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okay so our topic is public
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international
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and uh this not so important subject the
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first sunday of the bar
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[Music]
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okay so again it's the prayer of lawyers
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according to thomas morris
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[Music]
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but i hope nobody looks this way you
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know okay
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so sabine joseph's story
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the law is a jealous mistress and
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requires
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a long and constant called but this
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is not an excuse for me
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okay and then one thing that i have
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seen in the internet here lies a lawyer
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for the last time
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and when the lawyer dies he has to be
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buried in a standing position
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he has been lying all his life
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okay
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okay
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that a good lawyer knows the law of
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course you studied the law
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a better lawyer knows the judge
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but the best lawyer knows the judge
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is okay so everything that we'll be
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talking about this uh
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afternoon until tomorrow and sunday i
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believe
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would be taken from this book public
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international oh simplified
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uh an distributed author published by
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rex bookstore
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okay and for other updates you may
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subscribe to this youtube channel
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for other videos not only in public
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international constitutional
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labor maryland and some other surprises
00:03:19
so please don't
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do not forget to subscribe no yeah
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yeah okay sorry about public
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international law
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public international
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the branch of public law that regulates
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the relation between submarines
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and other entities that have been
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granted international personalities
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and from then on it was interchangeably
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used with the term
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laws of nations now what's the
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difference between public international
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law
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and conflicts of law or private
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international law
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because in the college of law there are
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two laws that you have to deal with
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two international laws i should say that
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you have
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to deal with one is public international
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and the other one is private
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international law also known as
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conflicts of law public international
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law because we all know this
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it's under political law while conflicts
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of lower private international law is
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under
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civil law okay so that is a public
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international it is international in
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character
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while conflicts of law or private
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international
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of course one is italian character but
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in international when we talk of
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municipal
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character we are talking not of the
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municipal level
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in our country but rather local no
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a municipal court is not the mtc but our
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supreme court in the sphere of
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international law
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then of course states or other
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submarines and the entities with
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international personality are the
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parties that are in
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for private international of course
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private individuals
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that currently now foreign private
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international law
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and then transactions the transactions
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of submarines or states
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and then of course private transactions
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no man for that things are conflicts of
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law now in terms
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of remedies in case of brits
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under public international you have
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pacific or hostel methods
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and under conflicts of law you go to the
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municipal tribunal or the local
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courts okay so those are the
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distinctions
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now in terms of division public
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international has the law of peace
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loss of war and the laws of neutrality
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okay so what are the sources of
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international law
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when a giant primary resources these are
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international treaties and conventions
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and as we go along we'll be discussing
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this treatise and conventions
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then you have international customs
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general principles of law
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and of course the secondary sources
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would be decisions of courts
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okay right now we have how many
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we have three international tribunals no
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one the icj which is under
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the united nations charter it is an it
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is an organ of the un
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international court of justice discuss
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that as you go along
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and then you have under the united
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nations convention on the laws of the
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sea
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you have the it log i mean it lost the
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national tribunal
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on the loss of the sea and then under
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the rome statute
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you have the icc or the international
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criminal courts
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so these are the three international
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tribunals whose decisions
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become secondary sources of
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international law
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now you might be wondering i know by
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some permanent court of arbitration
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that is not considered a court but
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rather it is an independent arbitral
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body
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that may be asked by these international
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tribunals or
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countries to resolve disputes amicably
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that's why
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when the philippines filed a case
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against the people's republic of china
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for the disputes territorial disputes
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maritime disputes
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under in that uh west philippine sea
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latina town and china and the south
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china sea we
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opted to go for arbitration that's why
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sabina it lost
