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Legal Aspects of the Mekong River System*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 May 2009

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The Mekong river, with a length of 4,200 km, is the main watercourse in South-East Asia, flowing from the north-eastern rim of the Tibetan plateau at an altitude of 5,000 m into the South China Sea near Ho-Chi-Minh Ville. Its drainage basin of nearly 800,000 km is larger in area than France and includes Kampuchea, most of Laos and parts of the other four riparian countries, i.e., the People's Republic of China, Burma, Thailand and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. In its course it constitutes parts of the boundaries between the People's Republic of China and Burma, Burma and Laos, Laos and Thailand and Laos and Kampuchea. Its flow increases considerably during the rainy season (May-October), raising the water level at Phnom-Penh by 16 m and flooding the Central Plain of that country, thereby trebling the surface of the Tonlé-Sap (Great Lake) and the Delta in Southern Vietnam. With an annual average discharge of about 475,000 million cubic metres, it is the eighth largest river in the world.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © T.M.C. Asser Press 1987

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References

1. Osborne, M., River Road to China. The Mekong River Expedition 1866–1873 (1975)Google Scholar.

2. Treaty of Peace and Convention between France and Siam, 3 October 1893, British and Foreign State Papers (18941895) vol. 87, p. 187Google Scholar.

3. Convention between French Indochina and Siam concerning the Relations between the Two Countries, 25 08 1926, LNTS, vol. 69, p. 313Google Scholar.

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5. Jayanama, D., Siam and World-War II (1966) Appendices 4, 9 and 10Google Scholar.

6. Ibid., Appendix 9.

7. Ibid., Appendix 10.

8. Agreement between the Government of the People's Republic of China and the Government of the Union of Burma on questions concerning the boundary between the two countries, 28 January 1960, Treaties of the People's Republic of China, 1949–1978. An Annotated Compilation (1980) p. 31 (Westview Special Studies on China and East Asia).

9. Treaty of Friendship, Commerce and Navigation between France and Siam, 15 08 1856, British and Foreign State Papers (18561857) vol. 47, p. 993Google Scholar.

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12. See n.3 supra.

13. See n.4 supra.

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15. Convention Relative au Régime de la Navigation Maritime et Fluviale sur le Mékong et la Navigation Fluviale d'accès au Port de Saigon, December 1954, Annuaire Français vol. VIII (1962) p. 112Google Scholar.

16. See n.14 supra.

17. See n.15 supra.

18. Statute on the Regime of Navigable Waterways of International Concern, Barcelona, 20 04 1921, LNTS, vol. VII, p. 51Google Scholar.

19. See n.3 supra.

20. See n.14 supra.

21. See n.15 supra.

22. See n.3 supra.

23. See n.14 supra.

24. See n.15 supra.

25. See Art. 10, paras. 1–4, of the ‘Barcelona Statute on the Regime of Navigable Waterways of International Concern’.

Following the suspension of the Committee as from 1975, an Interim Committee was set up in 1978 to proceed - until the original Committee could resume its work - with water resources development activities in three riparian countries. See section 4.6 infra.

26. Development of Water Resources in the Lower Mekong Basin, UN Doc. C/E/CM.II/457, Bangkok 1958.

27. See Annex I at the end of this article.

28. ECAFE Annual Report (15 February 1956 - 28 March 1957) p. 37, Bangkok 1958.

29. Annual Report of the Mekong Committee, MKG/85001, p. 9, Bangkok 1985.

30. ECAFE, Programme of Studies and Investigations for Comprehensive Development of the Lower Mekong River Basin (Wheeler Report), 1958.

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32. Annual Report, Mekong Committee (1981) p. 30 and Annex 3; Annual Report, Mekong Committee (1982) p. 34.

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34. Document E/CN.II/WRD/MKG/L. 129, Annual Report (1964) p. 47.

35. Malcolm, D.K.Legal Aspects of the Integrated Development of the Lower Mekong Basin’, 2 Lawasia Journal (1971) p. 80Google Scholar.

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38. See Annexes 2 and 3 at the end of this article.