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2 Sing. J. Int'l & Comp. L. 557 (1998)
The Roles of Flag States, Port States, Coastal States and International Organisations in the Enforcement of International Rules and Standards Governing the Safety of Navigation and the Prevention of Pollution from Ships under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea and Other International Agreements

handle is hein.journals/singa2 and id is 565 raw text is: Singapore Journal of International & Comparative Law
(1998) 2 pp 557 - 578
THE ROLES OF FLAG STATES, PORT STATES, -
COASTAL STATES AND INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATIONS
IN THE ENFORCEMENT OF INTERNATIONAL RULES AND
STANDARDS GOVERNING THE SAFETY OF NAVIGATION
AND THE PREVENTION OF POLLUTION FROM SHIPS
UNDER THE UN CONVENTION ON THE LAW OF THE SEA
AND OTHER INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS
I. INTRODUCTION
THE subject-matter of this paper is both wide and topical, allowing
me to concentrate on some trends and developments, placed in their
historical context. There are three preliminary issues which should
be noted.
A. The Convention on the Law of the Sea and
other International Agreements
The UN Convention on the Law of the Sea was memorably and correctly
described by Ambassador Tommy Koh, in his capacity of the President
of the Conference, as the constitution for the oceans.' The Convention
remains one of the principal achievements of the UN and a tribute
is due to Ambassador Koh for the role he played in securing the
adoption of the text despite well-known difficulties.2 The Convention
represents a framework which links together the fundamental rules
The term used by President Koh at the time of the Convention's adoption. The
full statement is reproduced in the UN Secretariat's booklet containing the text
of the Convention and the Final Act of the Conference (No 83 V 5), as well as
in Nordquist (Ed) UNCLOS 1982: A Community, (1985) Vol I, p 11 (hereafter the
Virginia Commentary).
2 Some of these difficulties were explained by Ambassador Satya Nandan in a
speech given in Hamburg at the time of the inauguration of the International
Tribunal for the Law of the Sea in October 1996.

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