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Section 1, Article 1
of the 1987 Constitution
The national territory comprises the
Philippine archipelago, with all the islands and
waters embraced therein, and all other territories
over which the Philippines has sovereignty or
jurisdiction, consisting of its terrestrial, fluvial and
aerial domains, including its territorial sea, the
seabed, the subsoil, the insular shelves, and other
submarine areas. The waters around, between, and
connecting the islands of the archipelago, regardless
of their breadth and dimensions, form part of
internal waters of the Philippines.
Necessity of constitutional
    provision on National Territory
1. Binding force of such provision under international law.
     A state has the power to try, hear and decide
     cases throughout the extent of its territory.
     If there is a territorial dispute it should be
     settled according to the international law.

2. Value of provision defining our national territory.
      It is important to know so that we and the
      other nations would know the boundaries
      of our country.
3. Acquisition of other territories.
     Even though the bounds of our national
     territory is already written in the law, this does
     not prevent the Philippines from acquiring new
     territories by means of purchase, exchange, and
     such.
National Territory of the Philippines comprises of:
  1. The Philippine archipelago with all the islands
  and waters embraced therein;
  2. All other territories over which the Philippines has
  sovereignty or jurisdiction.
  3. The terrestrial, fluvial and aerial domains
  including the territorial sea, the seabed, the
  subsoil, the insular shelves, and other submarine
  areas thereof; and
  4. The internal waters.
Archipelago
     Derived from the Greek word pelagos meaning
     “sea.”
     A sea or part of a sea containing many
     islands.
     In other words, it includes both sea and islands
     which geographically may be considered as an
     independent whole.
     Our country is comprised of the sea and all its
     islands which is considered to be one single
     unit.
Other territories over which the
 Philippines has sovereignty or
          jurisdiction
According to the 1973 constitution, “all the other
territories belonging to the Philippines by historic right
                        or legal”
1. Philippine claim to Sabah
    Sabah is the northern part of Borneo.
   Coastline of 800 to 900 miles
    South China Sea in the West and North
    Sulu Sea in the Northeast
    Celebes Sea in the East
    It is 1,143km from Manila and 1678 km from
    Kuala Lumpur.
The Sultan of Sulu was granted the territory of Sabah
as a prize for helping The Sultan of Brunei against his
  enemies and from then on that part of Borneo is
recognized as part of the Sultan of Sulu’s sovereignty.

     But in 1878, Baron Von Overbeck, a German
representative of the British North Borneo Co. and his
  partner Alfred Dent, a British representative of the
 British North Borneo Co. leased the territory known
                     as “Sabah.”
Britain took Sabah on July 10, 1946 as part of its crown
     territories and then made the land part of the
  Federation of Malaysia. The Philippines maintained
that the contract with Overdeck and Dent was for lease
 but the United Kingdom insisted it was for cession or
                  transfer of ownership.
The Philippines broke diplomatic relations with
Malaysia after the federation have included “Sabah.”
At that time, the current Sultan of Sulu have given the
 Philippine government the authority to pursue the
          claim legally in international courts.


