Period 1852-1952, “..Johor.. took no action at
all.. from June 1850 for the whole of the following century..” (ICJ Judgment,
Para 275)
This was the most unkindest
cut of all
Julius Caesar, Act 3
Introduction
In this long century, 1852-1952, of Johore’s alleged silence, conversely
it was the period that Johore did much to contribute to the wealth creation and
security of the Settlement of Singapore and later the Crown Colony of
Singapore, 1946-1959. This was a period
of shared destiny between Johore and Singapore. Any schoolboy from the State
and Territory of Johore would know this symbiotic relationship as they
frequently visit the Johore Archives to read the Annual Reports of the State and Territory of Johore and the Royal
Museum in Johore Bharu. The chronology
of the first 50 years of the twentieth century would read as follows:
In 1901, the Singapore-born Sultan Ibrahim, 1895-1959, negotiated with
the Colonial Office to raise a loan for the construction of the Johore Railway
that linked the Federated Malay States Railway with the Port of Singapore by a
Railway Ferry across the Straits of Tebrau.
The Johore Railway was completed in 1909.
In February 1915 the Sepoy Mutiny broke out in Singapore and threatened
the security of Singapore. The Sultan
personally led his 150 strong Johore Military Force (JMF) across the Straits of
Tebrau and returned when he heard that some of the Mutineers had crossed over
the Straits of Tebrau into Johore. The
JMF was responsible for the capture of 180 men and the Sultan himself was
personally credited for the surrender of 4 soldiers at Kulai and transported
them back to Johore Bahru in his own personal car. The Governor of the Colony of the Straits
Settlements is on record personally thanking the Sultan on behalf of His
Majesty for his role in quelling the Uprising.
The State of Johore contributed financially to the construction of the Tambak Johore (Johore Causeway) that
carried road and railway traffic between the Mainland and the Settlement of
Singapore and later the water pipe-line that provided unprocessed water for
Singapore’s residential communities; commercial enterprise; military and the
shipping sectors. The Causeway was
opened in June 1924 and in December 1927 the State and Territory of Johore
signed the Water Agreement with the Municipality of Singapore. In 1931 Johore legislated the “Naval Base Waters (Johore) Enactment, Number
112” which provided for British War Ships manoeuvring in the Admiralty Base
Waters of the Colony of the Straits Settlements to pass through Johore
Territorial Waters in the Straits of Tebrau.
The Sultan of Johore had developed a personal relationship with the British
Royal Family. He made a cash donation of
500,000 Pounds Sterling for the Silver Jubilee of King George V, much of it was
used to fund the Imperial Naval Base at Sembawang in Singapore. In 1935 he was decorated with the Knight
Grand Cross which entitled him to use the title of “Sir” before his name. In
1939 when the Second World War broke out the Governor of the Colony of the
Straits Settlement tried to raise funds for the war effort. Sultan Ibrahim rejected the proposal and made
of 250,000 Pounds Sterling cash gift to King George VI when he was in Europe
and in 1940 he wrote a personal cheque of 100,000 Pounds Sterling as an
interest free personal 10 year loan to His Majesty’s Government.
The Republic of Singapore would have us believe that against this close
knit special relationship between the State and Territory of Johore and the
Settlement of Singapore and later the Crown Colony of Singapore that in 1953
Johore’s sovereignty was compromised. It
is ironical that in 1953, the very year that Sultan Ibrahim was decorated with
the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal, that a British Civil Servant of the
Crown sent a letter to the British Adviser, Johore that triggered processes
that led to the ICJ and its 2008 Judgment.
This long century of silence has been dealt with earlier in 2009 (See Attachment One. On June 15th,
2009 I posted “The Silent Long Century,
1850-1952” on this blogspot) and more recently in part when the Case was
made for Appeal based on New Facts hitherto unknown. There are a couple of Facts made by the
Republic of Singapore that needs addressing in this Report. The repeatedly running theme that vibrates
through this century of silence is that Johore and its successor Governments
did nothing on the Island Rock of Pedra Branca and its Territorial Waters. The claim was advanced by the Republic of
Singapore and echoed by the ICJ in its 2008 Judgment.
The single fact that is advanced by the Republic of Singapore for this
one hundred year period in making its claim of continued exertion of
sovereignty is the 1920 collision between a British vessel and a Dutch ship. It is claimed by the Republic of Singapore
that its predecessor Government, the Crown Colony of the Straits Settlements,
investigated the shipping incident and heard it the Colony of the Straits
Settlements Marine Court of Enquiry, Port of Singapore. In contrast, the Republic of Singapore claimed
that the State of Johore and its Territory and its successor Government, the
Federation of Malaya never carried any sovereign act of its own on Pedra Branca
in this period 1852-1952.
One shipping incident heard in a Colony of the Straits Settlements
Marine Court of Enquiry in 1920 against an alleged background of Johore’s
silence in a hundred year period was enough to catch the attention of the Court
as will be set out the narrative below. The silence haunts the Court as even in its
concluding remarks of its Judgment the Court again draws attention that Johore
and its successor Government did nothing in this one hundred year period.
No one asked the obvious question did the Colony of the Straits
Settlements Marine Court of Enquiry in the Port of Singapore not investigate
and hear any other Shipping casualties in this one hundred year period. Were all these shipping casualties
investigated and heard were predicated on the territorial waters of the
Settlement of Singapore and later Crown Colony of Singapore?
In this long century, this Report will draw attention to Johore-Britain
Treaties and Agreements with Maps and Admiralty Charts attached that reflected
the intentions of the parties involved.
With the exception of the 1927 which was commented by the ICJ, the other
Treaties and Agreements were never addressed in the Judgment. These documents formed the solid spine of
continuity of Johore’s historical title over Pedra Branca which the Governor of
the Colony of the Straits Settlements knew and the Colonial Office knew. It is advanced that these documents had all
the intentions of Sovereign Acts by the
State and Territory of Johore on Pedra Branca. It is the Republic of
Singapore that chose to plead ignorance of these weighty legal engagements done
by the Governor of the Colony of the Straits Settlements. But was quick to recognise the “legal
significance” of the same Office of the Governor of the Colony of the Straits
Settlements when that office convened the single Marine Court of Investigation
in 1920 over a one hundred period.
The reader is asked to judge the evidence that is the Pleadings before
the Court. There is no new evidence,
hitherto unknown, introduced in this Report.
The young undergraduates of Malaysian and Singaporean Universities are
invited to weigh the facts. There is a
website on the History Department, National University of Singapore which
conducts an internet discussion on historical issues. This effort is highly lauded and perhaps
could be a platform for us to engage in an investigation and interrogation of
our historical sources. A decision has
to be made without prejudice which fact is light as the down feather of a
fighting cockerel blowing in the wind and which fact is as solid and anchored
as the granite rock that built the Horsburgh Lighthouse.
Singapore Pleadings
Singapore Memorial Para 6: “The Investigation by Singapore of Navigational
Hazards and Shipwrecks in the Territorial Waters of Pedra Branca.” (pg. 118)
Singapore Memorial Para 6.76: “Singapore and her
predecessors-in-title have also exercised sovereign authority over Pedra Branca
by investigating and reporting on maritime hazards and shipwrecks within the
island’s territorial waters.”
Singapore Memorial Para 6.77: “As early as 1920, a Court
of Investigation of the Straits Settlement, Port of Singapore, held a formal
investigation into the circumstances surrounding a collision between a British
vessel and a Dutch ship about 1½ to 1¾ miles north of Pedra Branca (footnote266). The Master of the British
vessel was reprimanded by the Court for his actions.”