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arbitration so arbitrators were
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appointed coming from the permanent
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court of arbitration we will discuss
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that in details as we go along with our
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discussion okay then teachings of
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publicis
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so what are the basis of international
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you have this law of nature school
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what is this it is based on the natural
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principle of right and wrong
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now in everything that we do and sabine
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thomas aquinas is a dominican
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the first rule of morality is do
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good and avoid evil illness
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do what is good avoid what is evil that
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is the first rule of
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morality but have to say when you are in
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the philippines
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the preoccupation of people is to do
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what is prohibited
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and avoid doing what is good
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enough so whether you are a nation or a
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state
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you have to do what is good and avoid
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what is evil
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in dealing with each other then of
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course
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you have the positivist school of
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thought that the binding force of
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international is derived from the
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agreement
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of the states because there is no state
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that is superior over
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other states where you have that
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principle of power and parana habit
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imperium equality of also brain
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so no state can claim dominance over
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other states so when we enter into a
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treaty
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our treaty or our agreement should be
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binding but we do not subordinate
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ourselves
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we are merely coordinating not
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subordinating
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ourselves okay so
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um and finally you have the eclectic or
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the grosjean school
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at the tournament it is
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a dutch statesman and also known as the
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father of international law
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but please do not ask me who the mother
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is i really do not know
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probably it's because international law
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is
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an illegitimate child of a beautiful
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father no
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okay it's a compromise between the two
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school support and consider
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international as a binding force
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because it is good and right and because
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it is agreed upon
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by the state right so your agreement
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must
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are binding provided they are based on
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the principle of right and wrong
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do what is good avoid what is evil
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okay now what are the functions of
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international laws
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promote international peace and security
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world peace
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and then foster friendly relation among
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nations so if there is
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relation among nations of the world then
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there would be peace and security
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provide oil orderly canada for
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regulation or regulation of conduct
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of states and their mutual billings 17
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to deal with other states because as the
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psychologists who tell us
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men are gregarious beings so if we are
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gregarious we cannot live in the
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in isolation so we need other people
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just like states
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we need other states there is that
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continuing interdependence among
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nations of the world so you cannot live
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in isolation
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but how do we transact with other states
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so of international law
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and then ensure international
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cooperation in the pursuit of certain
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common
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purposes economic social cultural
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humanitarian
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character now meron de ben
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to look for the cure at least a vaccine
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so that people would be immune from this
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virus coming from
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china uh
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so there is now a common goal to cure
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the virus
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that's one of the functions of
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international pharmaco cooperation
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but remember the united states of
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america the biggest contributor
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to the fans of the world health
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organization has already withdrawn its
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support
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dominated china and world health
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organization
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okay spokesperson
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world health organization anyway so why
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do we apply
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international law and local jurisdiction
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because number one
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the doctrine of incorporation that the
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principles of international law are
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adapted as
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the municipal law of the land and we
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have that in no less than our
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constitution
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article 2 section 2 that the philippines
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renounces war as an instrument of
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national policy
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adopts a generally accepted principles
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of international law
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as part of the law of the land and
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adheres to the policy of peace
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equality justice freedom cooperation
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and army with all nations
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okay so we also have the so-called
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kellung bryant
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i think wooden statement on that the
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philippines renounces war
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as an instrument of national policy in
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itself
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is an integration or adoption of an
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international principle
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also known as the pact of paris also
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known as the kellogg bryant
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because it was facilitated by bra frank
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kellogg
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and our steve brian
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kobe bryan bryan foreign
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a uh secretary of state in the united
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states of america
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the general treaty for renunciation of
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war as an instrument of national
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policy and in that agreement and
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sovereign disputes or conflicts
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of whatever nature or whatever origin
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maybe they may which may arise among
