STATE CLAIMS IN VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 4 (LOSC ARTICLE 7), Guinea case

An egregious breach was committed by in its Decree of 1964 which purported to establish a single of 120 n.m. enclosing its entire coastline (see Fig. 5.14). The is somewhat indented in localities, but it certainly does not pass muster under any interpretation of the “deeply indented and cut into” language of Article 4 (LOSC Article 7). To view Sene Island in the in the south as together constituting an island fringe is also to misapprehend that requirement as it is used in the Convention. The have no spatial relationship to one another nor are they within 12 n.m. of the coast. Having failed to meet either geographical test under Article 4(1) (LOSC Article 7(1)), it hardly mattered that the followed the general direction of the coast.
In the course of an ongoing with over their common on the continental shelf, Guinea repealed its inappropriate baseline in July 1980, reverting to a baseline for the length of its coast.

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