Footnote 266 “Report of the Court of Investigation to
Examine into the Circumstances Attending the Collision between the British s.s.
Chak Sang and the Dutch s.s. Ban Fo Soon about 1.5 to 1.75 Miles
North of the Horsburgh Lighthouse on the Night of the 9th July 1920, dated 5
Aug 1920, attached to this Memorial as Annex
78.” (See Singapore Memorial)
Singapore Memorial Section
IV. “In
Contrast to Singapore, Malaysia has Never Carried Out any Sovereign Acts on
Pedra Branca.” (pg. 132)
Singapore Memorial Para 6.112 “If the documentary record
is striking in demonstrating that the United Kingdom and Singapore carried out
extensive State functions on Pedra Branca ever since its acquisition, it is
equally striking in revealing the complete absence of any similar activities on
the part of Malaysia. Quite simply, Singapore does not believe that Malaysia
can point to a single example of State activity that Malaysia undertook on
Pedra Branca at any time after the island had been acquired by the United
Kingdom in 1847-1851.”
Singapore Memorial Section
I. “Malaysia’s
Implicit and Express Recognition of Singapore’s Sovereignty Over Pedra Branca.”
(pg. 140)
A. MALAYSIA’S ELOQUENT SILENCE
IN THE FACE OF SINGAPORE’S ACTS OF SOVEREIGNTY
2. Legal Effects of Malaysia’s Silence
Singapore Memorial Para 7.25 “The case-law cited in
this award is impressive. When applied to the present case, there is no doubt
that Malaysia’s long and persistent silence – in the face of a continued,
peaceful and public pattern of acts of Singapore as sovereign – is an
unequivocal recognition of, or at the very least clear acquiescence in,
Singapore’s sovereignty over Pedra Branca.”
Singapore Reply
Singapore Reply Para 4.30 “Any assessment of the legal value of State
conduct with respect to Pedra Branca depends on the overall context of the
case, not on a fragmented approach to the evidence as adopted by Malaysia. It
is not enough for Malaysia to provide affidavits from outside consultants
discussing the tasks that might, in any given situation, be entrusted to the
administrator of a lighthouse. The facts must be viewed in the light of all the
relevant circumstances. In the present case, the overall context within which
Singapore’s conduct falls to be considered encompasses the following key
elements:”
(h) “Throughout this
period, and consistent with all of the factors mentioned above, neither Johor
nor Malaysia ever carried out any sovereign act of their own on the island.”
Singapore Reply Para 4.161 “The next incident taken up by Malaysia's
Counter-Memorial concerns the investigation carried out by a Court of
Investigation sitting in Singapore into a collision in 1920 between a British
vessel s.s. Chak Sang and a Dutch vessel s.s. Ban Fo Soon some 1
1/2 miles north of Pedra Branca. Malaysia contests this example of the exercise
of territorial jurisdiction by the authorities in Singapore on the grounds that
the jurisdictional basis of the inquiry had nothing to do with sovereignty over
Pedra Branca.”
Singapore Reply Para 4.162 “While the report of the
investigation does not state the exact basis on which it was convened, the
significance of Singapore's investigation of an accident occurring so near (i.e.,
1 1/2 miles) to Pedra Branca is undeniable. The incident further illustrates
that Singapore authorities were diligent in investigating incidents of this
kind which took place in Pedra Branca's territorial waters while Malaysia, and
her predecessor Johor, were not.”
ICJ Judgment
The Court assessed the evidence during this one hundred year period in Paragraphs 165 to 191 before moving on
to the 1953 Correspondence as another subject.
The Court took pains to dismiss the claims of both parties on their specific
conduct on Pedra Branca and its Territorial Waters and bearing in mind the “extensive
aid” of the period of construction and commissioning of the Horsburgh
Lighthouse, 1847-1851 and its “sovereign character” in Report Two; the Court in its Judgement extended that trend and
tilted in favour of the Republic of Singapore’s version of its predecessor’s
conduct on Pedra Branca. Based on a
single act in 1920 the Court accepted the Republic of Singapore’s claim that similar
Investigations were conducted and heard in 1963 and 1979 and continued even in
the 1980’s.
In its final concluding remarks of its Judgment the Court again
re-visited this period and again echoed the Republic of Singapore’s claim that
Johore and its successor Government took no action at all on Pedra Branca
during this one hundred years.
The reader is posed with the question what weight would you put on a
single act in 1920 in a Colony of Straits Settlements Marine Court of Enquiry
in favour of the Republic of Singapore’s claim of continuous sovereign acts in
this long century. Conversely, in the silence that the Republic of Singapore
alluded to and the Court in its Judgment concurred, there were sovereign acts taken
by the State and Territory of Johore with Britain in its Treaties and
Agreements accompanied with Charts/Maps.
These documents were placed with the Court and Singapore had responded
to Malaysia’s claim. That is to say would the reader be inclined to read that
by including Pedra Branca in the Maps/Charts of Treaties and Agreements that
Johore was confirming its historical sovereignty over Pedra Branca and that
this established fact in advancing the State and Territory of Johore’s claim is
far superior to that of a single Colony of the Straits Settlements Marine Court
of Enquiry decision. Surely Treaties and
Maps attached to illustrate the intention of both parties is an enshrined legal
principle to establish sovereignty as in previous ICJ Judgments.
ICJ Judgment 5.4.4. The conduct of the Parties,
1852-1952
ICJ Judgment Para 164. “The Parties
refer to activities undertaken by them and their predecessors in title between
1852 and 1980, and indeed beyond. Given the nature of the conduct, the changing
constitutional position of the Parties and their predecessors and an exchange
of correspondence in 1953 to which the Parties have given a great deal of
attention, the Court finds it
convenient to divide the conduct between events occurring before 1953 and those
occurring after. The division is not precise since some conduct runs through
the whole period.”
ICJ Judgment Para 165. “At this
stage it is also convenient for the Court to put to one side as not relevant to
sovereignty over Pedra Branca/Pulau Batu Puteh a number of matters mentioned by
Singapore but which relate essentially to the maintenance and operation of the
lighthouse and nothing more — the improvement of the lighthouse, the exercise
of authority over its personnel, and the collection of meteorological
information (on the last matter see also paragraph 265).”
ICJ Judgment Para 233. “The first
investigation to which Singapore refers was into a collision within 2 miles of
the island in 1920 between British and Dutch vessels.(This is one of the
instances referred to in paragraph 164 above where it is convenient to consider
pre-1953 conduct at this stage.) The report of the investigation does not identify the
jurisdictional basis on
which it was undertaken. Of some significance for the Court is that the enquiry
was undertaken by Singapore and not Johor.”
ICJ Judgment Para 275. “Further, the Johor authorities
and their successors took no action at all on Pedra Branca/Pulau Batu Puteh
from June 1850 for the whole of the following century or more.”
Points of Fact
Shipping Casualties
This Century,
1852-1952, is crucial in shaping the Court’s final Judgment, especially since
Malaysia had in the Court’s Judgment historical title to Pedra Branca. In this one hundred years the Court evaluated
the evidence of conduct by both parties on Pedra Branca and its Territorial Waters.