     In 1972, the Marcos administration revived
        the claim; but, the “Jabidah Massacre”
            incident shelved it once more.
The Sulu Sultanate, in spite of it being located in Mindanao, is
   NOT the same as saying it is under the rule of the Philippine
 government. It is, in fact, an independent Muslim state, which
 historically has acquired territories in and around the Sulu Sea,
       including the island of Sabah. When Malaysia got its
     independence from the British, the British company also
"surrendered" Sabah to Malaysia. The claim of the Sultan of Sulu
 would have more legal bearing if the Philippines recognized the
  Sulu Sultanate. As a republic, the Philippine constitution does
not recognize royalties. Also no country recognizes the Sultanate
    of Sulu. Sabah will always be, politically speaking, ruled by
  Malaysia. Its ownership, however, will always remain with the
  heirs of the Sultanate. Philippines might not ever get to claim
                   Sabah as its rightful territory.
2. Philippine claim to Spratley Island.
      The Spratly Islands group consists of a large
      number of banks, reefs, cays and islands
      stretching from a point. The Spratlies or some
      part thereof has been variously claimed by
      China (both the People's Republic of China and
      the Republic of China), Viet-Nam, France,
      Japan, the Philippines, and, also Malaysia.
In 1956, a Filipino navigator named Tomas Cloma
issued a "Proclamation to the whole World" asserting
  ownership by discovery and occupation over all the
territory, "33 islands, sands cays, sands bars and coral
 reefs and fishing grounds in the Spratlies covering an
    area of 64,976 square nautical miles." This claim
      provoked statements of protest against the
Philippines by the People's Republic of China and the
                  Republic· of Viet-Nam.
The legal bases of the demand were as follows: ( 1) The
    Philippines has legal title to the island group as a
consequence of the occupation by Tomas Cloma (2) the
 presence of the Chinese forces in Itu Aba constituted a
threat to the security of the Philippines; (3) the Chinese
     occupation of some islands in the Spratly group
constituted de facto trusteeship on behalf of the World
  War II allies which precluded the gamsonning of the
 islands without the allies' consent; and (4) the Spratly
group is within the archipelagic territory claimed by the
                       Philippines.
In 1974, an official spokesman of the Philippine
  government announced that the Philippines had
 garrisoned five of the islands within the group. At
 present, the Philippines have possession of seven
islands. A number of Filipino nationals have settled
 in these islands, and a local government has been
              organized in one of them.
On June 11, 1978, President Marcos issued Presidential
 Decree No. 1596 declaring most19 of the islands, cays,
   shoals and reefs as belonging to the Philippines and
forming an integral part of Philippine territory. It named
  the area claimed "Kalayaan Island Group," which is a
  Filipinized version of the name Tomas Cloma gave his
  discovery: "Freedom land." The group of islands was
integrated as a municipality of the province of Palawan.
Philippine island closest to the incorporated cluster decree
  cited a number of bases for the claim to title, namely: (1)
 the area is part of the continental margin of the Philippine
 archipelago; (2) the islands do not belong to any state, but
    by reason of history, indispensable need, and effective
    occupation and control established in accordance with
   international law, should now be deemed subject to the
sovereignty of the Philippines; and (3) claims by other states
   over the area had lapse by reason of abandonment and
      cannot prevail over that of the Philippines on legal,
               historical and equitable grounds.
Currently the Philippines is occupying
 nine features (seven islands, three
               reefs):
Details
                              Features
                                         37.2 ha. (2nd largest), pag-asa means hope
Pagasa Island (Thitu Island)
                                         18.6 ha. (3rd largest), likas means natural or evacuate
Likas Island (West York Island)
                                         12.7 ha. (5th largest), parola means lighthouse

Parola Island (Northeast Cay)            7.93 ha. (8th largest), lawak means vastness

Lawak Island (Nanshan Island)            6.45 ha. (10th largest), kuta means fortress

                                         0.57 ha. (14th largest), patag means flat
Kota Island (Loaita Island)

                                         0.44 ha. (15th largest and the smallest, panatâ means vow
Patag Island (Flat Island)
                                         Rizal is named after Dr. José P. Rizal, the national hero of the
Panata Island (Lankiam Cay)
                                         Philippines
Rizal Reef (Commodore Reef)
                                         Balagtas is named after Francisco Balagtas, a famous Filipino

Balagtas Reef (Irving Reef)              poet

Ayungin Reef (Second Thomas Reef)        Ayungin is Leiopotherapon plumbeus, a Philippine-endemic fish

                                         species
2. Future claims by the Philippines to other areas.
       The phrase “all the other territories belonging
       to the Philippines by historic right or legal
       title.” Found in 1973 constitution was omitted
       in the present charter.
Other areas included in the
  Philippine archipelago.
The Philippine territory consists of its terrestrial,
fluvial, and aerial domains. Included in its fluvial
domains, in addition to the external waters, are:
       1. Territorial sea.
       2. The seabed
       3. The subsoil
       4. Insular shelves
       5. Other submarine areas
Three-fold division of navigable
            waters.
From the standpoint of international law, the waters of
   the earth are divided into:
       1. Inland or internal waters
        2. Territorial sea (Supra)
        3. High or open seas

All other territories over which the Philippines has sovereignty
 - includes any territory that presently belongs or might in the
 future belong to the Philippines through any of the accepted
            international modes of acquiring territory.
Archipelagic Principle
    Two elements: 1. The definition of internal waters
       (supra); 2. The straight baseline method of
             delineating the territorial sea

