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The '''Cook Islands – France Maritime Delimitation Agreement''' is a [[treaty]] in which the two states agreed to the [[Boundary delimitation|delimitation]] of the [[ocean|maritime]] [[border]] between the [[Cook Islands]] and [[French Polynesia]]. The treaty was signed at [[Rarotonga]] on 3 August 1990. The boundary is approximately 650 [[nautical miles]] long and is a modified equidistant line; the treaty defines it using eight specific points.
The '''Cook Islands – France Maritime Delimitation Agreement''' is a [[treaty]] in which the two states agreed to the [[Boundary delimitation|delimitation]] of the [[ocean|maritime]] [[border]] between the [[Cook Islands]] and [[French Polynesia]].
The treaty was signed at [[Rarotonga]] on 3 August 1990. The boundary is approximately 650 [[nautical miles]] long and is a modified equidistant line. The treaty defines the boundary using seven straight-line segments defined by eight specific coordinate points.


The official name for the treaty is ''Agreement on Maritime Delimitation between the Government of the Cook Islands and the Government of the French Republic of 3 August 1990''.
The official name for the treaty is ''Agreement on Maritime Delimitation between the Government of the Cook Islands and the Government of the French Republic of 3 August 1990''.

Revision as of 03:08, 21 January 2010

The Cook Islands – France Maritime Delimitation Agreement is a treaty in which the two states agreed to the delimitation of the maritime border between the Cook Islands and French Polynesia.

The treaty was signed at Rarotonga on 3 August 1990. The boundary is approximately 650 nautical miles long and is a modified equidistant line. The treaty defines the boundary using seven straight-line segments defined by eight specific coordinate points.

The official name for the treaty is Agreement on Maritime Delimitation between the Government of the Cook Islands and the Government of the French Republic of 3 August 1990.

References

  • Jonathan I. Charney, David A. Colson, Robert W. Smith (eds., 1993). International Maritime Boundaries vol. 2 (American Society of International Law; Hotei Publishing: Leiden, ISBN 0792311876) pp. 1179ff.
  • Ewan W. Anderson (2003). International Boundaries: A Geopolitical Atlas (Routledge: New York, ISBN 157958375X) pp. 297, 595.