their jobs in Gib. and Moroccans supplied the labour force.
    Gib. still prospered. There are family ties on both sides of the frontier so the Spaniards get hurt as well as the Gibraltarians..
    Any more bright suggestions ?
    Spain neads Gib. more than Gib. needs Spain

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 09:14 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Simon68

    The vast majority of Gibraltarians have a direct descedence from Spanish stock, it only takes a look at the Gibraltar telphone book top prove it!!!

    Faux Aussie's comment about the delays at the frontier are totally stupid, the Gibraltarians don't go to Spain, the Spanish go to Gib!!!!

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 01:34 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • aussie sunshine

    * 35simple simon says. The Gibs have property all over Andalucia and buy goods in Andalucia so I say Keep the frontier waiting period 10 hours. It is nasty to be sitting in a car for 10 hours under the hot sun!! No fishing no quick way into Gib. Let´s not get caught up in the economics..Gib employ Spaniards bla bla bla bla let´s look at a political solution to this Pommie colony in Europe.

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 06:25 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • briton

    Are you lot not forgetting the most important thing of all,

    Democracy and freedom,
    It does not matter if they decent from European stock, of African stock,
    It does not matter if they come from mars the moon or Argentina,

    The fact is, they have a right to decide who they wish to be, just like every other peoples in other countries,
    And the people of Gibraltar with to be [giblatarian] and to be part of Britain,
    And just like the Falklands, it is there choice,
    ……………………….
    But of course to you anti British indocronoughts,
    If they wish to be British, they are wrong, but if they choose Spain or argentina, then that is right,
    Is this not so,
    The real truth is, you want them, they don’t want you, and you are jealous and envious,

    At the end of the day, we call it democracy and freedom,
    You want it a dictatorship,

    Please prove me wrong,
    There country there choice,,
    Not yours

    Just a British thoughts .
    lol
    .

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 07:08 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Clyde15

    #36
    You have lived in S.Spain and Gibraltar to talk with such authority have you ? It's amazing to hear from people who have nothing to with the problem spouting half-baked ideas without having to face the consequences of their action.
    OK then, how about if we banished Spanish trawlers from UK waters or made them land their catches at Scottish ports for fisheries identification against quotas. I would designate my local fishing port of Troon for this job. They would need about two days to reach the port from the west Atlantic. The fisheries protection officer would have to have the total catch unloaded and examine each fish for species and size. This would take about three days while the fish were going off. If satisfied , they could be loaded onto container lorries and head off to the S. of Spain where they are sold. On the way to the channel. they could be pulled off the road for a stringent vehicle inspection to ensure that they met the requirements of UK law - quite a few don't. Then the driver's hours may well be exceeded meaning that he would have to have a break before he could continue. By the time he arrived in Spain - normally a two day trip, the fish would be ripe ! All this would be legal under EU fishing policy law.
    Why not ask the Spaniards what their opinion would be as they would lose a living if this happened..
    Two can play at silly buggers and still solve nothing.

    Did I see in one of your posts that you were part Serbian ?
    If so, that is something to be proud of.
    You happily criticize the UK on every aspect of life when your ancestors come from a country that practised genocide on a section of their population who's crime was to be moslem. Kosovo ?
    If I am mistaken about your ancestry, then I apologise unreservedly for the above remarks.

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 07:26 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • aussie sunshine

    *38 How can you banish spanish trailers from The uk?? Member states cannot ban another member from its waters. If Gibraltar is part of the EU, what right have they to banish spanish trailers?Gibraltar should have the right to fish in spanish waters and spanish trailers in Gib waters, but these Gibs are so anti spanish that they take the law into their own hands and pretend that they are right??!!and expect Spanish authorities to stand by and do nothing....

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 08:30 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • briton

    when we get of this euro gravy train,, all spannish ships will be banned,
    they will have to fish in argentine waters .lol.

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 09:34 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Conor

    @39
    Actually Gibraltar isn't a full member of the EU, it has a membership status but it hasn't signed up to much of the Brussels created legislation on fishing. Oh and even if they did, Gibraltar still has the right to refuse certain countries in some circumstances, especially if they have a habit of overfishing-which the spanish fisheries do. So everything you have just said about the “Gibs” being anti-spanish and taking the law into their own hands is incorrect. Oh and by the way, the Spanish haven't allowed Gibraltarian boats to fish in their waters in the first place so why should they expect the Gibraltarian's to extend them the same rights.

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 10:28 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Furry-Fat-Feck

    38 Clyde15 (#)
    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 07:26 pm

    ** LIKE **

    Turn right Clyde!