In arriving at some early conclusions the Court referred to legal principles in
International Law which were established in earlier Judgments:
ICJ Judgment Para 121. “Under certain
circumstances, sovereignty over territory might pass as a result of the failure
of the State which has sovereignty to respond to conduct à titre de
souverain of the other State or, as Judge Huber put it in the Island of
Palmas case, to concrete manifestations of the display of territorial
sovereignty by the other State (Island of Palmas Case (Netherlands/United
States of America), Award of 4 April 1928, RIAA, Vol. II, (1949) p.
839). Such manifestations of the display of sovereignty may call for a response
if they are not to be opposable to the State in question. The absence of
reaction may well amount to acquiescence. The concept of acquiescence “is
equivalent to tacit recognition manifested by unilateral conduct which the
other party may interpret as consent . . .” (Delimitation of the Maritime
Boundary in the Gulf of Maine Area (Canada/United States of America), Judgment,
I.C.J. Reports 1984, p. 305, para. 130). That is to say, silence may also
speak, but only if the conduct of the other State calls for a response.”
ICJ Judgment Para 122. “Critical for
the Court’s assessment of the conduct of the Parties is the central importance
in international law and relations of State sovereignty over territory and of
the stability and certainty of that sovereignty. Because of that, any passing
of sovereignty over territory on the basis of the conduct of the Parties, as set
out above, must be manifested clearly and without any doubt by that conduct and
the relevant facts. That is especially so if what may be involved, in the case
of one of the Parties, is in effect the abandonment of sovereignty over part of
its territory.”
Long before the
claimed Republic of Singapore that its predecessor Government took possession
of Pedra Branca, 1847-1851, and exercised the will of the Crown in the
construction and commissioning of Horsburgh Lighthouse; the Settlement of
Singapore had investigated and reported shipping casualties on Pedra Branca and
its Territorial Waters; on Point Rumenia in the State of Territory of Johore
and on Pulau Bintang, which formed part of the Territories of the Rhio-Lingga
Sultanate under the Dutch sphere of influence.
In this long century, the Settlement of Singapore and later Crown
Colony of Singapore investigated and reported annually shipping
casualties. The following Attachment TWO lists out the various shipping cases heard in the
Courts of the Port of Singapore. It
would be evidently clear that the Jurisdiction of the Settlement of Singapore
Court and its successor Courts were not based on territorial sovereignty. The list of case after case of annual
evidence was never placed in either the Malaysia nor the Singapore
Pleadings. Nonetheless it is very much
in the public domain. It is in the Colony
of the Straits Settlements Government Gazettes; Annual Reports of the
Marine Department, Colony of the Straits Settlements and in contemporary
Singapore newspapers and more recently with the advancement of technology it is
readily available on the internet. See http://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/newspapers/ made possible by the National Library of Singapore.
The one shipping incident that the Republic of Singapore established
occurred in 1920 and advanced the point that the Colony of the Straits
Settlements Court, Port of Singapore heard the case because it occurred within
the Territorial Waters of Pedra Branca:
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS GOVERNMENT GAZETTE, SEPT.
10, 1920.
1451
No. 1612.-COURT OF
INVESTIGATION TO EXAMINE INTO THE CIRCUMSTANCES ATTENDING THE COLLISION BETWEEN
THE BRITISH s.s. Chak Sang and THE
DUTCH s.s. Ban Fa Soon ABOUT I 1/2 to l 3/4 MILES NORTH OF THE
HORSBURGH LIGHTHOUSE ON THE NIGHT OF THE 9TH JULY, 1920.
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS.
PORT OF SINGAPORE.
Report of Court.
THE MERCHANT SHIPPING ORDINANCE, 1910.
(SECTION 288 (4) AND RULE 19 OF RULES UNDER SECTION
295)'.
[Emphasis Added]
In the matter of a formal
investigation held at Singapore on the 5th day of August, 1920, before PAUL
FELIX DAVID, assisted by BERTIE ANGELO CATOR, Commander, R.N., MAURICE LLEWELYN
TONKIN and JOHN BAXTER, Master Mariners, into the circumstances attending the
collision between the British s.s. Chak Sang and the Dutch s.s. Ban Fo Soon about 1 1/2 to 1 3/4
miles North of the Horsburgh Lighthouse on the night of the 9th July, 1920.
The Court having carefully
enquired into the circumstances attending the above-mentioned casualty makes
answers to the questions put to it as follows, namely :-
Question 1.-Was the s.s. Chak
Sang properly found and equipped and in a seaworthy condition on leaving Hong
Kong on the 3rd July, 1920?
Answer.- Yes.
Question 2.- Did the s.s. Chak Sang carry
her proper complement of Officers as required by law?
Anwer.-Yes.
Question 3.- Was a proper lookout kept
on board both the s.s. Chak Sang and the s.s. Ban Fo Soon ?
Answer.-Yes.
Question 4.-Were proper Navigation
Lights exhibited by both vessels?
Answer.-Yes.
Question 5.-How long before the
collision did each vessel observe the others lights?
Answer .-The s.s. Chak
Sang saw the masthead and side lights of s.s. Ban Fo Soon 20
minutes before the collision. The side lights and masthead lights of the s.s. Chak
Sang were sighted by the s.s. Ban Fo Soon about 33 minutes before
collision.
Question 6.-Were proper steps taken
by the Officer in charge of each ship, after sighting each other's lights, to
ensure the safe navigation of their respective ships?
Answer.-No.
The Master of the s.s. Chak
Sang did not take proper steps to ascertain the bearing of the approaching
vessel.
Question 7.-Were the vessels
crossing vessels within the meaning of Article 19 of the Regulations for
Preventing Collisions at Sea? .
Answer.-Yes.
Question 8.-Where and at what time did the collision
occur?
Answer.- The evidence as to the exact
place of the collision is conflicting but the Court is of opinion that it
occurred about 1 1/2 to 1 3/4 miles North of Horsburgh Lighthouse. The time of
collision was 8.9 P.M. on 9th July.
Question 9.-Were any lives lost as a
result of the collision and from which vessel?
Answer.-No.'
Question 10.-Did the Master of the
s.s. Chak Sang render assistance to the s.s. Ban Fo Soon as
required by Section 422 of the Merchant Shipping Act 1894?
Answer.-Yes.
Question 11.-(i) What damage was caused to the s.s. Ban
Fo Soon?
(ii) What damage was caused to the s.s. Chak Sang?
Answer.-(i) and (ii) As stated in the
report of Government Surveyor of Ships-Exhibit B.,
Question 12. By whose wrongful act or default was the
collision caused?
Answer. - The Master of the s.s. Chak Sang. .
Question 13. -Decision of the Court in
respect to Certificate of the Master of the s.s. Chak Sang.
Answer. - The
Court decides not to deal
with the Certificate of the Master of the s.s. Chak Sang but reprimand
him for failing to take bearings of the s.s. Ban Fo Soon after sighting
her. .
The Assessors' fees to be paid by the
Attorney-General.
Dated at Singapore, this 5th day of August,
1920. P. F.
DAVID,
President.
We concur in the above report.
B. A. CATOR,
M. L. TONKIN,. Assessors.
John Baxter
The following are cases heard in the Colony of the Straits Settlements,
Marine Court of Investigation, Port of Singapore based on the same Merchant Shipping Ordinance and same
Sections and Rules and the same Court of Investigation at the Port of Singapore
and the Reports were published in the same Colony
of the Straits Settlements Government
Gazettes as the 1920 Horsburgh case documented above. The Colony of the
Straits Settlements Court of Investigation, Port of Singapore on shipping
incidents heard cases occurring in Dutch, Johore and Philippine Territorial
Waters. In the Colony of the Straits
Settlements Marine Courts of Investigation, jurisdiction was not based on
territorial sovereignty.
