THE HAGUE, Netherlands
The United Nation's top court has sided with Equatorial Guinea in a row with Gabon over three islands in potentially oil-rich waters.
The two Central African
countries have been arguing over the isles - Conga, Mbanié and Cocoteros -
since the early 1970s.
The islands are virtually
uninhabited but are in a maritime zone thought to contain significant oil
deposits.
The International Court of
Justice (ICJ) ruled that Equatorial Guinea's claim - based on a 1900 treaty
dividing up French and Spanish colonial assets - should be honoured.
The court dismissed Gabon's
central argument - that a more recent treaty, the 1974 Bata convention, had
switched the islands' sovereignty in its favour.
In a final and binding ruling,
the ICJ said Conga, Mbanié and Cocoteros were held by Spain, and then passed to
its former colony Equatorial Guinea at independence in 1968.Courtesy
Gabon will now have to remove
its soldiers from Mbanié, the largest of the islands.
In 1972, the Gabonese army
drove Equatoguinean troops from Mbanié and established its own military
presence there.
Hostilities cooled until the
early 2000s, when the prospect of oil in the Gulf of Guinea became apparent.
In 2016, following years of
mediation by the United Nations, the two nations agreed to let the ICJ settle
the matter.
A spokesperson for the
Gabonese presidency said it was now down to the countries to negotiate in the
light of the ruling, the AFP news agency reports.
"Gabon and Equatorial
Guinea have to live side-by-side, we can't move away from each other. Therefore
we will have to talk it over to solve all these problems," said Guy
Rossatanga-Rignault.
Both countries are significant
oil producers. However, they have experienced falling oil production in recent
years due to underinvestment, insufficient exploration activity and ageing
wells.
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