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them
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must be resolved in accordance
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with peaceful means not
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war that's why there is renunciation of
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war
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but
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in china i like
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so one filipino soldier 20 chinese
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soldiers
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anyway so indian artillery announced a
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lot of original war
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we are renouncing war of aggression
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but we do not pronounce a war to defend
00:15:37
ourselves
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where the war of self-defense is not
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renounced
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in any way because the right to
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self-defense
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is always a right of everyone
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okay now
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uh let me proceed oh
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okay
00:16:00
and then of course
00:16:06
secretary of justice versus ralph
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lanchon
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okay january 18 2007
00:16:14
under the doctrine of incorporation
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rules of international
00:16:17
shall form part of the law of the land
00:16:20
and no further legislative action
00:16:22
is needed to make such rules applicable
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in domestic sphere the doctrine of
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incorporation is applied whenever
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municipal tribunals or local courts are
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confronted
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with situations in which there appear to
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be a conflict
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between a rule of international law and
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the provision of the constitution
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okay however you have to remember that
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if an international law
00:16:46
is in conflict with our constitution our
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constitution prevails
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why because that is the doctrine of
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constitutional supremacy
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as enunciated by the supreme court in
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that case of manila prince hotel versus
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gsis
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being the fundamental of the land it is
00:17:04
supreme
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over others okay anxious
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why we apply uh international and local
00:17:13
jurisdiction
00:17:14
is the doctrine of transformation
00:17:25
law is not a binding law
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locally
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but it cannot be enforced locally in the
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absence of a counterpart
00:17:38
legislation and i know 2007
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public international law distinguish a
00:17:46
soft law
00:17:47
from a hard glow somebody knows
00:17:51
a shop law is not yet motivated
00:17:55
it becomes hard there after well i do
00:17:57
not know what they were talking about no
00:17:59
so an international law cannot be
00:18:00
enforced locally
00:18:02
unless there is a counterpart local
00:18:04
legislation so international
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it is in the nature of isoflow
00:18:09
local law that is the highest law okay
00:18:12
so
00:18:17
international law will be transformed
00:18:20
into a local law
00:18:22
to make it implementable in the local
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sphere
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okay now who are the subjects of
00:18:28
international law
00:18:31
the subjects of international as you can
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see from your screen
00:18:34
of the states colonies and dependencies
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mandates and trust territories you have
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the vatican
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the united nations religion communities
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international administrative bodies and
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to some extent individuals
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but later on in that case of binoya
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versus executive secretary
00:18:51
the supreme court was saying that
00:18:53
individuals are not subjects of
00:18:55
international
00:18:56
law okay
00:18:59
that international sphere for
00:19:00
additionally all the only means
00:19:02
available for individuals to bring a
00:19:04
claim
00:19:04
within the international legal system
00:19:06
has been when the individual
00:19:08
is able to persuade the government to
00:19:10
bring blame
00:19:12
on the individual's behalf
00:19:15
and even then it is not the individual's
00:19:17
rights that are being asserted
00:19:19
but rather the state's own rights
00:19:29
asking for compensation and public
00:19:32
apology from
00:19:33
the japanese government because
00:19:36
apparently they were the victims of
00:19:40
sexual
00:19:41
assault and continuous rape during the
00:19:44
war
00:19:45
by the japanese soldiers the members of
00:19:47
the japanese imperial army
00:19:49
so hindi
00:19:58
they were also asking for compensation
00:20:00
from the japanese government
00:20:03
and problems
00:20:07
and this treaty between the philippine
00:20:08
government and japan
00:20:10
and based on the treaty the philippine
00:20:12
government has already renounced all
00:20:13
claims against the japanese government
00:20:15
in nineteen fifty one indi alabama
00:20:18
compared to benito
00:20:19
they only came out in 1990s no the 1990s
00:20:25
and compensation saving supreme but you
00:20:27
cannot go there you cannot go to japan
00:20:29
you cannot file your individual claims
00:20:31
in an international tribunal so you have
00:20:33
to be sponsored
00:20:34
by your government you say as an
00:20:37
individual
00:20:38
you cannot go there on your own you have
00:20:41
to be represented
00:20:42
by your government because you are not
00:20:44
subjects of international law
00:20:46
okay but even then kaitlyn goodyear
00:20:48
angle claim
00:20:50
still it is not your individual rights
00:20:53
but rather the rights of the state
00:20:56
against
00:20:56
japan at that time in that case enough
00:20:59
okay
00:21:00
so what is a colony a colony is used for
00:21:02
the countries that are under the
00:21:03
dominion and sovereignty
00:21:04
of another state for 333 years
00:21:09
the philippines was a colony of spain
00:21:29
okay what about the mondays so
00:21:33
i'm world war one i know 1919
00:21:38
[Music]
00:21:42
it was uh ended by the treaty of
00:21:44
versailles
00:21:45
and because there was now a
00:21:50
a longing for peace
00:21:56
is an international organization known
00:21:58
as the league of nations
00:22:00
apparently to prevent war but it did not
00:22:03
prevent war
00:22:04
so territories established nato they
00:22:07
were called
00:22:08
the mandates now upon the entry into the
00:22:12
force of the charter of the eu in 1945
00:22:15
it's a mandate on india's screen
00:22:18
advantage for palestine for example
00:22:23
territories okay based on the
00:22:27
altar conference again and then of
00:22:30
course you have the vatican the vatican
00:22:32
is a special case the vatican is a state
00:22:37
and not a member of the u.n
00:22:40
it occupies uh as an obser an observer's
00:22:43
purpose
00:22:44
in the u.n now it is also known as the
00:22:47
holy see
00:22:49
from the latin word santa or the holy
00:22:52
seeds or the holy chair
00:22:54
now i say with all due respect it is not
00:22:56
the person occupying the chair that is
00:22:58
holy but rather
00:22:59
the chair itself why based on church
00:23:02
tradition
00:23:03
it was first occupied by the very first
00:23:06
pope
00:23:06
that according to the tradition of the
00:23:09
church
00:23:20
is
00:23:22
that you are peter and upon this rock i
00:23:24
will build my church
00:23:26
the gates of hell and hate shall not
00:23:27
prevail against it i will give you the
00:23:29
peace of heaven
00:23:30
and whatever you bind and earth shall be
00:23:32
bound in heaven and whatever you lose on
00:23:35
some delusion in heaven amen
00:23:49
the hills foreign vatican
00:23:54
people square so the capital city is
00:23:56
vatican the language
00:23:58
latin and also italian because it is in
00:24:01
italy in the capital of italy
00:24:05
the government is absolute monarchy but
00:24:07
the night
00:24:09
is elected
00:24:16
the head of the state and government at
00:24:19
the same time is pope francis
00:24:21
and it gained independence from the
00:24:23
kingdom of italy
00:24:25
on february 11 1929 by the latter and
00:24:28
treaty
00:24:30
and
00:24:46
italy in exchange for other people
00:24:50
estates that should be turned over
00:24:52
to the kingdom of italy
00:24:57
square kilometers
00:25:16
and then the immunity
00:25:19
from local jurisdiction of the vatican
00:25:22
was affirmed by our supreme court
00:25:25
in that case of holy see versus rosario
00:25:29
december 1 1994 it involves a sale of
00:25:32
land
00:25:33
on the corona
00:25:40
who is the representative of the vatican
00:25:47
the vatican is sending its ambassador to
00:25:49
the different countries where it has
00:25:52
diplomatic relations
00:26:02
[Music]
00:26:08
the vatican is immune from just like any
00:26:10
other sobriety
00:26:12
now international administrative bodies
00:26:15
these are international organizations
00:26:18
that are also subject
00:26:20
of international law and they are also
00:26:24
immune from local jurisdictions
00:26:27
[Music]
00:26:31
diplomats you have to remember diplomats
00:26:34
are
00:26:35
immune from local jurisdictions because
00:26:37
of the vienna convention
00:26:39
on diplomatic relations in 1961 but
00:26:42
international organizations are not
00:26:43
diplomatic representatives
00:26:46
so their immunity would be based on the
00:26:49
treaty
00:26:49
entered into between the philippine
00:26:52
government
00:26:52
and that international organization okay
00:26:56
so you also have the united nations the
00:26:59
united nations has six principal organs
00:27:03
they are uh
00:27:17
i will discuss them in details later on
00:27:20
you have the security council
00:27:22
economic and social council or ecosoft
00:27:25
the frustration council
00:27:26
the national court of justice and the
00:27:29
secretariat
00:27:30
right then you have the charter the u.n
00:27:34
charter was signed on june 26 1945
00:27:37
by the representatives of the 50
00:27:38
countries 15 original from philippines
00:27:41
but later on in admitted million poland
00:27:43
soon again 51
00:27:45
original signatories and
00:27:48
as of today a 193 states
00:27:52
are members of the u.n so from 51
00:27:56
it has grown to become 193 states
00:27:59
and the newest member is south sudan
00:28:02
republic of south sudan and that break
00:28:04
away from sudan
00:28:06
okay that was way back july 9 2011.
