- Territorial disputes of the Russian Federation
Throughout history, there have been many territorial disputes concerning the
Russian Federation .*The
Kuril Islands dispute concerns the islands ofEtorofu ,Kunashiri , andShikotan and theHabomai group occupied by the Soviet Union in 1945, now administered by Russia, claimed byJapan .*Disputes over the boundary with the
People's Republic of China were finally resolved onJuly 21 2008 . On that day the Foreign Ministers of the two countries signed an agreement inBeijing . Under the agreement, Russia ceded approximately 174 km² of territory to China. [ [http://www.business-standard.com/india/storypage.php?tp=on&autono=42718 Business Standard Article - source for 174 km² figure] ] The territory transferred comprisedTarabarov Island and approximately half ofBolshoy Ussuriysky Island . The area transferred was largely uninhabited. [ [http://www.economist.com/world/asia/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11792951 Economist article including map of new Russia-China Border] ] The settlement of their border dispute followed over 40 years of negotiations. The final settlement was the result of the Treaty of Good-Neighborliness and Friendly Cooperation which was concluded onJune 2 2005 and signed by Chinese Foreign MinisterLi Zhaoxing and his Russian counterpart,Sergei Lavrov . This followed talks inVladivostok . There is now no border dispute between Russia and China along their 4300 km border.*Caspian Sea boundaries are not yet determined among all littoral states. Issues between Russia and the states bordering it -
Azerbaijan andKazakhstan - were settled in 2003. Russia has no common land or Caspian-sea border withTurkmenistan andIran , which do not agree with the Caspian Sea settlements.*With respect to the
Baltic states , a draft treaty delimiting the boundary withLatvia has not been signed; and a 1997 border agreement withLithuania was ratified in 2003.Estonia n and Russian negotiators reached a technical border agreement in December 1996. The border treaty was initialed in 1999. On18 May 2005 Estonian Foreign MinisterUrmas Paet and his Russian colleagueSergei Lavrov signed in Moscow the [http://web-static.vm.ee/static/failid/394/Est-Rus_border_treaty.pdf “Treaty between the Government of the Republic of Estonia and the Government of the Russian Federation on the Estonian-Russian border”] and the “Treaty between the Government of the Republic of Estonia and the Government of the Russian Federation on the Delimitation of the Maritime Zones in theGulf of Finland and theGulf of Narva ”. On20 June 2005 theRiigikogu (Estonian Paliament) ratified the signed treaties by adopting ratification act [http://www.vm.ee/eng/kat_200/5733.html] , objected by Russia. The President of EstoniaArnold Rüütel announced them on22 June 2005 . On31 August 2005 Russian PresidentPutin gave a written order to the Russian Foreign Ministry to notify the Estonian side of “Russia’s intention not to participate in the border treaties between the Russian Federation and the Republic of Estonia”. On6 September 2005 the Foreign Ministry of the Russian Federation forwarded a note to Estonia, in which Russia informed that it did not intend to become a party to the border treaties between Estonia and Russia and did not consider itself bound by the circumstances concerning the object and the purposes of the treaties.*An additional ocean boundary dispute exists in the
Barents Sea with the neighbouring Kingdom ofNorway . Russia applies a sector line spanning fromCape Nemetskii to theNorth Pole for delimitation purposes whilst Norway applies the equidistance principle. Neither method is acceptable for either state since they arguably lead to an inequitable result, so the matter is subject to negotiation where a compromise is likely to be attained.*Russia has made no territorial claim in
Antarctica (but has reserved the right to do so) and does not recognize the claims of any other nation. The Soviet Union signed theAntarctic Treaty in 1960.*Disputes over the boundary with Georgia relating to Russia's legal recognition of Georgian regions,
South Ossetia andAbkhazia as independent states.References
External links
*cite web | title=GlobalSecurity.org In The News | work=China, Russia Agree on Border After 40 Years of Talks | url=http://www.globalsecurity.org/org/news/2005/050603-china-russia.htm | accessdate = August 14 | accessyear=2005
*cite web | title=China, Russia solve all disputes along shared border (3 June 2005 ) | url=http://www.chinaembassy.org.in/eng/zgbd/t198465.htm | accessdate = August 14 | accessyear=2005
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.