|
International Court of Justice's advice
on Western Sahara's sovereignty 16 October 1975
| Author:
International Court of Justice |
| Date:
16 October 1975 |
| Title:
WESTERN SAHARA - Advisory Opinion of 16 October 1975 |
| Original language:
English |
| Concerning:
The UN General Assembly had asked the ICJ to give advice on two questions
concerning Western Sahara with the intention of deciding whether the
question of the sovereignty of the territory should be treated by the UN
Committee for Decolonisation. The questions were; "Was Western Sahara (Rio de Oro and Sakiet El Hamra) at the time of colonization by Spain a territory belonging to no one
(terra nullius)?"; and "What were the legal ties between this territory and the Kingdom of Morocco and the Mauritanian entity?" |
| Source:
ICJ web site |
WESTERN SAHARA
Advisory Opinion of 16 October 1975
In its Advisory Opinion which the General Assembly of the
United Nations had requested on two questions concerning Western
Sahara, the Court,
With regard to Question I, "Was Western Sahara (Rio de Oro
and Sakiet El Hamra) at the time of colonization by Spain a
territory belonging to no one (terra nullius)?",
- decided by 13 votes to 3 to comply with the request for an
advisory opinion;
- was unanimously of opinion that Western Sahara (Rio de Oro
and Sakiet El Hamra) at the time of colonization by Spain was not
a territory belonging to no one (terra nullius).
With regard to Question II, "What were the legal ties
between this territory and the Kingdom of Morocco and the
Mauritanian entity?", the Court
- decided by 14 votes to 2 to comply with the request for an
advisory opinion;
- was of opinion, by 14 votes to 2, that there were legal ties
between this territory and the Kingdom of Morocco of the kinds
indicated in the penultimate paragraph of the Advisory Opinion;
- was of opinion, by 15 votes to 1, that there were legal ties
between this territory and the Mauritanian entity of the kinds
indicated in the penultimate paragraph of the Advisory Opinion.
The penultimate paragraph of the Advisory Opinion was to the
effect that:
The materials and information presented to the Court show the
existence, at the time of Spanish colonization, of legal ties of
allegiance between the Sultan of Morocco and some of the tribes
living in the territory of Western Sahara. They equally show the
existence of rights, including some rights relating to the land,
which constituted legal ties between the Mauritanian entity, as
understood by the Court, and the territory of Western Sahara. On
the other hand, the Court's conclusion is that the materials and
information presented to it do not establish any tie of
territorial sovereignty between the territory of Western Sahara
and the Kingdom of Morocco or the Mauritanian entity. Thus the
Court has not found legal ties of such a nature as might affect
the application of General Assembly resolution 1514 (XV) in the
decolonization of Western Sahara and, in particular, of the
principle of self-determination through the free and genuine
expression of the will of the peoples of the Territory.
For these proceedings the Court was composed as follows:
President Lachs; Vice-President Ammoun; Judges Forster, Gros,
Bengzon, Petrén, Onyeama, Dillard, Ignacio-Pinto, de Castro,
Morozov, Jiménez de Aréchaga, Sir Humphrey Waldock, Nagendra
Singh and Ruda; Judge ad hoc Boni.
Judges Gros, Ignacio-Pinto and Nagendra Singh appended
declarations to the Advisory Opinion; Vice-President Ammoun and
Judges Forster, Petrén, Dillard, de Castro and Boni appended
separate opinions, and Judge Ruda a dissenting opinion.
In these declarations and opinions the judges concerned make
clear and explain their positions.
*
* *
Course of the Proceedings
(paras. 1-13 of Advisory Opinion)
The Court first recalls that the General Assembly of the United
Nations decided to submit two questions for the Court's advisory
opinion by resolution 3292 (XXIX) adopted on 13 December 1974 and
received in the Registry on 21 December. It retraces the
subsequent steps in the proceedings, including the transmission of
a dossier of documents by the Secretary-General of the United
Nations (Statute, Art. 65, para. 2) and the presentation of
written statements or letters and/or oral statements by 14 States,
including Algeria, Mauritania, Morocco, Spain and Zaire (Statute,
Art. 66).
