MARITIME DISPUTE WITH INDIA Bangladesh gets 19,467sq km area in Bay

MARITIME DISPUTE WITH INDIA

Bangladesh gets 19,467sq km area in Bay








Settling a longstanding India-Bangladesh maritime boundary dispute, a Hague-based international court has awarded Bangladesh 19,467square kilometres out of 25,602 sq km disputed area in the Bay of Bengal.
Foreign Minister AH Mahmood Ali disclosed this at a press briefing in the afternoon.
The Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) delivered the verdict after nearly five years of argument and counter argument by the two nations, spot visit by judges and examination of survey reports.
The judgemenThe judgement is final and cannot be appealed against. t is final and cannot be appealed against. 
Bangladesh Ambassador to the Netherlands Sheikh Mohammed Belal received the copy of the verdict at 2:00pm (Bangladesh time) yesterday at a ceremony at the PCA.
Indian Ambassador in the Hague Rajesh Nandan Prasad received it on behalf of his government.
Dhaka lodged the case against New Delhi with the PCA on October 8, 2009 after India unfairly cut off a significant portion of Bangladesh's maritime area in the Bay.
The verdict delivered by the German-based International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) on March 14, 2012 sustained Bangladesh's claim to 200 nautical miles exclusive economic zone and territorial rights in the Bay of Bengal against Myanmar's claim.
Representatives from both the parties and Tribunal members
The court concluded its hearings on December 18, 2013 at the Peace Palace in The Hague.
The PCA is a permanent judicial body established by the United Nations in 1899 to facilitate arbitration and other forms of resolution of dispute between states.
The judges of the court are Prof Dr Rüdiger Wolfrum (president), Thomas A Mensah, Dr Pemmaraju Sreenivasa Rao, Prof Ivan Shearer and Jean-Pierre Cot.



Google Ads 84