00:28:11
okay so the general assembly is the main
00:28:15
deliberative organ of the u.n
00:28:17
after you heart and sold out now
00:28:23
representative and each member including
00:28:26
the philippines
00:28:27
has one vote now all decisions
00:28:31
are carried out by simple majority but
00:28:34
there are three markers
00:28:38
[Music]
00:28:42
and these are peace and security
00:28:44
admission of new members
00:28:47
budgetary matters so total vote and
00:28:50
requirement otherwise all decisions
00:28:52
are carried out by a vote of simple
00:28:54
majority
00:28:55
and of course you know a simple majority
00:28:58
is just 50 percent plus one
00:29:00
right i am now my president
00:29:05
president and general assembly
00:29:10
from 1949 to 1950 was carlos
00:29:16
president
00:29:20
president secretary general
00:29:26
is the head of the secretariat young
00:29:28
general assembly is headed by a
00:29:30
president
00:29:31
but young secretary general
00:29:34
five years on time two times 10 years
00:29:37
federal president and general assembly
00:29:40
is just for one year
00:29:41
he will just preside the general
00:29:44
assembly
00:29:45
session
00:29:48
once it opens so from 1949 to 1950
00:29:52
um
00:30:07
is now the president of general assembly
00:30:09
until next year
00:30:16
assembly meeting because of the physical
00:30:19
distancing protocol
00:30:21
a online dinner that you meet in milan
00:30:24
and then you have the security council
00:30:27
in charge
00:30:30
peace and security of course
00:30:35
is organized to be able to function
00:30:37
continuously and as a representative of
00:30:39
its members must be
00:30:41
present at all times at the united
00:30:43
nations and foreign
00:30:45
nasa new york then when a complaint
00:30:49
concerning
00:30:51
a threat to peace brought before it the
00:30:55
council first
00:30:56
action is usually to recommend to the
00:30:59
parties to try
00:31:01
to reach an agreement by peaceful
00:31:17
war then of course the council
00:31:21
is to recommend that the parties must
00:31:23
reach an agreement
00:31:25
like peaceful means also so there are
00:31:28
two kinds of members in the security
00:31:30
council
00:31:31
you have permanent members if a young
00:31:35
china france russian federation united
00:31:38
kingdom and the united states
00:31:41
so continental impermanence may have
00:31:43
brazil for as long as my review and
00:31:44
security
00:31:53
okay and then of course there are 10
00:31:55
non-permanent members
00:31:57
so they are elected by the general
00:31:59
assembly for a
00:32:00
term of two years and not eligible for
00:32:04
immediate re-election now
00:32:07
the non-permanent members was increased
00:32:10
from
00:32:10
six and right now they are 10 because of
00:32:14
the amendment to the charter of the u.n
00:32:16
in 1965
00:32:26
okay and then you have the economic and
00:32:29
social council
00:32:30
it's one of the biggest organs of the
00:32:33
u.n
00:32:34
style the most specialized agencies
00:32:38
primary concern of mobilization
00:32:40
economics
00:32:43
then the council serves as a central
00:32:45
forum for discussing international
00:32:47
economic and social issues
00:32:49
formulating policies recommendation
00:32:51
addressed to member states and the u.n
00:32:53
itself
00:32:54
so what are the functions of the ecosoc
00:32:56
number one
00:32:57
it is responsible for promoting higher
00:32:59
standards of living
00:33:04
[Music]
00:33:13
so there is a disparity in the
00:33:15
distribution of the wealth of the world
00:33:18
it's not only in the philippines
00:33:38
okay and then of course will employment
00:33:40
economic and social progress
00:33:42
that's why you have there the
00:33:43
international labor organization
00:33:46
and from the protocols of the
00:33:47
international labor organization
00:33:49
we got our labor code
00:33:53
called commission protocols
00:33:59
and labor code way back may 1 1974 and
00:34:03
according to article 2 of the labor code
00:34:05
this code shall take effect
00:34:07
six months after its promulgation and it
00:34:10
was formulated in may 1974
00:34:12
so the labor code took effect november 1
00:34:15
1974
00:34:16
so
00:35:15
china
00:35:19
when they were finally allowed entry
00:35:22
it's have been amazing organization
00:35:28
china
00:35:40
facilitating international cultural
00:35:43
economic
00:35:44
educational cooperation that's why
00:35:48
unesco united nations educational
00:35:51
scientific and cultural
00:35:56
organizations
00:36:10
the un has to enter at the nawaz
00:36:13
heritage site
00:36:14
uh it is owned by humanity at indiana
00:36:18
either cambodia or thailand
00:36:35
it was a city bigger than the city of
00:36:37
london now
00:36:38
in the 8th century but the native
00:36:42
cambodians
00:36:44
are blaming the thais for the downfall
00:36:48
of that
00:36:49
uh civilization okay so
00:36:52
i will and of course encouraging
00:36:54
universal respect for human rights and
00:36:56
fundamental freedoms
00:36:58
that's why on december 10 1948
00:37:01
the members of the u.n including our
00:37:04
country
00:37:05
sign the so-called universal declaration
00:37:09
of human rights
00:37:11
that recognize
00:37:14
the human rights of individuals
00:37:17
right
00:37:29
that's the reason why in our
00:37:31
constitution we integrated
00:37:34
into our constitution itself
00:37:37
the bill of rights 31 articles
00:37:42
of the universal declaration of human
00:37:44
rights
00:37:48
they are almost the same if not totally
00:37:51
the same
00:37:52
with the bill of rights of the
00:37:54
philippines and going a step
00:37:56
further our constitution the framers of
00:37:59
the 1987 constitution
00:38:02
institutionalized in article 13
00:38:05
a constitutional commission for the
00:38:08
protection of human rights that's why we
00:38:10
have
00:38:10
the commission on human rights
00:38:37
let us just put things in their proper
00:38:39
perspective
00:38:40
the reason why the commission on human
00:38:42
rights was created by the framers of the
00:38:45
constitution
00:38:46
i'm not from the commission on human
00:38:47
rights
00:38:51
but the thing is the commission on human
00:38:54
rights is a constitutional body the
00:38:56
congress cannot abolish that unless you
00:38:57
amend the concept of john no
00:39:27
and eagerness to enforce the law and
00:39:30
arresting the suspects they might
00:39:33
trample
00:39:34
upon the the individual human rights of
00:39:37
the suspect
00:39:39
human rights
00:39:55
is a signatory to that universal
00:39:57
declaration of human rights
00:40:00
so as a signatory to that international
00:40:03
document
00:40:04
we are bound by our commitment to
00:40:07
protect human rights in our country and
00:40:09
we institutionalize that in our
00:40:11
constitution
00:40:13
ok
00:40:22
so
00:40:27
in good faith are we still adhering in
00:40:30
good faith to our commitment to protect
00:40:32
human rights
00:40:33
under that declaration of universal
00:40:35
declaration of human rights
00:40:50
is
00:41:18
to prevent
00:41:33
trusteeship township okay
00:41:36
now my president
00:41:40
of last year november 22 2019
00:41:43
in jonathan guy allen on the united
00:41:46
kingdom that the untrusted
00:41:50
councilman suspended the operation
00:41:53
for the members of the transmission
00:41:55
council there are five permanent members
00:41:57
of course of permanent members and
00:41:58
security council
00:42:00
are also permanent members of the sekadi
00:42:03
trusteeship council and then
00:42:06
the aims of the transmission system have
00:42:09
been to
00:42:10
have been fulfilled to such some extent
00:42:12
that all trust territories have attained
00:42:14
health government or
00:42:15
independence either a separate states or
00:42:18
by joining neighboring
00:42:19
independent states
00:42:23
territory republic of palau
00:42:39
now the republic of palau has become an
00:42:43
independent
00:42:44
state on november 1 1994.
