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Papian: Wilson Arbitral Award A Valid And Legally Binding Document

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  • Papian: Wilson Arbitral Award A Valid And Legally Binding Document

    Ara Papian: Woodrow Wilson's Arbitral Award Is A Valid And Legally
    Obligatory Document

    14.05.2011 | 11:47 | www.nt.am | Noyan Tapan | Articles and Analyses

    (Noyan Tapan - 14.05.2011) By Ara Papian


    The Armenian Genocide during the World War I and after went down the
    history as a crystal-clear example of unpunished crime that reinvented
    itself in Nazi extermination of the Jews, the Gypsies and the Slavic
    peoples. The annihilation of an entire civilization that occurred
    under the apathetic eye of the world at the turn of the XX century
    ricocheted right into our lifetime with the destruction of innocent
    people in Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur. The principle of an ignored crime
    backfired again.

    All Genocides have a common denominator - it is brutal and
    premeditated killing of hundreds of thousands and millions of people,
    huge loses of cultural values and property. Unfortunately, the
    Armenian Genocide has something in particular that makes it deferent
    and it stands separately from all other Genocides. In addition to
    human loses and destruction of our heritage we lost the most valuable
    thing that a nation can possess - we lost our Homeland. The Armenian
    massacres and deportations uprooted men, women and children who were
    living on their ancestral homeland for several millennia, reducing a
    once vibrant region into open graves and ghost towns throughout
    Anatolia and Western Armenia. It is a sad fact that today there are
    less than 60,000 Armenians left in Turkey. After the 1.5 million
    killed, the remaining survivors and their descendants are now
    dispersed throughout the world.

    Armenian territorial rights are based upon several international
    instruments. The most important of them is the Arbitral Award by the
    United States President Woodrow Wilson, done on November 22, 1920,
    which by a binding decision and conclusively defined the boundary
    between Armenia and Turkey. Because of the time constraint, I will not
    go into details of this document. Especially when the full text of the
    Arbitral Award in English (more than 240 pages) with detailed notes
    and indices will come out in Yerevan at the end of next month - on May
    28. However, it is important to give the general overview of the
    Arbitral Award, which we Armenians rightfully consider as the Bible of
    our territorial rights.

    As you may know, the Republic of Armenia declared her independence on
    May 28, 1918. One and half years after this declaration, on January
    19, 1920, the Supreme Council of the Allied Powers finally agreed to
    recognize the government of the Armenian State on the condition that
    the recognition should not prejudge the question of the eventual
    frontier.1 The United States recognized the Republic of Armenia on
    April 23, 1920, on the same condition. By the way, the United States
    refused to recognize the independence of Georgia and Azerbaijan
    because of their unlawful claims to Armenian territory.2

    On April 26, 1920, the Supreme Council meeting at San Remo requested
    the President of the United States two things:

    1. The United States assume a mandate over Armenia;

    2. The President of the United States to make an Arbitral Decision to
    fix the boundary of Armenia with Turkey.3 As you may know, the
    Armenian mandate was rejected by Senate vote on June 1, 1920.
    Nevertheless, the American answer to the second request was positive
    and on May 17, 1920, the Secretary of State informed the American
    Ambassador in France that the President had agreed to act as
    arbitrator.4 For the implementation of the task, the State Department
    began to assemble a team of experts in mid-July 1920 headed by
    Professor William Westermann, from Wisconsin University. The state
    department put together a committee, entitled: `The Committee upon the
    Arbitration of the Boundary between Turkey and Armenia'. As the Treaty
    of Sevres was signed on August 10, 1920, the boundary committee began
    its deliberations. The fact of signing the Treaty of Sevres is
    important because the compromis, i.e. the application for the
    arbitration, is included in the Treaty as Article 89. It must be
    underlined that the status of the compromis has nothing to do with the
    status of the main Treaty, thus with ratification or non-ratification
    of the Treaty. Therefore, as the State Department received the
    authenticated copy of the Treaty on October 18, 1920, it was
    sufficient for the President officially to conclude the arbitration
    without waiting the ratification of the Treaty of Sevres.