    Aug 22nd, 2012 - 11:00 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • British_Kirchnerist

    If Gibralter and the Falklands are to have the same size of territorial waters as China and India surely that just isn't fair? And is there any reason than anti-Spanish jingoism not to give Spanish boats permits?

    Aug 23rd, 2012 - 12:33 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Conor

    @43
    You really are pathetic aren't you? Every country on earth gets an equal size of territorial waters, 200 miles is the exclusion zone for every, country, province, state, territory and dependency. And the overall size is actually phenomenally smaller for the falklands as the geographical size of China for example gives them a massive amount of ocean space. Oh and as for the ”anti-Spanish read my comment to understand.

    Aug 23rd, 2012 - 12:43 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Lord Ton

    Fair ! What are you whittering on about. Size makes no difference, although both China and India have a longer coast-line with which to benefit from the 200 mile limit.

    Do grow up!

    Aug 23rd, 2012 - 12:44 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Betelgeuse

    @33 Lord Ton

    You're incorrect when you state that the principle of self-determination '...remains undefined, unlimited, unconditional'. There are well established legal criteria for determining which groups may legitimately claim the right to self-determination under international law.
    The current occupants of Gibraltar’s alleged right to self-determination is highly dubious for the following reasons:
    They do not constitute ‘a people’, and only ‘a people’ is entitled to self-determination under international law. They are not ‘a people’ because they are not a population indigenous to Gibraltar, but were gradually settled there by Britain after it had expelled the Spanish population that lived there. Moreover, they are not sufficiently distinct from the British metropolitan population to be considered ‘a people’. Their status as ‘a people’ has never been recognized by the UN, who have consistently called them a ‘population’ but never a ‘people’. Even if they were a people, this would not automatically give them a right to self-determination that could override the territorial integrity principle that applies to colonial enclaves such as Gibraltar and the Falklands.

    Moreover, the current trend in international State practice is for colonial enclaves to return to the mainland, irrespective of a valid treaty cession (Goa; Hong Kong; Macau; and Walvis Bay).

    This trend is supported by current ICJ case law. For example, in the Western Sahara case the ICJ found that some pre-existing legal ties of a third state to the territory colonized by some other state could in principle affect the decolonization of the territory (see para. 162 in particular).

    You might like to have a look at the following reference by an eminent British international lawyer, and Cambridge University Professor, as just one authority which nicely sets out the relevant international law principles: James Crawford, The Creation of States in International Law (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1979) at 377-85.

    Aug 23rd, 2012 - 06:40 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Lord Ton

    No Betelgeuse it is YOU that are wrong. Show me these “well established legal criteria ”; show me where it says, “They do not constitute ‘a people’. Show me where is mentions that a people has to be ”indigenous.”

    Prove your case!

    You cannot of course, because the UN has never said any of these things. There are no ICJ cases determining either 'peoples' or limiting the right to 'self-determination'.

    And the rest of your post is just bullsh*t !

    Aug 23rd, 2012 - 07:56 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • HansNiesund

    @46

    This is one of the more tragi-comic aspects of the Falklands/Gibraltar irredentist agenda, the attempt to deny, through legal contortions and bogus analogies, the people most directly involved a voice in their own destiny. And calling it decolonization. It's hysterical.

    In the meantime, the principle of self-determination is upheld for alleged rapists holed up in the Ecuadorean embassy.

    Aug 23rd, 2012 - 08:28 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Lord Ton

    Confusing Hans - the peoples of Gibraltar have previously exercised their right to self-determination in a referendum.

    The people of the Falkland Islands will be exercising their right in next year's referendum.

    Neither people are being denied, through legal contortions, bogus analogies or otherwise, a voice in their own destiny. Both peoples are firmly grasping their own destinies.

    The law relies on decisions, not beatle's “trends”; nor even on untested opinions. There are no restrictions on 'self-determination' although many Nations would like there to be so; and there is no definitions of 'people', again in spite of the fact that many rather less than democratic nations would like to impose them.

    The matter remains sufficiently open for the UK's Government to quite rightly support the right of both these peoples to decide their own futures.

    Aug 23rd, 2012 - 09:14 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • HansNiesund

    > Neither people are being denied, through legal contortions, bogus analogies or otherwise, a voice in their own destiny. Both peoples are firmly grasping their own destinies.

    The point I am making, is that Betelguese and co, would deny them precisely that, and call it decolonization.