Case One
This involves the sinking of the vessel s.s. Hong Wan off Muar, in the State and Territory of Johore in the
Straits of Malacca. There are several
other cases heard by the same Court at the Port of Singapore of shipping
causalities in the territorial waters of the State and Territory of
Johore. The British Adviser of Johore
did not raise any objections that shipping casualties in Johore’s territorial
waters were heard by the Colony of the Straits Settlements Marine Court of
Investigation with the High Commissioner in Kuala Lumpur or with the Governor
of the Colony of the Straits Settlements.
This fact speaks volumes on the nature and function of the Colony of the
Straits Settlements Marine Court of Investigation, Port of Singapore. There was no reason; as such Courts of
Investigation had nothing to do with the territoriality of where the Shipping
Casualties occurred.
8- STRAITS SETTLEMENTS
GOVERNMENT GAZETTE, JAN. 4, 1918
No. 8.-COURT OF INVESTIGATION into the
circumstances attending The Loss OF the s.s. Hong Wan IN THE
STRAITS OF MALACCA.
Report.
THE MERCHANT SHIPPING ORDINANCE, I9I0
(SECTION 288 (4) AND RULE
19 OF THE RULES MADE
UNDER SECTION 295). [Emphasis
added]
In the matter of a formal
investigation held at Singapore on the 22nd, 23rd, 28th and 30th days of
November, 1917, before
RALPH SCOTT, Esq., District Judge, assisted by Commander B. A. CATOR,
R..N., Mr. A. SNOW and Mr. H. J. HENDERSON, Master Mariners, into the
circumstances attending the loss of the s.s. Hong Wan.
The Court, having carefully
inquired into the circumstances of the above mentioned shipping casualty, finds
for the reasons stated in the Annexe hereto that :-
Question 1.-Was the s.s. Hong Wan properly found and equipped and
in a seaworthy condition when she left Singapore on the 10th October, 1917?
Answer.-The ship was
properly found and equipped. There may have been a little more deck cargo than
was admitted by the ship's officers but not enough to endanger her, if properly
secured. The Court is of the opinion that it was not properly secured.
According to one passenger the ship was leaking when she left, his evidence is
uncorroborated and this cannot be accepted as proved.
Question 2. Have the vessel her proper complement?
Answer.-Yes. The number of
the crew according to the articles was 30, 37 appear to have been actually on board.
Question 3.-What was the number of the
passengers?
Answer.--3 for certain.
There may have been a few more, but in any case the number was well below her
licensed capacity of 139.
Question 4.-Was the ship
navigated in a prudent and seamanlike manner up to the time of foundering- ?
Answer.-The Court is of the
opinion that course was altered some time after 4-30 A.M., on October 11th
from North-west by West to go into Muar,
probably onto a North-easterly course. The master must have had some good
reason for altering his original intention of proceeding direct to Malacca and
was justified in his change of course. Up to this time the vessel had been
navigated in a prudent and seamanlike manner, but having decided that it was
necessary to go into and having set his course for Muar-his further change of
course back to North-west by West was not a prudent one, as it brought the wind
and sea onto his port beam. The Court does not believe the vessel was ever put
onto a South-west course, as stated. The second change was influenced by the
chinchew or his clerk.
Question 5.-Were the
engines in good working order up to the time of floundering?
Answer.-Yes.
Question 6.-What was the cause of the floundering
of the vessel?
Answer.-The cause of the
foundering was the list to port which began at some time after 4-30 A.M. It is
impossible to decide on the evidence what the original cause of this list was ;
it was accentuated by water pouring into the engine room, and probably assisted
by the shifting of the cargo, caused by the list itself. The Court cannot
accept the evidence of the vessel's people that the foundering was caused by
seas breaking over her when on a South-west course. The Court considers that
the list may have been due to the ship springing a leak some time during the
voyage. The Court does not consider that the evidence shows that the state of the
wind and sea were sufficient to account for the list to port : both wind and
sea were on her port beam until she altered course to go into Muar.
Question 7.-Where did the vessel flounder?
Answer.-Somewhere between the Muar River and
Pulau Undan, probably nearer to the former.
Question 8.-Were proper steps taken to save the
passengers and crew?
Answer.-An attempt was made
to distribute life-belts and clear the boats. The ship appears to have
floundered before these steps were completed.
The starboard boat was not cleared.
Question 9.-How many passengers were lost?
Answer.-At least 8 persons.
Question 10.-How many members of the crew were
lost?
Answer.-Three.
Question 11.-By whose
wrongful act or default (if any) was the floundering occasioned?
Answer.-The Master's, for the following reason:-
If he had kept on his
course to Muar he might have saved the ship, the second change of course to
proceed to Malacca risked her safety. The fact that he wished, to go into Muar
leads the Court to believe that he considered it was necessary for her safety
that he should get into the nearest port, and as soon as possible.
Question 12.-Decision of the Court in respect to
the Certificates of the Master and Officers concerned.
Answer.-The Master's Certificate is suspended
for six months.
Question 13.-Costs, by whom to be paid?
Answer.-The costs of the witnesses to be paid by
the ship's owners.
Dated this 4th day of December, 1917.
R. SCOTT,
Judge.
We concur in the above report. }
B. A.
CATOR, COMDR. R.N., }
Master Attendant, s. s.
ALEX. SNOW, } Assessors,
H. J. HENDERSON, }
Annexe
The S.S. Hong Wan left Singapore at 4-30 P.M., on
October 10th bound direct for Malacca. According to the declaration
signed by the Boarding Officer she had a crew of 29 and 73 passengers,
including 6 women and 2 children
; she also had a certain amount of deck cargo and firewood on the main deck,
and her Plimsoll mark was 3 inches
above the water line. The evidence of the ship's officers and crew was all most
unsatisfactory; there is no doubt that they have not only kept the real reason
for the ship's loss concealed as far as possible, but they have also concocted
a new story to account for it since their return to Singapore. It is difficult
to decide what the actual events were which occurred and the uncertainty begins
with the Boarding Officer's declaration. The evidence of the Muar authorities
and various passengers' statements make it clear that the figures in the
declaration are incorrect and that the Boarding Officer did not count the
numbers on board at all, he also probably never went up into the shade deck as
he states he did. This makes it impossible to say how many
passengers were actually lost.
The Master remained in
charge until midnight when he handed over to the Gunner. At 4 A.M., the Master was roused by
the wind and took over charge again; the ship's position being between Pulau
Undan and Kuala Kesang about 6 miles from the former place and on a course of
North-West by West. According to him he altered course to South-West at 4-30 A.M. and slowed down on account
of the wind and sea getting up, the wind being South-West. The wind and sea
increased and washed the ship over the bows, he found at 5 A.M. that she
was in a bad way and ordered life-belts to be served out and the boats cleared.
At 5-15 A.M., he altered course North to try to get into shallow water
before she sank and two or three minutes after she had steadied on her new
course she sank. He denied that he ever tried to get into Muar. The conclusion
which the Court arrived at was that this story was untrue and that the actual
facts were probably as follows.
Somewhere about 4-30 A.M. the Master considered that
it was advisable to go into Muar instead of going on to Malacca. His reasons for
this are unknown, but were probably connected with the state of the weather and
the fact that the ship had begun to list. He sent for and informed the
chinchew, or his clerk, of his intention and was told to do what he thought
proper. Course was altered for Muar but shortly after he was told by the
chinchew, or the clerk, that he must proceed to Malacca and against his own
better judgment he complied. The ship which had already begun to list to port,
took a further list, water poured into the engine room and put out the fires in
furnace, the deck cargo and possibly the cargo in the hold, shifted under the
influence of the list and the vessel sank shortly after. The original cause of
the list cannot be found.