Important distances with respect to the waters around
the Philippines
-Territorial Sea 12 nautical miles (n.m.)
-Contiguous Zone 12 n.m. from the edge of the
territorial sea
-Exclusive Economic Zone 200 n.m. from the baseline
Territorial Sea
    The belt of the sea located between the coast and
      internal waters of the coastal state on the one
    hand, and the high seas on the other, extending up
      to 12 nautical miles from the low water mark.
Contiguous Zone
   Extends up to 12 nautical miles from the territorial
              sea. Although not part of the
  territory, the coastal State may exercise jurisdiction
       to prevent infringement of customs, fiscal,
              immigration or sanitary laws.
Exclusive Economic Zone
   The state in the EEZ exercises jurisdiction with
   regard to:
   1. the establishment and use of artificial islands,
   installations, and structures;
   2. marine scientific research;
   3. the protection and preservation of marine
   environment;
The Philippine Position
1. Fatal effect application of 12 mile rule upon
territorial integrity of the Philippines – To apply to the
 three-mile rule to the Philippines, with every island
having its own territorial sea, would have a fatal effect
   upon the territorial integrity of the Philippines. It
 would mean the dismemberment of the archipelago
 with the Sibuyan sea separating the Visayas, and the
 Mindanao Strait and the Sulu isolating Palawan from
               the rest of the archipelago.
These and other areas of waters would cease to be
   Philippine waters; they would become international
 waters or high seas, and fishing vessels from all nations
can enter to get fish and other living resources of the sea
  which nature and Divine Providence intended for the
    Filipinos. Furthermore, warships of even unfriendly
   nations could enter these waters and stay there with
 perfect legal right to do so. At the same time, we would
   lose a large part of our territory on both sides of the
archipelago, towards the China Sea and the Pacific Ocean.
2. The Philippines, a single nation and a united state -
   More than seven thousand islands comprise the
 Philippines ruled by one whole unitary government,
 bound by a common heritage, beholden to the same
 tradition, pursuing the same ideals, interdependent
and united politically, economically and socially as one
                         nation.
3. Archipelago principle fully recognized bu UN Law
 of the Sea Convention - The archipelago principle
  and the exclusive economic zone rights are now
     fully recognized in the U.N. Law of the Sea
    Convention. It was approved by the interim
     Batasang Pambansa on February 27, 1984.
THANK YOU!!
   Alyssa Palmada
   Lorenzo Osorio
      Aleia Cai
       1ASN2

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Philippine Constitution Article 1