Mauritania and Morocco each asked to be authorized to choose a
judge ad hoc to sit in the proceedings. By an Order of 22
May 1975 (I.C.J. Reports 1975, p. 6), the Court found that
Morocco was entitled under Articles 31 and 68 of the Statute and
Article 89 of the Rules of Court to choose a person to sit as
judge ad hoc, but that, in the case of Mauritania, the
conditions for the application of those Articles had not been
satisfied. At the same time the Court stated that those
conclusions in no way prejudged its views with regard to the
questions referred to it or any other question which might fall to
be decided, including those of its competence to give an advisory
opinion and the propriety of exercising that competence.
Competence of the Court
(paras. 14-22 of Advisory Opinion)
Under Article 65, paragraph 1, of the Statute, the Court may
give an advisory opinion on any legal question at the request of
any duly authorized body. The Court notes that the General
Assembly of the United Nations is suitably authorized by Article
96, paragraph 1, of the Charter and that the two questions
submitted are framed in terms of law and raise problems of
international law. They are in principle questions of a legal
character, even if they also embody questions of fact, and even if
they do not call upon the Court to pronounce on existing rights
and obligations. The Court is accordingly competent to entertain
the request.
Propriety of Giving an Advisory Opinion
(paras. 23-74 of Advisory Opinion)
Spain put forward objections which in its view would render the
giving of an opinion incompatible with the Court's judicial
character. It referred in the first place to the fact that it had
not given its consent to the Court's adjudicating upon the
questions submitted. It maintained (a) that the subject of
the questions was substantially identical to that of a dispute
concerning Western Sahara which Morocco, in September 1974, had
invited it to submit jointly to the Court, a proposal which it had
refused: the advisory jurisdiction was therefore being used to
circumvent the principle that the Court has no jurisdiction to
settle a dispute without the consent of the parties; (b)
that the case involved a dispute concerning the attribution of
territorial sovereignty over Western Sahara and that the consent
of States was always necessary for the adjudication of such
disputes; (c) that in the circumstances of the case the
Court could not fulfil the requirements of good administration of
justice with regard to the determination of the facts. The Court
considers (a) that the General Assembly, while noting that
a legal controversy over the status of Western Sahara had arisen
during its discussions, did not have the object of bringing before
the Court a dispute or legal controversy with a view to its
subsequent peaceful settlement, but sought an advisory opinion
which would be of assistance in the exercise of its functions
concerning the decolonization of the territory, hence the legal
position of Spain could not be compromised by the Court's answers
to the questions submitted; (b) that those questions do not
call upon the Court to adjudicate on existing territorial rights; (c)
that it has been placed in possession of sufficient information
and evidence.
Spain suggested in the second place that the questions
submitted to the Court were academic and devoid of purpose or
practical effect, in that the United Nations had already settled
the method to be followed for the decolonization of Western
Sahara, namely a consultation of the indigenous population by
means of a referendum to be conducted by Spain under United
Nations auspices. The Court examines the resolutions adopted by
the General Assembly on the subject, from resolution 1514 (XV) of
14 December 1960, the Declaration on the Granting of Independence
to Colonial Countries and Peoples, to resolution 3292 (XXIX) on
Western Sahara, embodying the request for advisory opinion. It
concludes that the decolonization process envisaged by the General
Assembly is one which will respect the right of the population of
Western Sahara to determine their future political status by their
own freely expressed will. This right to self-determination, which
is not affected by the request for advisory opinion and
constitutes a basic assumption of the questions put to the Court,
leaves the General Assembly a measure of discretion with respect
to the forms and procedures by which it is to be realized. The
Advisory Opinion will thus furnish the Assembly with elements of a
legal character relevant to that further discussion of the problem
to which resolution 3292 (XXIX) alludes.