An
attempt was made to serve
out life-belts and clear the boats. The port boat got away but the starboard
one did not. Later on the starboard boat, came up and about 22 people got into
her. The passengers and crew were rescued by launches which came out from Muar
on receipt of the news of the disaster. A
muster was held at the Police Station and according to the list made by
the Deputy Commissioner of Police the number of crew present was 34, passengers
65, and one dead woman who had been picked up from the floating
wreckage. No other bodies were recovered.
There is no doubt that
three of the crew were lost and at least eight passengers: in all probability
this is not full number.
The Master, Gunner,
Quartermaster, Chinchew and Clerk gave very unreliable evidence. The
passengers' evidence and that of the Muar officials showed this up, but all
their allegations could not be accepted as proved.
There is no doubt at all
that the course was altered to go into Muar, and, whatever the Master's reasons
were he must have known that by altering course again on the chinchew's
instructions he was increasing the danger to the ship. There appears to have
been a fairly stiff squall with some sea but not enough to endanger the ship
under ordinary circumstances. His action possibly deprived the vessel of a good
chance of getting safely into Muar or at all events of getting into shallow
water and near the shore before she sank. If he had frankly accepted liability
for his error and given all the assistance he could in elucidating the facts of
the disaster, the Court would have felt it could recommend him to His
Excellency the Governor for some consideration in respect to his suspended
certificate, but in view of his evidence is unable to do this.
The chinchew's, or clerk's,
interference with the Master's discretion in his navigation of the vessel must
be held to be a contributory cause to the disaster.
In such cases it cannot be
doubted that a native master is more or less under the chinchew's thumb,
unfortunately the Court cannot deal with him.
Dated this 4th day of December, 1917.
R. SCOTT,
Judge
B A. CATOR,
COMDR. R. N., }
Master Attendant, S.
S., }
ALEX. SNOW, } Assessors.
H.
J. HENDERSON, }
----------------------------------------
Case Two
This case investigated the stranding of s.s. Anamba off Sabang, in Northern Sumatra, Dutch Territories. It involved the same Merchant Shipping
Ordinance; the same Sections and Rules of that Ordinance as in the case of the
1920 Horsburgh Shipping collision. There
were many other shipping casualties in Indonesian Territorial Waters heard in
the Colony of the Straits Settlements Marine Court of Enquiry. The Dutch
authorities did not object that the Court of Investigation in the Settlement of
Singapore heard such cases.
Straits Settlements
Government Gazette, Jan. 3, 1919
No.14.-COURT OF
INVESTIGATION INTO THE CIRCUMSTANCES
ATTENDING THE STRANDING OF THE BRITISH S. S. Anamba NEAR SABANG ON THE 26th
September, 1918
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS.
Report
of Court.
THE MERCHANT SHIPPING ORDINANCE,
1910.
(SECTION 288 (4) AND RULE 19 OF THE
RULES MADE UNDER SECTION 295).
[Emphasis added]
In
the matter of a formal
investigation held at Singapore on the 28th day of November, 1918, before
WILLIAM LANGHAM-CARTER, District Judge and First Magistrate, assisted by A. A.
CHALMERS, R.N.R., W. DAWSON and J. E. FARRFLL Master Mariners, into the
circumstances attending the stranding of the British s.s. Anamba near Sabang on the
26th September, 1918
The Court having carefully
enquired into the circumstances attending the above-mentioned stranding makes
answer to the questions put to it as follows, namely:-
Question 1.-Was the s.s. Anamba properly found and
equipped and in a seaworthy condition on leaving Soesoe for Sabang (Pulo Weh)
on the 25th September, 1918?
Answer 1.-yes.
Question 2.-Had the vessel the
requisite charts, sailing directions and navigating instruments?
Answer 2.-Yes. I
Question 3.-
Where and when were the
compasses last adjusted?
Answer 3.-By the Captain himself last September-in Sabang
Bay.
Question 4.-Had the vessel her proper complement or
certificated officers?
Answer 4.-Yes.
Question 5.-Was the vessel navigated
in a prudent and seamanlike manner after leaving Soesoe on the 25th September,
1918, up to the time of stranding?
Answer 5.-The vessel was so
navigated up to the time when the course was changed at 9-52 and after that the
Master did not take sufficient care to keep her on the bearing S. 30.2 which
must have been safe and which must have opened up the red lights and ensured
the safety of the ship.
Question 6.-Were the engines in good
working order up to the time of stranding?
Answer 6.-Yes, as regards
the main engines, but the steering gear was not satisfactory, and it being within
the knowledge of the Master that this was so, was an additional reason for caution
in navigation.
Question 7. -Where did the vessel
strand?
Answer 7.-On the N.W. point of Pulau Way?
Question 8.-After the vessel struck were proper steps
taken to save the ship?
Answer 8.-Yes.
Question 9.-By whose wrongful act or
default (if any) was the stranding occasioned?
Answer 9 - By that of the Master who
should have exercised greater caution in navigation.
Question 10.-Decision of the Court
in respect of the Certificates of the Master and Officers concerned.
Answer 10.-The Court cannot deal
with the certificates of any of the officers except that of the Master. As
regards his certificate, the Court has by a majority decided not to suspend it,
but considers him deserving of severe censure.
Question 11. Costs, by whom to be
paid?
Answer 11.-The Court orders that the costs be paid by
the Master.
Dated this 20th day of November, 1918.
W. LANGHAM-CARTER,
President.
We concur in the above report.
W. DAWSON, }
A. A. CHALMERS, } Assessors.
J. E. FARRELL, }
Annex
to the Report.
The British s.s. Anamba,
Official No. 123917 of London, Gross Tonnage 1835, Nett Tonnage 1159; Master
CLAUDE PHILIP ARNOLD, Certificate No. 0. C. 038145, owned by Messrs The
Anglo-Petroleum Company, Limited, of London, left Pangkalan Soesoe at 2-07 P.M.
on the 25th September 1918, for Sabang with a cargo of case oil of
the weight of about 1,783 tons and a crew of 42 all told, On September 26th the
Master set the course West true from noon and bearings were taken by him between
8 P.M. and 9-50 P.M. of that date of Tapa Gaja Light and Ujong Bahu Point; all
of which bearings put the vessel a little over a mile from the shore. At 9-52
P.M. being then about two miles from the shore the Master headed the ship for
Kellas Light the bearing being S. 30 E. by Co1npsi which was supposed to be
true. The Red Light on Masam Point was not then visible. At 10-4 P.M. the
steering gear jammed, the vessel being then about one mile from the shore, and
at about 10-7 P.M. the steering gear cleared again and the helm was put “Hard a
Port " but the ship failed to answer it and at 10-11 P.M. the vessel took the
ground near Penimpuan with Penimpuan Point bearing about S.S.E. by Standard Compass. The weather at
this time was fairly clear with moderate Westley wind, and moderate to heavy swell. The vessel
remained fast for 5 days and was subsequently to cut off by the Company's tug boat Neptune. Some of the cargo
was discharged into Company lighters, whilst the vessel was aground. The vessel
put into Sabang under her own steam where temporary repairs were effected and afterwards
she proceeded to Singapore arriving there on the afternoon of October 26th, 1918, for docking and
repairs.