  • 1.
  • 2. Section 1, Article 1 of the 1987 Constitution
  • 3. The national territory comprises the Philippine archipelago, with all the islands and waters embraced therein, and all other territories over which the Philippines has sovereignty or jurisdiction, consisting of its terrestrial, fluvial and aerial domains, including its territorial sea, the seabed, the subsoil, the insular shelves, and other submarine areas. The waters around, between, and connecting the islands of the archipelago, regardless of their breadth and dimensions, form part of internal waters of the Philippines.
  • 4. Necessity of constitutional provision on National Territory
  • 5. 1. Binding force of such provision under international law. A state has the power to try, hear and decide cases throughout the extent of its territory. If there is a territorial dispute it should be settled according to the international law. 2. Value of provision defining our national territory. It is important to know so that we and the other nations would know the boundaries of our country.
  • 6. 3. Acquisition of other territories. Even though the bounds of our national territory is already written in the law, this does not prevent the Philippines from acquiring new territories by means of purchase, exchange, and such.
  • 7. National Territory of the Philippines comprises of: 1. The Philippine archipelago with all the islands and waters embraced therein; 2. All other territories over which the Philippines has sovereignty or jurisdiction. 3. The terrestrial, fluvial and aerial domains including the territorial sea, the seabed, the subsoil, the insular shelves, and other submarine areas thereof; and 4. The internal waters.
  • 8. Archipelago Derived from the Greek word pelagos meaning “sea.” A sea or part of a sea containing many islands. In other words, it includes both sea and islands which geographically may be considered as an independent whole. Our country is comprised of the sea and all its islands which is considered to be one single unit.
  • 9. Other territories over which the Philippines has sovereignty or jurisdiction
  • 10. According to the 1973 constitution, “all the other territories belonging to the Philippines by historic right or legal” 1. Philippine claim to Sabah Sabah is the northern part of Borneo. Coastline of 800 to 900 miles South China Sea in the West and North Sulu Sea in the Northeast Celebes Sea in the East It is 1,143km from Manila and 1678 km from Kuala Lumpur.
  • 11.
  • 12. The Sultan of Sulu was granted the territory of Sabah as a prize for helping The Sultan of Brunei against his enemies and from then on that part of Borneo is recognized as part of the Sultan of Sulu’s sovereignty. But in 1878, Baron Von Overbeck, a German representative of the British North Borneo Co. and his partner Alfred Dent, a British representative of the British North Borneo Co. leased the territory known as “Sabah.”
  • 13. Britain took Sabah on July 10, 1946 as part of its crown territories and then made the land part of the Federation of Malaysia. The Philippines maintained that the contract with Overdeck and Dent was for lease but the United Kingdom insisted it was for cession or transfer of ownership.
  • 14. The Philippines broke diplomatic relations with Malaysia after the federation have included “Sabah.” At that time, the current Sultan of Sulu have given the Philippine government the authority to pursue the claim legally in international courts. In 1972, the Marcos administration revived the claim; but, the “Jabidah Massacre” incident shelved it once more.
  • 15. The Sulu Sultanate, in spite of it being located in Mindanao, is NOT the same as saying it is under the rule of the Philippine government. It is, in fact, an independent Muslim state, which historically has acquired territories in and around the Sulu Sea, including the island of Sabah. When Malaysia got its independence from the British, the British company also "surrendered" Sabah to Malaysia. The claim of the Sultan of Sulu would have more legal bearing if the Philippines recognized the Sulu Sultanate. As a republic, the Philippine constitution does not recognize royalties. Also no country recognizes the Sultanate of Sulu. Sabah will always be, politically speaking, ruled by Malaysia. Its ownership, however, will always remain with the heirs of the Sultanate. Philippines might not ever get to claim Sabah as its rightful territory.
  • 16. 2. Philippine claim to Spratley Island. The Spratly Islands group consists of a large number of banks, reefs, cays and islands stretching from a point. The Spratlies or some part thereof has been variously claimed by China (both the People's Republic of China and the Republic of China), Viet-Nam, France, Japan, the Philippines, and, also Malaysia.
  • 17. In 1956, a Filipino navigator named Tomas Cloma issued a "Proclamation to the whole World" asserting ownership by discovery and occupation over all the territory, "33 islands, sands cays, sands bars and coral reefs and fishing grounds in the Spratlies covering an area of 64,976 square nautical miles." This claim provoked statements of protest against the Philippines by the People's Republic of China and the Republic· of Viet-Nam.
  • 18. The legal bases of the demand were as follows: ( 1) The Philippines has legal title to the island group as a consequence of the occupation by Tomas Cloma (2) the presence of the Chinese forces in Itu Aba constituted a threat to the security of the Philippines; (3) the Chinese occupation of some islands in the Spratly group constituted de facto trusteeship on behalf of the World War II allies which precluded the gamsonning of the islands without the allies' consent; and (4) the Spratly group is within the archipelagic territory claimed by the Philippines.
  • 19.