Consequently the Court finds no compelling reason for refusing
to give a reply to the two questions submitted to it in the
request for advisory opinion.
Question 1: "Was Western Sahara (Rio de Oro and Sakiet El
Hamra) at the Time of Colonization by Spain a Territory Belonging to
No One (terra nullius)?"
(paras. 75-83 of Advisory Opinion)
For the purposes of the Advisory Opinion, the "time of
colonization by Spain" may be considered as the period
beginning in 1884, when Spain proclaimed its protectorate over the
Rio de Oro. It is therefore by reference to the law in force at
that period that the legal concept of terra nullius must be
interpreted. In law, "occupation" was a means of
peaceably acquiring sovereignty over territory otherwise than by
cession or succession; it was a cardinal condition of a valid
"occupation" that the territory should be terra
nullius. According to the State practice of that period,
territories inhabited by tribes or peoples having a social and
political organization were not regarded as terrae nullius: in
their case sovereignty was not generally considered as effected
through occupation, but through agreements concluded with local
rulers. The information furnished to the Court shows (a) that
at the time of colonization Western Sahara was inhabited by
peoples which, if nomadic, were socially and politically organized
in tribes and under chiefs competent to represent them; (b) that
Spain did not proceed upon the basis that it was establishing its
sovereignty over terrae nullius: thus in his Order of 26
December 1884 the King of Spain proclaimed that he was taking the
Rio de Oro under his protection on the basis of agreements entered
into with the chiefs of local tribes.
The Court therefore gives a negative answer to Question I. In
accordance with the terms of the request for advisory opinion,
"if the answer to the first question is in the
negative", the Court is to reply to Question II.
Question 11: "What Were the Legal Ties of This Territory
with the Kingdom of Morocco and the Mauritanian Entity?"
(paras. 84-161 of Advisory Opinion)
The meaning of the words "legal ties" has to be
sought in the object and purpose of resolution 3292 (XXIX) of the
United Nations General Assembly. It appears to the Court that they
must be understood as referring to such legal ties as may affect
the policy to be followed in the decolonization of Western Sahara.
The Court cannot accept the view that the ties in question could
be limited to ties established directly with the territory and
without reference to the people who may be found in it. At the
time of its colonization the territory had a sparse population
that for the most part consisted of nomadic tribes the members of
which traversed the desert on more or less regular routes,
sometimes reaching as far as southern Morocco or regions of
present-day Mauritania Algeria or other States. These tribes were
of the Islamic faith.
Morocco (paragraphs 90-129 of the Advisory Opinion) presented
its claim to legal ties with Western Sahara as a claim to ties of
sovereignty on the ground of an alleged immemorial possession of
the territory and an uninterrupted exercise of authority. In the
view of the Court, however, what must be of decisive importance in
determining its answer to Question II must be evidence directly
relating to effective display of authority in Western Sahara at
the time of its colonization by Spain and in the period
immediately preceding. Morocco requests that the Court should take
account of the special structure of the Moroccan State. That State
was founded on the common religious bond of Islam and on the
allegiance of various tribes to the Sultan, through their caids or
sheiks, rather than on the notion of territory. It consisted
partly of what was called the Bled Makhzen, areas actually subject
to the Sultan, and partly of what was called the Bled Siba, areas
in which the tribes were not submissive to him; at the relevant
period, the areas immediately to the north of Western Sahara lay
within the Bled Siba.
As evidence of its display of sovereignty in Western Sahara,
Morocco invoked alleged acts of internal display of Moroccan
authority, consisting principally of evidence said to show the
allegiance of Saharan caids to the Sultan, including dahirs and
other documents concerning the appointment of caids, the alleged
imposition of Koranic and other taxes, and acts of military
resistance to foreign penetration of the territory. Morocco also
relied on certain international acts said to constitute
recognition by other States of its sovereignty over the whole or
part of Western Sahara, including (a) certain treaties
concluded with Spain, the United States and Great Britain and
Spain between 1767 and 1861, provisions of which dealt inter
alia with the safety of persons shipwrecked on the coast of
Wad Noun or its vicinity, (b) certain bilateral treaties of the
late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries whereby Great
Britain, Spain, France and Germany were said to have recognized
that Moroccan sovereignty extended as far south as Cape Bojador or
the boundary of the Rio de Oro.