    On November 22, 1920,5 Woodrow Wilson signed the final award with
    seven enclosed appendices. So under the Arbitral Award of November 22,
    1920, the border between Armenia and Turkey was settled conclusively
    and without appeal, because, as clearly states The Hague Convention6
    (article 54 of the 1899 edition and article 81 of the 1907 edition):7
    `The award, duly pronounced and notified to the agents of the parties,
    settles the dispute definitively and without appeal.' 8

    Few words on the content of the Arbitral Award. According to the
    Arbitral Award, the title and the rights of the Republic of Armenia
    were recognized on the large part of the provinces of Van, Bitlis,
    Erzerum and Trebizond. It was less than the half of the territory on
    which the Armenian title was recognized by the article 24 of the
    Mudros armistice on October 30, 1918. This drastic cutback was due to
    far-reaching reduction of native Armenian population, because of the
    Armenian Genocide.

    Now briefly on the most important issue - the present status of the
    Arbitral Award. As indicates the official Manual of the Terminology of
    Public International Law of the United Nations, for the arbitral award
    to be valid it must meet four criteria:9

    Criterion 1: The arbitrators must not have been subjected to any undue
    external influence such as coercion, bribery or corruption;

    Criterion 2: The production of proofs must have been free from fraud
    and the proofs produced must not have contained any essential errors;

    Criterion 3: The compromis must have been valid;

    Criterion 4: The arbitrators must not have exceeded their powers.

    Due to time limits, I will not go into details. However, after
    assessing Wilson's Arbitral award against the abovementioned criteria,
    it can be declared confidently: The Arbitral Award of Woodrow Wilson
    is still a valid and legally obligatory document, because the
    indispensable feature of an arbitral award is that it produces an
    award that is final and binding. By agreeing to submit the dispute to
    arbitration, i.e. signing a compromis, the parties in advance agree to
    accept the decision.10 Therefore, in spite of the long-standing
    occupation, Turkey does not possess any legal title to the territory
    of Wilsonian Armenia. After the arbitral award of the US President,
    signed and sealed on November 22, 1920, Turkish presence over there is
    not more than an administrative control alike of Turkish status in
    Northern Cyprus. Thus, the presence and all acts taken by the Turkish
    Republic in the `Wilsonian Armenia' are illegal and invalid, because
    the belligerent occupation does not yield lawful rule over a
    territory.

    It is true that international law by itself will not be able to bring
    about a solution for the Armenian-Turkish confrontation. Nonetheless,
    there is no doubt that international law is the only way to bring
    about a just and peaceful resolution, thus a durable and permanent
    solution. The main basis for the lawful solution of long-standing
    Armenian- Turkish problem are not the infamous Armenian-Turkish
    protocols, but the Arbitral Award, done over 90 years ago in the
    capital city of this country by 28th President of the United States of
    America Woodrow Thomas Wilson.

    Notes

    1 G. H. Hackworth, Digest of International Law, Turkish?Armenian
    Boundary Question, vol. I, Chapters I-V, Washington, 1940, p. 715.

    2 (H. Lauterpacht, Recognition in International Law, Cambridge, 1947,
    p. 11. Papers Relating to Foreign Relations of the United States,
    1920, v. III, Washington, 1936. p. 778.) [hereinafter - FRUS].

    3 The Treaties of Peace, 1919?1923, (Preface by Lt.?Col. Lawrence
    Martin).vol. I, New York, 1924, p. xxxii.

    4 Ibid., p. 783.

    5 Cukwurah A. O., The Settlement of Boundary Disputes in International
    Law, Manchester, 1967, pp. 165-166.

    6 The 1899 Convention was ratified by Turkey on July 12, 1907. (The
    Hague Court Reports, op. cit., p. cii).

    7 This notion was comprised in article # 54 of the 1899 Convention
    with slightly deferent wording: `The award, duly pronounced and
    notified to the agents of the parties [at variance, puts an end to]
    the dispute definitively and without appeal.'( The Hague Court
    Reports, op. cit., p. lxxxix).

    8 Ibid.

    9 Manual of the Terminology of Public International Law, op.cit., §
    508, pp. 588?590. 10 Ibid., p. 27.




    From: A. Papazian
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