  • 20. In 1974, an official spokesman of the Philippine government announced that the Philippines had garrisoned five of the islands within the group. At present, the Philippines have possession of seven islands. A number of Filipino nationals have settled in these islands, and a local government has been organized in one of them.
  • 21. On June 11, 1978, President Marcos issued Presidential Decree No. 1596 declaring most19 of the islands, cays, shoals and reefs as belonging to the Philippines and forming an integral part of Philippine territory. It named the area claimed "Kalayaan Island Group," which is a Filipinized version of the name Tomas Cloma gave his discovery: "Freedom land." The group of islands was integrated as a municipality of the province of Palawan.
  • 22. Philippine island closest to the incorporated cluster decree cited a number of bases for the claim to title, namely: (1) the area is part of the continental margin of the Philippine archipelago; (2) the islands do not belong to any state, but by reason of history, indispensable need, and effective occupation and control established in accordance with international law, should now be deemed subject to the sovereignty of the Philippines; and (3) claims by other states over the area had lapse by reason of abandonment and cannot prevail over that of the Philippines on legal, historical and equitable grounds.
  • 23. Currently the Philippines is occupying nine features (seven islands, three reefs):
  • 24. Details Features 37.2 ha. (2nd largest), pag-asa means hope Pagasa Island (Thitu Island) 18.6 ha. (3rd largest), likas means natural or evacuate Likas Island (West York Island) 12.7 ha. (5th largest), parola means lighthouse Parola Island (Northeast Cay) 7.93 ha. (8th largest), lawak means vastness Lawak Island (Nanshan Island) 6.45 ha. (10th largest), kuta means fortress 0.57 ha. (14th largest), patag means flat Kota Island (Loaita Island) 0.44 ha. (15th largest and the smallest, panatâ means vow Patag Island (Flat Island) Rizal is named after Dr. José P. Rizal, the national hero of the Panata Island (Lankiam Cay) Philippines Rizal Reef (Commodore Reef) Balagtas is named after Francisco Balagtas, a famous Filipino Balagtas Reef (Irving Reef) poet Ayungin Reef (Second Thomas Reef) Ayungin is Leiopotherapon plumbeus, a Philippine-endemic fish species
  • 25. 2. Future claims by the Philippines to other areas. The phrase “all the other territories belonging to the Philippines by historic right or legal title.” Found in 1973 constitution was omitted in the present charter.
  • 26. Other areas included in the Philippine archipelago.
  • 27. The Philippine territory consists of its terrestrial, fluvial, and aerial domains. Included in its fluvial domains, in addition to the external waters, are: 1. Territorial sea. 2. The seabed 3. The subsoil 4. Insular shelves 5. Other submarine areas
  • 28. Three-fold division of navigable waters.
  • 29. From the standpoint of international law, the waters of the earth are divided into: 1. Inland or internal waters 2. Territorial sea (Supra) 3. High or open seas All other territories over which the Philippines has sovereignty - includes any territory that presently belongs or might in the future belong to the Philippines through any of the accepted international modes of acquiring territory.
  • 30. Archipelagic Principle Two elements: 1. The definition of internal waters (supra); 2. The straight baseline method of delineating the territorial sea Important distances with respect to the waters around the Philippines -Territorial Sea 12 nautical miles (n.m.) -Contiguous Zone 12 n.m. from the edge of the territorial sea -Exclusive Economic Zone 200 n.m. from the baseline
  • 31. Territorial Sea The belt of the sea located between the coast and internal waters of the coastal state on the one hand, and the high seas on the other, extending up to 12 nautical miles from the low water mark. Contiguous Zone Extends up to 12 nautical miles from the territorial sea. Although not part of the territory, the coastal State may exercise jurisdiction to prevent infringement of customs, fiscal, immigration or sanitary laws.
  • 32. Exclusive Economic Zone The state in the EEZ exercises jurisdiction with regard to: 1. the establishment and use of artificial islands, installations, and structures; 2. marine scientific research; 3. the protection and preservation of marine environment;
  • 34. 1. Fatal effect application of 12 mile rule upon territorial integrity of the Philippines – To apply to the three-mile rule to the Philippines, with every island having its own territorial sea, would have a fatal effect upon the territorial integrity of the Philippines. It would mean the dismemberment of the archipelago with the Sibuyan sea separating the Visayas, and the Mindanao Strait and the Sulu isolating Palawan from the rest of the archipelago.
  • 35. These and other areas of waters would cease to be Philippine waters; they would become international waters or high seas, and fishing vessels from all nations can enter to get fish and other living resources of the sea which nature and Divine Providence intended for the Filipinos. Furthermore, warships of even unfriendly nations could enter these waters and stay there with perfect legal right to do so. At the same time, we would lose a large part of our territory on both sides of the archipelago, towards the China Sea and the Pacific Ocean.
  • 36. 2. The Philippines, a single nation and a united state - More than seven thousand islands comprise the Philippines ruled by one whole unitary government, bound by a common heritage, beholden to the same tradition, pursuing the same ideals, interdependent and united politically, economically and socially as one nation.
  • 37. 3. Archipelago principle fully recognized bu UN Law of the Sea Convention - The archipelago principle and the exclusive economic zone rights are now fully recognized in the U.N. Law of the Sea Convention. It was approved by the interim Batasang Pambansa on February 27, 1984.
  • 38. THANK YOU!! Alyssa Palmada Lorenzo Osorio Aleia Cai 1ASN2