Having considered this evidence and the observations of the
other States which took part in the proceedings, the Court finds
that neither the internal nor the international acts relied upon
by Morocco indicate the existence at the relevant period of either
the existence or the international recognition of legal ties of
territorial sovereignty between Western Sahara and the Moroccan
State. Even taking account of the specific structure of that State,
they do not show that Morocco displayed any effective and
exclusive State activity in Western Sahara. They do, however,
provide indications that a legal tie of allegiance existed at the
relevant period between the Sultan and some, but only some, of the
nomadic peoples of the territory, through Tekna caids of the Noun
region, and they show that the Sultan displayed, and was
recognized by other States to possess, some authority or influence
with respect to those tribes.
The term "Mauritanian entity" (paragraphs 139-152 of
the Advisory Opinion) was first employed during the session of the
General Assembly in 1974 at which resolution 3292 (XXIX),
requesting an advisory opinion of the Court, was adopted. It
denotes the cultural, geographical and social entity within which
the Islamic Republic of Mauritania was to be created. According to
Mauritania, that entity, at the relevant period, was the Bilad
Shinguitti or Shinguitti country, a distinct human unit,
characterized by a common language, way of life, religion and
system of laws, featuring two types of political authority:
emirates and tribal groups.
Expressly recognizing that these emirates and tribes did not
constitute a State, Mauritania suggested that the concepts of
"nation" and of "people" would be the most
appropriate to explain the position of the Shinguitti people at
the time of colonization. At that period, according to Mauritania,
the Mauritanian entity extended from the Senegal river to the Wad
Sakiet El Hamra. The territory at present under Spanish
administration and the present territory of the Islamic Republic
of Mauritania thus together constituted indissociable parts of a
single entity and had legal ties with one another.
The information before the Court discloses that, while there
existed among them many ties of a racial, linguistic, religious,
cultural and economic nature, the emirates and many of the tribes
in the entity were independent in relation to one another; they
had no common institutions or organs. The Mauritanian entity
therefore did not have the character of a personality or corporate
entity distinct from the several emirates or tribes which
comprised it. The Court concludes that at the time of colonization
by Spain there did not exist between the territory of Western
Sahara and the Mauritanian entity any tie of sovereignty, or of
allegiance of tribes, or of simple inclusion in the same legal
entity. Nevertheless, the General Assembly does not appear to have
so framed Question II as to confine the question exclusively to
those legal ties which imply territorial sovereignty, which would
be to disregard the possible relevance of other legal ties to the
decolonization process. The Court considers that, in the relevant
period, the nomadic peoples of the Shinguitti country possessed
rights, including some rights relating to the lands through which
they migrated. These rights constituted legal ties between Western
Sahara and the Mauritanian entity. They were ties which knew no
frontier between the territories and were vital to the very
maintenance of life in the region.
Morocco and Mauritania both laid stress on the overlapping
character of the respective legal ties which they claimed Western
Sahara to have had with them at the time of colonization (paragraphs
153-160 of the Advisory Opinion). Although their views appeared to
have evolved considerably in that respect, the two States both
stated at the end of the proceedings that there was a north
appertaining to Morocco and a south appertaining to Mauritania
without any geographical void in between, but with some
overlapping as a result of the intersection of nomadic routes. The
Court confines itself to noting that this geographical overlapping
indicates the difficulty of disentangling the various
relationships existing in the Western Sahara region at the time of
colonization.
*
* *
For these reasons, the Court (paragraphs 162 and 163 of the
Advisory Opinion) gives the replies indicated on pages 1 and 2
above.
___________
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