00:42:54
by the decision of the majority of the
00:42:57
members
00:42:58
okay then you have the secretariat
00:43:01
and the secretariat is a workhorse of
00:43:04
the u.n
00:43:05
it performs the day-to-day work of the
00:43:07
united nations organization
00:43:09
and it serves as other principal organs
00:43:11
of the u.n
00:43:12
and administers the program so i'm u.n
00:43:15
secretariat
00:43:16
i may run new york of course the
00:43:19
headquarters in
00:43:20
addis ababa ethiopia
00:43:23
bangkok thailand beirut in lebanon
00:43:25
geneva
00:43:26
in switzerland nairobi in kenya santiago
00:43:30
in chile
00:43:30
and vienna austria so all over the world
00:43:37
secretariat and it is headed by the
00:43:39
secretary general
00:43:42
as i said earlier
00:43:45
secretary general 2017
00:43:54
my five-year term of office 2017-2022
00:44:00
but he can be re-elected by another
00:44:03
to another five-year term maximum now in
00:44:06
10
00:44:24
of the international court of justice
00:44:28
how many are its members okay
00:44:31
what is the term of office i thought was
00:44:34
a
00:44:42
what is his or her nationality
00:44:58
[Music]
00:45:01
i was lecturing also
00:45:17
do not remember the names names are not
00:45:20
normally asked
00:45:27
so after the first sunday during the
00:45:29
evening of the first sunday
00:45:45
six question and that is a valid
00:45:47
question because
00:45:48
it is asking you the jurisdiction
00:45:52
of the icj for your first five
00:45:55
questions
00:46:16
the netherlands okay that is the
00:46:19
judicial organ of the u.n
00:46:21
it started its work in 1946 after the
00:46:24
institution of the u.n
00:46:26
and it replaced the permanent court of
00:46:29
international justice
00:46:31
and what is that called all about that
00:46:33
was the
00:46:34
uh inter and that was the judicial
00:46:36
tribunal
00:46:38
under the league of nations champion
00:46:40
league of nations for maleficent united
00:46:42
nations
00:46:42
finally permanent for international
00:46:44
justice it is now called
00:46:46
international court of justice okay
00:46:50
same headquarters agenda headquarters
00:46:53
icc or the international criminal court
00:46:56
okay so 2010
00:47:01
um
00:47:06
questions time during our discussion of
00:47:10
constitutional law
00:47:14
knowing the enemy is half of the battle
00:47:17
one okay so 50 percent of the battle is
00:47:20
already one if you know your enemy
00:47:21
of course
00:48:18
is
00:48:47
the icj number one it settles in
00:48:51
accordance with international law
00:48:53
the legal disputes submitted to it by
00:48:56
the state
00:48:57
among members of you and
00:49:28
is
00:49:34
the answer is because there is a special
00:49:37
or another law
00:49:39
governing that kind of dispute that's a
00:49:42
china china and the philippines are both
00:49:45
members
00:49:45
of the um authorities
00:49:49
and under the uncles there is another
00:49:50
tribunal
00:49:53
i mean it lost so the only jurisdiction
00:49:55
on attending
00:49:56
so so called territorial disputes of
00:49:58
archipelagic states
00:50:00
and particularly maritime domain icj
00:50:04
is diversity of jurisdiction and
00:50:06
jurisdiction goes to the iplos
00:50:10
okay so other states had their disputes
00:50:13
time dinner maritime dispute the anya
00:50:17
icj
00:50:18
and of course unlike our supreme court
00:50:21
which does not give decision unless
00:50:23
there are not there is an actual case or
00:50:25
controversy
00:50:26
the icj gives advisory opinion
00:50:30
uh that we begin an opinion
00:50:38
and we begin
00:50:49
how many composed the icj there are 15
00:50:52
judges
00:50:53
they're not justices they're just called
00:50:55
judges
00:50:56
right but would you address them at your
00:50:58
honor
00:51:00
15 judges elected to a nine year term of
00:51:02
office
00:51:04
so they are also elected by the majority
00:51:06
vote
00:51:07
of the general assembly of the u.n and
00:51:09
the security council
00:51:10
voting separately and i should not be
00:51:13
independent of each other
00:51:15
that's why way back 2010
00:51:19
miriam santiago was one of the
00:51:22
candidates
00:51:23
for a position there as a judge in the
00:51:26
icj
00:51:27
um
00:51:31
santiago and i like her for that that
00:51:33
china is the mother of
00:51:36
dropping corruption or china invented
00:51:38
grafton corruption for
00:51:40
awards to that effect
00:51:44
a security council remember china is a
00:51:47
permanent member
00:51:48
okay so
00:52:02
majority
00:52:11
okay then of course it cannot have a
00:52:15
judge uh more than
00:52:18
one judge for every nationality filipino
00:52:24
and then elections are held every three
00:52:26
years for one time
00:52:30
every three years but they can be
00:52:33
re-elected
00:52:34
so they do not represent their
00:52:36
governments but they are independent
00:52:38
judges or magistrates okay so the icj
00:52:42
and qualification and judges they must
00:52:45
possess
00:52:46
the qualification required in the
00:52:47
respective countries
00:52:49
for appointment to the highest judicial
00:52:51
offices
00:52:52
so supreme court qualification of course
00:52:54
the qualification is an article 8 debate
00:52:56
a natural-born citizen at least 40 years
00:52:59
old and
00:53:00
he'll be able to read and write okay
00:53:04
they must be lawyers or judges of the