LANGHAM-CARTER.
President
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS.
PORT OF SINGAPORE.
ORDER FOR PAYMENT OF COST
OF INVESTIGATION.
THE MERCHANT SHIPPING
ORDINANCE, 1910.
(SECTION 288 (7) AND RULE
18 OF RULES UNDER SECTION, 29).
In the matter of a formal
investigation held at Singapore on the 28th day of November, 1918 WILLIAM
LANGHAM-CARTER District Judge and 1st Magistrate, assisted by A. A. CHALMERS Lieut.,
R.N.R., W. DAWSON and J. E. FARRELL,
Master Mariners, into the circumstances attending the Stranding of the British S.S. Anamba near Sabang on the 26th September, 1918.
The Court orders that :- C.
P. ARNOLD, Master of s.s. Anamba, do pay to the Attorney-General the sum of
forty-eight dollars ($48) on account of the expenses of this investigation.
Given under my hand this 28th day of November,
1918.
W.
LANGHAM-CARTER
Judge
Case Three
The Straits Settlements Court of Investigation, Port of Singapore heard
the case of the stranding of s.s.Kajang,
off Taganak Island in the Sulu Seas, Philippine Territorial Waters which was
under American Administration,.
No. 638. – Court of Investigation to Examine into the circumstances
attending the stranding of the s.s. Kajang on a voyage from Sandakan to Kudat
on January 23rd, 1920
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS.
PORT OF SINGAPORE.
Report of Court.
THE MERCHANT SHIPPING
ORDINANCE, 1910.
(SECTION 288 (4) AND RULE 19 OF RULES UNDER SECTION
295).
[Emphasis added]
In the matter of a formal
investigation held at Singapore on the 9th day of March, 1920, before RALPH
SCOTT, assisted by BERTIE Angelo Catok, Commander, H.N., ARTHUR STANLEY FULLAM and
HUGH LLOYD PRITCHARD, Master Mariners, into the circumstances attending the
stranding of the s.s. Kajang on
a voyage from Sandakan to Kudat on January 23rd, 1920.
The Court having carefully
enquired into the circumstances attending the above-mentioned stranding makes
answer to the questions put to it as follows, namely :-
Question 1.-Was the s.s.
Kajang- properly found and equipped and in a seaworthy condition on leaving
Sandakan for Kudat on the 23rd January, 1920 ?
Answer 1.-Yes.
Question 2.-Had the vessel
the requisite charts, sailing direction and navigating instruments?
Answer 2.-Yes.
Question 3.-
Where and when were the compasses last adjusted ?
Answer 3.-In Singapore in September, 1919.
Question 4.-Had the vessel her proper complement
of Certificated Officers?
Answer 4.-Yes.
Question 5.-Was the vessel
navigated in a prudent and seamanlike manner after leaving Sandakan on the 23rd
January, 1920, up to the time of stranding ?
Answer 5.-The vessel was
not navigated in a prudent and seamanlike manner, as the Master failed to take
steps to verify his exact position with re regard to Pulau Taganak when he was
called on deck by the Second Officer at 3
A.M.
Question
6.-Were the engines in good
working order up to the time of stranding?
Answer 6.-Yes.
Question 7.-Where did the vessel
strand?
Answer 7.-On the reef on the South-east side of
Pulau Taganak.
Question
8.-After the vessel struck,
were proper steps taken to save the ship?
Answer 8.-Yes.
Question
9.-By whose wrongful act or
default (if any) was the stranding occasioned?
Answer 9.-The Master's for the
reason given in reply to Question 5.
Question 10.-Decision of the Court
in respect to the Certificates of the Master and Officer concerned.
Decision 10.-The Master's
certificate is not dealt with.
Question 11.-Costs by whom to be
paid?
Answer 11 .- Government.
Dated the 9th March, 1920.
R. Scott,
President
We concur in the above
report.
B.A. CATOR }
A.S. FULLAM } Assessors
H.L. PRITCHARD }
The Court in its 2008 Judgment paid much attention to the 1920 Ship
collision within the Territorial Waters of Pedra Branca and the investigation
and hearing by the Colony of the Straits Settlements Marine Court of Enquiry,
Port of Singapore. In Paragraph 233
of its Judgment the Court observes that the Report as
submitted by the Republic of Singapore does not provide the
jurisdictional basis on
which it was undertaken. Nonetheless the
Court notes that it was within the Territorial Waters of Pedra Branca and the Colony
of the Straits Settlements Marine Court of Enquiry investigated and heard the
shipping case and the State and Territory of Johor did nothing.
The clear implication of the above statements of the Court is that it
judged that the Investigation had territorial implications. The case was heard by a Court at the Port of
Singapore under The Merchant Shipping
Ordinance, 1910. (Section 288 (4) and Rule 19 of Rules under
Section 295). [Emphasis added]
The Report of the Court was published in the Colony of the Straits Settlements Government Gazette, 10th
September 1920. The three cases noted
above decisively showed that neither the Dutch Indonesian nor the American
Philippines did anything for the Investigation and neither did they object that
the Colony of the Straits Settlements Marine Court which were discharging their
international obligations under the Merchant Shipping Ordinance. Neither did the British Adviser, responsible
for the 1885 Territorial Integrity of the State and Territory of Johore under
Treaty obligations advise the Sultan and his State Council that the Settlement
of Singapore was intruding into its Sovereign Waters.
The Court had ruled that it is the responsibility of the party that
wants to establish a fact to provide the evidence to establish that claim. The threshold of evidence is very low in this
case as under the same Merchant Shipping
Ordinance and same Sections and Rules and the same Court of Investigation
at the Port of Singapore heard 3 other similar cases and the Reports were
published in the same Colony of the Straits
Settlements Government Gazettes. Malaysia
might be held negligent for not providing the details of shipwrecks for the
period 1852 – 1952. Malaysia depended on
the affidavits of maritime experts who attested that investigating and hearing
such cases in Marine Courts does not reflect territorial sovereignty.
In the context of the legal weight of significance that the single 1920
shipping incident within the Territorial Waters of Pedra Branca is assigned by
the Court there must be some responsibility of the Republic of Singapore. The Republic of Singapore pulled out this
single 1920 shipping collision from the legal records of the Colony of the Straits Settlements Gazettes. Their researchers would have had to dredge
over hundreds of pages to find this one incident. They should take
responsibility of the party that advanced the fact when the Republic of
Singapore only singled out one shipping incident from the Colony of the Straits Settlements Government Gazette and presented
the evidence to its best advantage. Who
is to be accountable for the other brushed over facts that are in the same Government Gazettes; Annual Reports of the Marine Department,
Colony of the Straits Settlements and
later Crown Colony of Singapore and
in the Singapore based newspapers? A
manufactured fact by the Republic of Singapore shaped the final decision of the
Court.
There is another dimension of the Colony of the Straits Settlements
Marine Court of Investigation held in the Port of Singapore. This involves an Appeal against the Judgment
of the Court. The Higher Court that heard an Appeal as in the case of
Captain McLeod of s.s. Royalstar was
not a Colony of the Straits Settlements Court but the High Court in
London. The details of this case was
revealed in 2003 publication of “Beyond
the Harbour Lights”, authored by Chris Mills, Whittles Publishing, Dundurn.
The Colony of the Straits
Settlements Government Gazette published the Report of a Formal Investigation held at the First Magistrate’s Court,
Settlement of Singapore on 25th and 26th January 1927.
