
-
UEFA move to defuse anger over Infantino delay at FIFA Congress
-
Biden thanks supporters for 'love' after cancer diagnosis
-
Abhishek blitz knocks Lucknow out of IPL play-off race
-
After Putin call, Trump says Ukraine truce talks to start 'immediately'
-
Italian designer Piccioli named creative director at Balenciaga
-
US top court allows lifting of legal protections for Venezuelans
-
Six Nations 2026 to start on Thursday to avoid Winter Olympics clash
-
El Salvador arrests rights lawyer helping deported migrants
-
Biden cancer diagnosis fuels Trump team's cover-up claims
-
Bolsonaro's trial on coup charges to begin in Brazil
-
Young Cameroonians face prospect of new bid by 92-year-old leader
-
Ex-Tour champion Vingegaard against 'stressful' Montmartre inclusion
-
Cairo-set Cannes thriller takes aim at Egypt's president
-
Nigeria needs good fathers, says director who made Cannes history
-
WHO guiding body gets to grips with budget beset by US pullback
-
Trump targets Beyonce in rant about endorsing Kamala Harris
-
AI talking trees feature at Chelsea Flower Show
-
Monkeys kidnap babies of another species in weird 'fad'
-
Trump calls Putin in push for Ukraine ceasefire
-
ICJ backs E.Guinea in spat with Gabon over oil-rich islands
-
UK man gets two-year suspended term for gold toilet theft
-
The battle by Chile torture site dwellers to remain
-
ICJ sides with E.Guinea in spat with Gabon over oil-rich islands
-
Kevin Spacey to get charity award in Cannes despite new scandal
-
Pope meets Vance ahead of Ukraine ceasefire push
-
How serious is Biden's prostate cancer diagnosis?
-
Perrier scandal bubbles up as French parliament slams cover-up
-
Gary Lineker: England's World Cup hero turned BBC's 'defining voice'
-
Failure means Man City would not 'deserve' Champions League: Guardiola
-
Joe Biden thanks supporters for 'love' after cancer diagnosis
-
Portugal's far-right party gains as premier holds on
-
Three things we learned from the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix
-
Gary Lineker to leave BBC after antisemitism row
-
Serie A title deciders to be played Friday
-
Russian ballet patriarch Yuri Grigorovich dies at 98
-
Gary Lineker to leave BBC after social media 'error'
-
New 'Frankenstein' will be no horror flick, Del Toro says
-
Indian, Romanian climbers die on Nepal's Lhotse
-
EU relief as centrist wins Romania vote but tensions remain
-
African players in Europe: Ndiaye gives Everton perfect send-off
-
UK forges new ties with EU in post-Brexit era
-
Trump to call Putin in push for Ukraine ceasefire
-
Guinness maker Diageo cuts costs, eyes US tariff hit
-
Farioli resigns as Ajax coach due to 'different visions'
-
Trump turning US into authoritarian regime, says Emmy winner
-
Far right gains in Portuguese polls as PM holds on
-
French state covered up Nestle water scandal: Senate report
-
French intelligence rejects Telegram founder's claim of Romania vote meddling
-
Trump tariffs force EU to cut 2025 eurozone growth forecast
-
Israel will 'take control of all' of Gaza, PM says
RYCEF | 1.92% | 10.91 | $ | |
RBGPF | 2.33% | 64.5 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.27% | 22.11 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.07% | 22.045 | $ | |
AZN | 0.7% | 69.295 | $ | |
NGG | 1.42% | 72.31 | $ | |
RIO | -0.64% | 62.24 | $ | |
SCS | -1.55% | 10.34 | $ | |
GSK | 0.32% | 37.76 | $ | |
VOD | 1.92% | 9.635 | $ | |
BTI | 1.8% | 43.42 | $ | |
BP | -1.62% | 29.285 | $ | |
BCC | -1.14% | 90.87 | $ | |
BCE | -0.3% | 21.495 | $ | |
RELX | 0.7% | 54.955 | $ | |
JRI | -0.49% | 12.837 | $ |

ICJ backs E.Guinea in spat with Gabon over oil-rich islands
The top United Nations court on Monday sided with Equatorial Guinea in a decades-long dispute with Gabon over three tiny islands in potentially oil-rich waters.
The two west African nations have been squabbling over the 30-hectare (74-acre) island of Mbanie and two smaller low-lying islets, Cocotiers and Conga, since the early 1970s.
The islands themselves are tiny and virtually uninhabited but lie in an area potentially rich in oil and gas.
The dispute dates all the way back to 1900, when then colonial powers France and Spain signed a treaty in Paris setting out the borders between the two countries.
But Gabon argued that a later treaty, the 1974 Bata Convention, then fixed the islands' sovereignty in their favour.
However, the International Court of Justice ruled that the Bata Convention "invoked by the Gabonese Republic is not a treaty having the force of law... and does not constitute a legal title."
It said that the legal title to the islands was held by Spain, which then passed to Equatorial Guinea upon independence in 1968.
Unlike most countries appearing before the ICJ in The Hague, which rules in disputes between states, Guinea and Equatorial Guinea agreed to ask judges for a ruling in an effort to find an amical solution.
The two countries asked the court to decide which legal texts are valid -- the Paris Treaty of 1900 or the Bata Convention of 1974.
Reacting to the ruling, a representative for Gabon, Guy Rossatanga-Rignault, said it was now down to the parties to negotiate in the light of the ruling.
"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," he told reporters.
The representatives for Equatorial Guinea declined to speak to reporters at the Peace Palace, the seat of the ICJ.
However, in hearings in October, Equatorial Guinea argued that Gabon invaded the islands in 1972 and had occupied them illegally ever since.
Lawyers for the country rubbished the Bata Convention in the October hearings, saying Gabon suddenly produced the document in 2003, surprising everyone.
"No one had seen or heard of this supposed convention," Domingo Mba Esono, Vice-Minister of Mines and Hydrocarbons from Equatorial Guinea, told ICJ judges.
"Moreover, the document presented was not an original but was only an unauthenticated photocopy," said Esono.
Philippe Sands, a lawyer representing Equatorial Guinea, dismissed the Bata Convention as "scraps of paper".
"You are being asked to rule that a state can rely on a photocopy of a photocopy of a purported document, the original of which cannot be found and of which no mention was made or any reliance placed for three decades," said Sands.
Equatorial Guinea has been asking for an original copy of the Bata Convention since 2003, so far in vain.
- 'Badly managed' -
But Marie-Madeleine Mborantsuo, honorary president of Gabon's constitutional court, argued that the Bata Convention "resolves all sovereignty issues regarding the islands and border delimitation".
She admitted that "sadly, neither of the two parties can find the original document", noting it was drawn up in an era before computers and databases.
"Archives were badly managed because of a number of things -- unfavourable climate, a lack of trained personnel and lack of technology," said Mborantsuo.
The court ruled that neither country seemed to regard the Bata Convention as binding upon them, meaning the court did not consider it the correct title in force.
Ch.Kahalev--AMWN