00:53:07
lower court for
00:53:08
15 years and they must be a person with
00:53:12
proven competence
00:53:14
integrity probability and independence
00:53:17
qualifications
00:53:26
qualifications
00:53:41
okay so yeah qualification you know and
00:53:45
then
00:53:46
in one of my classes a constitutional of
00:53:49
course
00:53:52
what are the qualifications of the
00:53:54
supreme court just for the sake of
00:53:56
enumerating the qualification of the
00:53:57
members of the supreme court
00:53:59
experience that's like what kind of
00:54:00
experience and have been
00:54:02
a meaningful experience
00:54:07
meaningful experience
00:54:23
is the best experience anyway so when
00:54:26
the point does not
00:54:27
include a judge possessing the
00:54:29
nationality of a state party or a case
00:54:32
that state may appoint a person
00:54:35
to sit as a judge ago for the purpose
00:54:38
of the case so for example
00:54:44
icc as icj filipino
00:54:48
as a judge supported
00:55:57
[Music]
00:56:00
also known
00:56:35
as i always say also the things that
00:56:36
would make you happy
00:56:38
and without hurting other people
00:56:52
happiness is a choice so you might have
00:56:56
all the pleasures in this life but still
00:56:58
you are not happy
00:57:00
you may have nothing at all but because
00:57:02
you choose to be happy
00:57:04
then you will be happy right okay
00:57:07
problems
00:57:08
come and go but you cannot control
00:57:11
problems but you can control
00:57:13
the way you approach the problems i am
00:57:17
okay so another
00:57:21
uh subject of
00:57:24
international law and you have the space
00:57:27
so in the
00:57:28
so-called multivideo convention of 1933
00:57:32
state is a community of persons more or
00:57:34
less numerals
00:57:36
occupying a permanent or definite
00:57:38
portion of territory
00:57:39
independent of external control and
00:57:41
possessing an organized government which
00:57:43
majority
00:57:44
or great value of inhabitants surrender
00:57:46
habitual objects
00:57:47
that's how the united at the montevideo
00:57:50
convention
00:57:51
defines the state will happen you india
00:57:54
1933 and
00:57:55
right horizonte video it is in uruguay
00:57:58
in south america
00:58:00
okay so from this definition we can
00:58:03
extract
00:58:04
the four elements of the same so what
00:58:07
are the elements
00:58:10
doctrine of the arkham state and they
00:58:13
thought
00:58:13
that every state is bound to respect the
00:58:16
independence of
00:58:18
every other sovereign state and the
00:58:20
ports will not sit
00:58:22
in judgment of another government's act
00:58:25
than within its own territory and in
00:58:27
invoking
00:58:28
china taiwan is part of china so
00:58:32
whatever we do with taiwan
00:58:34
other countries
00:58:47
in our experience going to both china
00:58:50
and taiwan the people in taiwan with all
00:58:53
due respect
00:58:55
chinese mainland generally was
00:58:58
purchased
00:59:10
that was my personal experience in going
00:59:13
to these two countries
00:59:14
okay so we have the so-called one-sided
00:59:16
policy and what's that one china policy
00:59:19
that there is only one china i mean that
00:59:20
people say public
00:59:23
and if you deal with taiwan and you are
00:59:24
going to betray
00:59:26
the one china policy okay
00:59:29
history in taiwan
00:59:34
[Music]
00:59:40
the people refers to the inhabitants of
00:59:43
the state
00:59:44
there is no required number let's say as
00:59:47
of 2019
00:59:49
china has uh for a 1409 a one million
00:59:55
one billion sorry sorry but no problem
00:59:58
number
01:00:33
okay so another element of the state is
01:00:35
territory
01:00:36
territory is the fixed portion of the
01:00:38
surface of the earth
01:00:40
inhabited by the people of the state all
01:00:43
right
01:00:44
as a hunting bansa a national territory
01:00:47
is found under article one
01:00:50
that the national territory comprise the
01:00:52
philippine archipelago with all the
01:00:53
islands and watersheds they're in and
01:00:56
all other territories although with the
01:00:57
philippines associated with jurisdiction
01:01:00
consisting of its terrestrial pluvial
01:01:02
and aerial domain
01:01:03
including the territorial sea the seabed
01:01:05
the sun soil
01:01:06
the insulations and other submarine
01:01:08
areas the water
01:01:10
is around different connections the
01:01:11
islands of the archipelago regardless of
01:01:12
your breadth and dimension
01:01:14
part of the internal water is from the
01:01:15
philippines
01:01:22
on the things
01:01:26
all other territories take note over
01:01:29
which
01:01:29
of the philippines are sovereignty or
01:01:31
jurisdiction that's very important later
01:01:33
on
01:01:34
as you will see now what is an
01:01:36
archipelago
01:01:38
archipelago does not refer to the
01:01:40
islands
01:01:41
archipelago is derived from the greek
01:01:44
word arpun or leader or chief
01:01:47
and pelagos meaning sea so archipelago
01:01:51
refers to the sea with many islands
01:01:55
all right as the years go by human
01:01:58
writers authors they interchangeably
01:02:01
use archipelago to refer to the islands
01:02:05
called to the sea but in reality
01:02:07
archipelago refers
01:02:08
to the sea the chief sea okay
01:02:12
in the gypsy now there are two kinds of
01:02:15