    Aug 23rd, 2012 - 09:17 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Lord Ton

    Ah - I was not certain. Thank you for the clarification :-)

    Aug 23rd, 2012 - 09:28 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • HansNiesund

    My fault, should've been clearer :-)

    Aug 23rd, 2012 - 09:39 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Clyde15

    #39
    Quite easily. Cast your mind back a few years. French farmers blockaded French channel ports and the French authorities and the EU did nothing.
    British imports of lamb were stopped by French farmers, container lorries attacked and the lamb taken out and burned by the protesters. The French authorities looked the other way and the EU took ages to do anything.
    Yes, banning the vessels would be illegal under EU law and as one of the few countries who always obey the EU laws we would not do so BUT there is more than one way of skinning a cat ! Trawl wires could be cut “accidently”. Spanish fishing boats have run across Scottish fishing boat's trawl wires on purpose in the past. Spanish vessels could be required to go to a designated UK port for maritime safety inspections - our safety laws are among the strictest in the world.
    Gentle “harassment” would make the fishing unprofitable without breaking any law. The fishing trade in Galicia would collapse and I am sure that they would turn to their government to negotiate the point with the UK.

    Aug 23rd, 2012 - 10:33 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • cLOHO

    love it the right to self determination doesn't apply to Gibraltar & Falklands but it does to any former French or Spanish colnonies.. Funny that never applies to anyone apart from the UK, although this has never been stated by the UN just made up by Brit haters?

    Aug 23rd, 2012 - 04:56 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Betelgeuse

    @54

    There is no conspiracy here. In fact you yourself have identified the nub of the issue. The limitation only applies to existing colonies - not former colonies that are now independent States.

    Aug 25th, 2012 - 06:13 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • cLOHO

    55... who says that???? You do , not the UN. I wonder if it applies to French Guinana ??? Oh no because that even though being on the south American continent is a metropolitan borough or region of france!!
    ! You have failed to provide any evidence.

    Aug 25th, 2012 - 08:52 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Betelgeuse

    @47

    Lord Ton

    Your insults only serve to highlight the poverty of your arguments and the bankruptcy of the case you are attempting to prosecute.

    I have already outlined the criteria and the relevant ICJ case law. I have also provided an authoritative reference on the relevant international law principles for you to check for yourself (all at @46 above). Have you bothered to have a look – or is your mind shut tight?

    Why do you think the UN General Assembly adopted Resolution 2353 (XXII), which observed that the referendum conducted by Gibraltar in 1967 was invalid?

    Since you are obviously having problems with the logic try thinking of it this way – what if a group of people from say Ireland established an Irish colony on the eastern coast of England and then claimed a right under the principle of self-determination to have the land they are occupying declared a part of Ireland.

    Can you imagine the threat to world peace and stability that would ensue if such action were legal? Can you now see the logic behind the legal criteria that limits the right to self-determination and why as a matter of common sense and international law, a coloniser cannot legally disrupt the territorial

    @56

    No - its not me it's the UN. French Guiana does not appear on the UN's list of non-self governing territories. However, Gibraltar does (see http://www.un.org/en/decolonization/nonselfgovterritories.shtml).

    Aug 26th, 2012 - 12:57 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Lord Ton

    No insults beatle - you cannot prove your case.

    I do not have a problem with logic - but I am trained in the law. Opinions are worth nothing unless substantiated by a court. Yours are not - nor even those of your 'eminent' lawers.

    Prove your case beatle or be seen as a fraud!!

    All the rest of you post is a feeble attempt to distract. Stick to the issue. WHERE IS YOUR EVIDENCE ? WHERE ARE YOUR COURT DECISIONS??

    Aug 26th, 2012 - 12:05 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • Pete Bog

    @57
    “what if a group of people from say Ireland established an Irish colony on the eastern coast of England and then claimed a right under the principle of self-determination to have the land they are occupying declared a part of Ireland.”

    If the English people inhabiting that part of the east coast wanted to be Irish , then it would be Irish under the rules of self-determination, if it was so when the UN was formed and when the UN charter (Including the rights of all peoples to freely determine their futurewas drawn up).

    Aug 27th, 2012 - 11:35 am - Link - Report abuse 0
  • HansNiesund

    @57
    And if they had a Treaty stating the land was theirs, it would be pointless looking for legal loopholes whose aim was to deny them a voice in their own destiny, and hypocritical in the extreme to call any such aim “decolonization”.

    Aug 27th, 2012 - 03:34 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • row82

    Please support Falklands Truth - it's a campaign page to promote the truth about the Falkland Islands and destroy Argentina's fascistic agenda https://www.facebook.com/truthfk

    Aug 27th, 2012 - 03:43 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • shb

    Is Spain going to negotiate with Morrocco about it's colonies over in North Africa any time soon?

    Spain employs double standards.

    Aug 27th, 2012 - 10:58 pm - Link - Report abuse 0
  • British_Kirchnerist

    #62 It should. And if you think so too, but want to stonewall Spain on Gibralter, does that make you guilty of double standards?

    Aug 28th, 2012 - 12:26 am - Link - Report abuse 0

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