----------------------------------------
Case Four
FOR OFFICIAL USE
(No. 7856.)
"ROYALSTAR" (S.S.).
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS.
ORDINANCE No. 125 (MERCHANT SHIPPING)
ORDINANCE No. 125 (MERCHANT SHIPPING)
REPORT OF COURT.
In the matter of a Formal Investigation held
at the First Magistrate's Court, Singapore, on the 25th and 26th January, 1927,
before me, assisted by Captain GEOFFREY FREYBERG, O.B.E., R.N., Master
Attendant, Straits Settlements, Captain ALFRED HENRY BARNES, D.S.C., Master
Mariner and Pilot, Singapore, and Captain ROBERT WILLIAM MORRIS, Master
Mariner, Singapore, into the circumstances attending the grounding of the S.S.
"Royalstar" near Batu Beranti in Singapore Strait on the 13th
January, 1927.
The Court, having carefully inquired into the
circumstances attending the above-mentioned shipping casualty, finds, for the
reasons stated in the annex hereto, that the casualty was caused by the
negligence of the Master.
1. In omitting to satisfy himself personally
that his charts were up to date.
2. In neglecting to read the instructions on
page 170 of the Malacca Strait Pilot, 1924.
3. In neglecting to have any bearings taken
or the position fixed between 6.14 a.m. and 9.05 a.m.
The Court does not consider it necessary to
deal with the Master's certificate, but severely censures him for the acts of
negligence stated above.
Dated this 27th day of January, 1927.
P. F.
DAVID, Judge.
We concur in the above report.
GEOFFREY
FREYBERG.
A. H. BARNES. R. W. MORRIS. |
Assessors.
|
ANNEX TO
REPORT.
The S.S. "Royalstar," Captain John
McLeod, Master, entered the Singapore Strait from the eastward in the early
morning of 13th January, 1927, Horsburgh lighthouse being abeam to port distant
about one mile at 6.14 a.m., course S. 75° W. (true), speed about 11 knots,
the vessel drawing about 28 feet water (aft).
Both the Master and another Officer were on
duty on the bridge from when the vessel passed Horsburgh lighthouse until the
time of the accident, which occurred at 9.13 a.m., close north-eastward of Batu
Beranti lighthouse. The weather was fine and clear with smooth sea.
The ship's position was not fixed from 6.14
a.m. until 9.05 a.m., when bearings taken by the 3rd Officer and plotted by the
Master gave Peak Island (centre) N. 70° W. (compass), and Batu Beranti S. 54°
W. (compass), the compass error being 2° E. The vessel was then about two
miles from Batu Beranti.
At 9.11 a.m., as the vessel was apparently
being set down towards Batu Beranti, the Master gave the order
"hard-a-port," and at 9.13 a.m., while still swinging to starboard,
the ship struck a reef or obstruction on the starboard side forward abreast of
Nos. 2 and 3 bulkheads. As the "Royalstar" was making water the
Master decided to proceed to Singapore Roads for assistance, where he anchored
at 9.40 a.m. the same morning and docked later.
Owing to the lack of fixed positions there is
not sufficient evidence to show whether the vessel struck the 13 feet submerged
rock situated at a distance of about 2½ cables north-eastward of Batu Beranti
or an uncharted reef or rock in this vicinity.
The Admiralty large scale chart of the
locality was not in use, the ship being navigated by an out-of-date and
uncorrected copy of Admiralty chart No. 2,403, Singapore Strait, on which the
rock first-mentioned is not shown.
The Master stated in evidence that before
leaving Liverpool he gave directions for his charts to be sent ashore to be
corrected; but he took no steps to satisfy himself that his instructions had
been carried out. The Court considered that it was clearly the duty of the
Master personally to make sure that his charts were up to date, especially as
it is admitted that the officer into whose charge they had been given left the
ship a few days before she sailed.
The 13 feet submerged rock, which was
discovered in 1923, is shown on the latest Admiralty Charts, and is also
referred to in the Malacca Strait Pilot, 1924, a copy of which was in the
Master's possession.
As stated in the finding, the Court was
unable to determine whether the obstruction encountered by the
"Royalstar" was actually this rock, or some other still uncharted
rock or reef in the vicinity. It is reasonable to suppose, however, that if the
Master had been in possession of a chart showing the 13 feet rock, lie would
have given Batu Beranti a wider berth from the start.
In any case, if the Master had read and
followed the directions given on page 170 of the Malacca Strait Pilot, he would
have kept to the Northern side of the Strait and avoided this dangerous region
with regard to which a very definite warning is given.
P. F. DAVID, Judge.
List of
Questions and Answers.
1. Was the "Royalstar" properly
equipped and in a seaworthy condition as regards her hull and machinery? Answer:
Yes.
2. Where and at what time did the casualty
occur? Answer: At 9.13 a.m. on the 13th January, 1927, near Batu Beranti Light
in the Singapore Strait.
3. Was the "Royalstar" provided
with her proper complement of officers as required by Section 92 of the
Merchant Shipping Act, 1894? Answer: Yes.
4. Was the "Royalstar" provided with the requisite charts,
sailing directions and navigating instruments? Answer: Yes, with the exception
that the charts in use had not been corrected up to date.
4A. Was the Master justified in proceeding on
his voyage through the Singapore and Malacca Straits without proper Admiralty
charts of the latest possible date? Answer: No. The Court is of opinion that it
was the duty of the Master to ascertain that all his charts had been brought up
to date before sailing.
5. Was there a qualified officer of the watch on the bridge prior to and
at the time of the casualty? Answer: Yes.
6. Was a proper lookout kept on board this ship? Answer: Yes.
6A. What was the state of sea and weather at the time of the casualty?
Answer: The weather was fine and clear, calm and smooth sea.
7. Were proper steps taken by the Master to ensure the safe navigation
of the ship? Answer: No (see reply to Question 9).
7A. If the Court is of opinion that the
"Royalstar" struck a reef, was that reef properly charted on the
latest Admiralty charts? Answer: There is no doubt that the
"Royalstar" struck a submerged rock, but owing to the vagueness of
the evidence with regard to the position of the ship it is impossible to say
whether the obstruction in question was the 13 feet rock shown in the latest
Admiralty charts about 2¾ cables N.E. of Batu Meranti or an uncharted rock
further to the northward.
8. Did the ship sustain material damage affecting her seaworthiness?
Answer: Yes.
9. Was the casualty caused by the negligence,
error of judgment or unskilful navigation of John McLeod, Master of the S.S.
"Royalstar"? Answer: The Court is of opinion that the casualty was
caused by the negligence of the Master”
1. In omitting to satisfy himself personally
that his charts were up to date.
2. In
neglecting to read the instructions on page 170 of the Malacca Strait Pilot,
1924.
3. In
neglecting to have any bearings taken or the position fixed between 6.14 a.m.
and 9.05 a.m.
10. Was the casualty caused by the
negligence, error of judgment or unskilful navigation of Thomas MacDonald,
Third Mate of the S.S. "Royalstar"? Answer: No.
11. Is any action required with regard to the
certificate of John McLeod, Master of the S.S. "Royalstar"? Answer:
The Court does not consider it necessary to deal with the Master's certificate,
but severely censures him for the acts of negligence stated above.
12. Is any action required with regard to the
certificate of Thomas MacDonald, Third Mate of the S.S. "Royalstar"?
Answer: No. The Court considers that the Third Officer is in no way to blame.