archipelago
01:02:17
you have coastal archipelago that is
01:02:19
situated very close to the mainland just
01:02:22
like the fluffton
01:02:23
island near norway that is what you call
01:02:26
scandinavian peninsula the scandinavian
01:02:28
peninsula is composed of the countries
01:02:30
of norway sweden
01:02:31
finland okay and
01:03:01
with other countries the archipelago
01:03:03
that's why
01:03:04
the united nations found it necessary
01:03:07
to have a law that would govern the
01:03:11
territorial waters of the different
01:03:13
archipelagic states in the world
01:03:15
so there were three conventions that
01:03:17
were held it was known as the united
01:03:19
nations convention on the loss of the
01:03:21
feast
01:03:22
so one was 1956 followed by 1960 and the
01:03:25
1973 convention
01:03:27
and the latest convention was made
01:03:29
effective november 16 1994 imagine
01:03:33
1918 1994 supporting years
01:03:36
afterwards a 1973 convention
01:03:39
after 1980 and delegates
01:03:53
the international tribunal of the laws
01:03:56
of the sea
01:03:57
all right so the luana young acting
01:04:00
international tribunal
01:04:01
is icj under the u.n charter
01:04:05
and then you have the islam under the
01:04:07
united nations convention and the laws
01:04:09
of the sea
01:04:10
so another jurisdiction the tribunal has
01:04:13
jurisdiction over any dispute
01:04:15
concerning the interpretation or
01:04:18
application
01:04:19
of the conventional training convention
01:04:21
in convention on the laws of the thing
01:04:24
support maritime or a maritime dispute
01:04:27
a territorial dispute over maritime
01:04:29
domain
01:04:31
icj and jurisdiction the jurisdiction
01:04:33
belongs to the epilogue
01:04:35
i mean it lost all other matters
01:04:38
specifically provided for
01:04:40
any agreement which converts your
01:04:42
restriction to the tribunal etc
01:04:44
yeah the headquarters i think the
01:04:46
netherlands but in hamburg
01:04:48
germany yeah so the heat loss is also
01:04:52
headed
01:05:09
[Music]
01:05:29
define the archipelagic doctrine
01:05:32
of national territory that is
01:06:06
uh let us define the archipelagic
01:06:08
doctrine by
01:06:09
looking in its original revolution
01:06:15
so now on 19
01:06:31
election of 1956.
01:06:58
it is composed of different islands
01:07:03
and each island is not an independent
01:07:06
body beating an avenue from
01:07:11
we draw a straight line
01:07:14
following the outermost islands on their
01:07:17
uh low water mark
01:07:22
will be treated as a single unit
01:07:26
for purposes of determining the
01:07:28
territorial waters and the internal
01:07:30
waters
01:07:31
archival territorial waters
01:07:33
international internal water is that
01:07:36
okay so and one straight baseline method
01:07:40
if we want to define the internal waters
01:07:42
of the archipelago
01:07:44
we have to draw a straight baseline
01:07:48
sun manga galilean baseline galling the
01:07:50
onsha low water milk
01:07:53
where is the low water mice the low
01:07:56
water mark
01:07:58
is the point if you are on the outermost
01:08:01
island
01:08:02
because the philippines and islands is
01:08:03
an archipelago
01:08:15
that separates us from taiwan going down
01:08:19
to the south
01:08:20
you have the celebrity that separates us
01:08:22
from indonesia malaysia et cetera
01:08:25
on the eastern portion
01:08:35
for cardinal directions
01:09:04
china with vietnam malaysia brunei
01:09:08
and so on okay
01:09:18
um
01:09:52
during low tide you look for the place
01:09:55
or the point where the sea meets the sun
01:09:59
yoon and low water mice okay
01:10:03
and that low water mic the maxi simula
01:10:07
i'm adding padilla going out wide to the
01:10:10
sea
01:10:11
and 12 nautical miles that would be our
01:10:15
sea or territorial water so the
01:10:18
water might equal connect and to form
01:10:22
a single unit and straight
01:10:25
baseline okay that's how you determine
01:10:28
the straight basis
01:10:42
straight face line so young
01:10:47
and twelve nautical miles and all other
01:10:49
measurements
01:10:50
to determine your territorial sea and
01:10:52
other
01:10:53
um territorial water underwater
01:11:11
waters we call them internal
01:11:15
waters from the baseline or you cutting
01:11:19
low water mark
01:11:20
you go to 12 nautical miles that would
01:11:23
be our
01:11:24
territorial sea okay
01:11:27
then the configuration you measure the
01:11:30
continuous zone not
01:11:31
from the baseline but rather from the
01:11:33
territorial waters
01:11:35
and then 200 nautical miles
01:11:38
from the baseline going out that is our
01:11:41
exclusive
01:11:42
economic zone
01:11:46
measurements
01:11:52
systems
01:12:06
[Music]
01:12:19
there were about 25
01:12:34
foreign
01:12:48
but briefly between territorial sea and
01:12:51
the internal waters of the philippines
01:12:54
so anonymous of our exam uh 16 years ago
01:12:57
i am so on territorial simple
01:13:00
you make sure that from the baseline or
01:13:04
low water mark
01:13:06
up to 12 nautical miles territorial sea
01:13:10
okay so all around baseline
01:13:15
straight baseline so from that line uh
01:13:19
you measure 12 nautical miles for each
01:13:22
foot
01:13:22
coconut connect more than your
01:13:24
territoriality
01:13:25
that is exclusively yours no one can
01:13:28
enter
01:13:29
