On 23 March 2021, the United Nations (UN) Human Rights Council passed a resolution entitled “The negative impact of unilateral coercive measures on the enjoyment of human rights”,[1] with the negative vote of 15 States, including Italy. One week later, on 31 March, during a joint session (7th Meeting, XVIII Legislature) of the Committee on Foreign and European Community Affairs (III) of the Chamber of Deputies and the Committee on Foreign Affairs, Emigration (3rd) of the Senate of the Republic, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Mr. Luigi di Maio, addressed and dispelled the allegations that Italy’s vote amounted to an endorsement of sanctions on Cuba (a Country that voted in favor of the resolution).
Continue readingThe Legality of the Libyan Fisheries Protection Zone and the Coastal State’s Enforcement Powers: A Change of Policy
Somewhat unsurprisingly, the so-called “red prawn war”, the dispute that has pitted the Mazara del Vallo fishing industry and the Libyan authorities against each other for dozens of years, has generated intense parliamentary activity in 2021 as well.
Continue readingResponsibility for the Spread of COVID-19 and Socio-economic Concerns in the Fight Against the Pandemic
The year 2020 was marked by COVID-19, which was declared a pandemic on 11 March 2020 by the World Health Organization (WHO).[1] COVID-19 not only caused millions of deaths around the world, but it impacted almost every aspect of human life, from the world economy to personal freedoms and the right to healthcare.
Continue readingThe Arrest and Continuous Detention of Egyptian Researcher Patrick Zaki
On 7 February 2020, Patrick Zaki, an Egyptian researcher, was arbitrarily arrested by the Egyptian authorities at Cairo airport. He was returning home from Italy for a family visit. Since August 2019, he had been on leave from his job at the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR) to study for a postgraduate degree at the University of Bologna. Upon his arrival at Cairo airport, Zaki was disappeared for 24 hours.
Continue readingThe Dispute with France over the Territorial Boundary in the Mont Blanc Area
The boundary between Italy and France in the Alpine region is set by the treaty signed in Turin, on 24 March 1860, by the Kingdom of Sardinia and the French Empire concerning the cession to the latter of the Duchy of Savoy and the County of Nice, as well as by the actual delimitation agreements – implementing the 1860 Treaty – signed by the same parties on 27 June and 25 November 1860, 7 March 1861, and 26 September 1862.[1]
Continue readingMaritime Delimitation in the Central Mediterranean Sea and Algeria’s Proclamation of an Exclusive Economic Zone
With Presidential Decree no. 18-96 of 20 March 2018, Algeria officially proclaimed an exclusive economic zone (EEZ) in the Mediterranean Sea so as to exercise therein its sovereign rights and jurisdiction in accordance with Part V of the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). The act included a list of 63 geographical coordinates delineating the extension of the maritime claim but envisaged that the outer limits of the EEZ could be modified through bilateral agreements with neighboring States, where necessary.[1]
Continue readingThe Proposed Israeli Annexation of Parts of the West Bank
On 20 April 2020, the Prime Minister of Israel, Mr Benjamin Netanyahu, and the leader of the White and Blue political alliance, Mr Benjamin Gantz, signed the coalition agreement that ended the political stalemate resulting from the inconclusive results of three consecutive Israeli legislative elections, which had been held in April 2019, September 2019, and March 2020.
Continue readingThe Libyan Fisheries Protection Zone and the Powers of Enforcement of a Local De Facto Government During the Libyan Civil War
On 1 September 2020, two Italian fishing vessels from Mazara del Vallo, Sicily, were seized by Libyan forces operating under the authority of the Benghazi unrecognized government. The seizure took place approximately 38 miles off the coast of Cyrenaica. The fishermen of the two boats – eight Italians, six Tunisians, two Indonesians, and two Senegalese – were accused of fishing in Libyan waters and were transferred to Libyan soil where they began a period of detention that would last 108 days.[1] The fishing vessels were also seized by the Libyan militia.
Continue readingArms Export to Some Near- and Middle-Eastern Countries
In 2020, the interest – from a legal viewpoint – in Italy’s position on arms export stemmed from what the Country’s representatives omitted to say rather than from the explicit content of their declarations.
Continue readingThe Classification of Italy’s Ports as Places Unsafe for Migrants Rescued by Foreign Vessels Outside the Country’s SAR Area
Even though greatly reduced compared to the peaks of the previous years, migratory flows across the Mediterranean Sea towards Italy’s coasts continued in 2020 – as did the tragic deaths of migrants, compounded by the inaction of Southern European States, in particular Italy and Malta.
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