into the territorial waters
01:13:57
so that's how you preach your friends
01:14:01
i do not know if the chinese are
01:14:03
following this no
01:14:04
[Music]
01:14:08
vladimir probe
01:14:12
if you strike
01:14:41
by sheer number on military might and
01:14:44
japan because
01:14:45
during the surrender of japan the
01:14:47
support from declaration
01:14:50
japan allied powers
01:14:54
unconstitutionally
01:15:18
[Music]
01:15:36
i do not know okay because along with
01:15:38
territorial water
01:15:39
marian and apple internal
01:15:42
waters okay internal waters
01:15:47
the waters around between and connecting
01:15:49
the islands of the archipelago
01:15:50
regardless of their breath and dimension
01:15:52
form five of the internal waters of the
01:15:55
philippines
01:15:56
so internal water is in baseline
01:16:00
all right so they are waters
01:16:04
uh land wide side of the baseline so you
01:16:07
know important
01:16:08
in low water right important time okay
01:16:11
so we are free to use aluminium and
01:16:14
foreign vessels
01:16:15
have no right of passage within the
01:16:18
internal
01:16:46
like rivers lakes canals gold
01:16:49
bays and streets they are
01:16:52
internal water so absolutely
01:17:29
okay so what about the right of innocent
01:17:31
patterns
01:17:32
thomas uncle's convention themselves of
01:17:35
all states
01:17:37
enjoy the right of innocent passage
01:17:40
through
01:17:40
the territorial field okay the
01:17:43
passengers must be continuous and
01:17:45
expeditious
01:17:46
except in cases of forced maduro
01:17:51
i am then submarines and underwater
01:17:53
craft are required to navigate
01:17:55
on the surface and show their plan
01:18:08
[Music]
01:18:38
territorial integrity and you go back to
01:18:41
article 2
01:18:42
section 4 that's one of the duties of
01:18:45
the armed forces
01:18:47
to maintain and preserve the territorial
01:18:49
integrity of the country
01:19:06
foreign
01:19:20
remember the spartans they were only
01:19:24
300.
01:19:29
so they were defending their integrity
01:19:31
territorial integrity
01:20:01
in the pacific ocean a vessel
01:20:16
up red corals fought near batanes
01:20:22
and then by international convention
01:20:23
certain corals are protected species
01:20:26
just before the vessel reached the high
01:20:28
seas the coast guard patrol intercepted
01:20:30
the vessel and sees the cargo including
01:20:32
the turret
01:20:32
oh imagine our coast guard can do that
01:20:35
without harming itself
01:20:36
okay and then of course the master of
01:20:39
the vessel
01:20:39
and the owner of the cargo protested
01:20:41
claiming the rights of transit passes an
01:20:44
innocent passage and short recovery of
01:20:46
the cargo and the release of the ship
01:20:48
so i know an issue deeper you have to
01:20:51
spot the issue
01:20:52
the issue is the right of innocent
01:20:55
passage
01:21:40
foreign
01:21:53
okay so between kazae
01:22:07
so if you pass through internal waters
01:22:10
there is no right of innocent passage
01:22:12
so the invocation of the right of
01:22:14
innocent passage is untenable
01:22:16
under the circumstance okay so indeed
01:22:19
that part
01:22:19
in the meritorius
01:23:47
so they will bridge other problems
01:23:50
waters
01:23:51
okay now 2004 example
01:23:54
distinguished clearly but briefly
01:23:56
between the continuous zone
01:23:58
and the exclusive economic zone
01:24:17
it is measured from the territorial
01:24:20
waters
01:24:21
you add another 12. okay super 24.
01:24:28
absolutely
01:24:33
but you may exercise limited
01:24:36
jurisdiction
01:24:37
to prevent imprisonment of customs
01:24:39
fiscal immigration or sanitary laws
01:25:10
okay
01:25:14
jurisdiction take note now what about
01:25:17
the
01:25:17
exclusive economic zone
01:25:21
exclusive economic zone in 2007
01:25:25
enumerate the rights of the coastal
01:25:28
state and the exclusive economic zone
01:25:30
so anova an exclusive economic zone
01:25:34
it extends up to 200 nautical miles take
01:25:36
a look at your screen
01:25:38
from the baseline i'm from so far an
01:25:40
exclusive economic zone
01:25:42
from the baseline up to 200 nautical
01:25:45
miles now
01:25:46
technically the area is billions the
01:25:49
country's territorials is not part of
01:25:51
our territory
01:25:52
but we exercise absolute
01:25:55
sovereignty or jurisdiction over
01:25:58
economic resources right
01:26:01
so up in that can
01:26:04
actually
01:26:19
1.6 kilometers i
01:26:22
want nautical mile so on two hundred gun
01:26:27
it's almost three hundred kilometers
01:26:30
away from empty and nan
01:26:34
here or 300 kilometers
01:26:38
okay so yeah like overlapping
01:26:42
and exclusivity so
01:26:45
you enter into a three people joint
01:26:48
exploration
01:26:50
you enter into a treaty for joint
01:26:51
exploration
01:26:53
in china joint exploration
01:27:00
joint exploration with china i valid
01:27:04
under our constitution and under
01:27:07
the united nations convention and the
01:27:08
laws of the sea i tell you
01:27:10
wrong there is no basis why and having
01:27:14
an arbitral tribunal there is no
01:27:16
overlapping
01:27:18
between the exclusive economic zone of
01:27:19
china and the exclusive economic zone of
01:27:21
the republic of the philippines
01:27:24
so bowel and joint exploration we enjoy
01:27:30
exclusivity
01:27:37
you