13. Costs of the Court by whom to be paid?
Answer: The costs of the Inquiry to be paid by the Attorney-General
The Colony of Singapore Marine Court of
Inquiry found Captain McLeod guilty of negligence but his Master’s Certificate
was neither cancelled nor endorsed.
Captain McLeod felt that the verdict was unjust and in London he set out
to clear his name. He raised an Appeal
in the High Court, London and after consulting Shipping Acts, the High Court
allowed his appeal. In 1928 the High
Court Judge, London provided the basis of its jurisdiction and ruled:
Description:
|
Board of
Trade wreck report for 'Royalstar', 1927. This records the appeal against the
original wreck report.
|
Creator:
|
UK Board of
Trade
|
Date:
|
1927
|
Copyright:
|
Out of
copyright
|
Partner:
|
SCC Libraries
|
Partner ID:
|
Unknown
|
Transcription
FOR OFFICIAL
USE
(No. 7856A.)
"ROYALSTAR" (S.S.).
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE.
PROBATE, DIVORCE AND ADMIRALTY DIVISION.
PROBATE, DIVORCE AND ADMIRALTY DIVISION.
(Admiralty.)
DIVISIONAL COURT.
Before the Right Honourable Lord Merrivale,
President, and
The Honourable Mr. Justice Hill.
President, and
The Honourable Mr. Justice Hill.
1927. Folio
198.
On Appeal from a Court of Formal Investigation into a shipping casualty.
In the matter of the Merchant Shipping Acts,
1894-1906, and Rule 19 of the Shipping Casualties and Appeals and Re-hearings
Rules, 1923, and
In the matter of an Appeal from the Finding
of a Court of Formal Investigation held at Singapore on the 25th and 26th days
of January, 1927, into the stranding of the Steamship "Royalstar," of
London, in the Straits of Singapore, on the 13th day of January, 1927.
23rd March,
1928.
The Divisional Court, being assisted by
Captains OWEN-JONES and A. H. MORRELL, two of the Elder Brethren of Trinity
House, and having heard Counsel for John MacLeod, Appellant, and Counsel for
the Board of Trade, Respondents, pronounced in favour of the appeal of the said
Appellant from the finding, judgment or decision of a Court of Formal
Investigation or Inquiry held at Singapore on or about the 25th and 26th days
of January, 1927, whereby the said Court held the said John MacLeod to be in
default and censured him in respect of the damage occasioned to the S.S.
"Royalstar" in the Straits of Singapore on the 13th January, 1927,
set aside the finding, judgment or decision and set aside the censure, and
condemned the Board of Trade in the costs of the Motion dated the 22nd
November, 1927, but made no order as to the costs of this appeal.
(Sd.)
MERRIVALE.
(Sd.) MAURICE HILL.
(Sd.) MAURICE HILL.
LONDON:
PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY HIS MAJESTY'S STATIONERY OFFICE
PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY HIS MAJESTY'S STATIONERY OFFICE
To be purchased directly from H.M. STATIONERY OFFICE at the following
addresses:
Adastral House, Kingsway, London, W.C.2; 120, George Street, Edinburgh;
York Street, Manchester; 1, St. Andrew's Crescent, Cardiff;
15, Donegall Square West, Belfast;
or through any Bookseller.
Adastral House, Kingsway, London, W.C.2; 120, George Street, Edinburgh;
York Street, Manchester; 1, St. Andrew's Crescent, Cardiff;
15, Donegall Square West, Belfast;
or through any Bookseller.
1928.
Price 3d. Net.
The above mentioned website contains several other nineteenth century
cases of shipwrecks that were heard by the Court of Investigation, Port of
Singapore and its members were assembled under the authority of the Governor of
the Colony of the Straits Settlements and formed a Court held in accordance of
the Imperial Merchant Shipping Act and its subsequent Amendments. The Reports of Investigation of the Straits
Settlements Court were reported as Reports
of the Board of Trade and published by Her Majesty’s Stationary Office. For continuity the convening of these Marine
Courts of Investigation which were once under the orders of the Governor continued
later through the Minister of the relevant Ministry.
Points of Fact
Treaties and Agreements
with Charts/Maps Attached.
This section of the Report will draw attention to what is even more
deadly silent in this one hundred years which the Court in its Judgment never
referred when it gave its learned verdict. Treaties and Agreements and Maps/Charts
attached to these Treaties and Agreements during this period between Johore and
Britain that were advanced as facts by Malaysia in its Pleadings were never
considered. Each Treaty and Agreement
had Maps/Charts which clearly showed Pedra Branca as part of the State and
Territory of Johore. There was
continuity of Johore’s historical sovereignty over Pedra Branca from the time
of the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 17th March 1824 which divided the
Straits of Singapore into a Dutch sphere and British sphere of influence and
the subsequent Crawfurd Treaty of 2nd August 1824 with Map attached
through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
In this long century, 1852-1952, there were several Treaties and
Agreements signed between the State and Territory of Johore and Britain that
had direct relevance to territorial title.
Malaysia in its Pleadings drew attention to the Johore-Pahang, First
Boundary and Friendship Treaty, 17th June 1862; the Pahang and
Johore, 1868 Award made by Governor of the Crown Colony of the Straits
Settlements, Sir H. ST George Ord, under
the provisions of the Treaty between Pahang and Johore of 17th June,
1862 with an Admiralty Chart attached to illustrate the intention; the
Agreement on Certain Points Touching the Relations of Her Majesty’s Government
of the Straits Settlements with the Government of the Independent State of
Johore, London, 11 December 1885 with Admiralty Charts attached in the
following year and the Colony of the Straits Settlements and Johore Territorial
Waters Agreement, 19 October 1927 with Map attached.
There is at least one Agreement during this long century between Johore
and the War office, UK in 1923 which is not published in the standard textbooks
of Treaties which again confirm that Britain knew that the State and Territory
of Johore had sovereignty over Pedra Branca.
In addition, in the years after 1952 there is an Agreement between the Surveyor
General Federation of Malaya and the Assistant Director of Survey, Far East
Land Forces (FARELF) to produce the one inch mapping of Malaya in 135 Map
Sheets of Malaya/Singapore under the Series
L 7010 and L 8010. The Chief Surveyor, Singapore, has agreed that
the Series will include Singapore. This
Agreement too does not appear in the standard textbooks on Treaties and was
signed in the early 1960’s and “A Map
Specification” manual was published. This publication detailed how the Map
Sheets were to represent District, State and International Boundaries and even
the Font size to be used with the intention to show Sovereignty over Territory
from that of a Font size that is smaller that has no such legal meaning. There
were even provisions for any of the signatories to the Agreement to appeal
should they consider that their territorial sovereignty were not properly
represented.
The reason why the Court never considered Malaysia’s evidence on
Treaties and Agreements is perhaps Malaysia’s own misleading admission on the
legal standing of these Treaties and Agreements. Malaysia never built a solid chapter in the
Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries highlighting all Johore-Britain Treaties and
Agreements accompanied by Maps or Admiralty Charts. This would have clearly
established Johore’s continuous sovereignty over
Pedra Branca and its surrounding features and of the stability and certainty of
that sovereignty. Britain knew that sovereignty over Pedra Branca by
engaging into these unbroken chain of Treaties and Agreements accompanied by
Maps and Charts continued to rest with Johore. Successive Governors of the
Colony of the Straits Settlements were signatories to these Treaties and knew
that Johore continued to have historic title over Pedra Branca. These Treaties were concrete
manifestations of the display of territorial sovereignty recognised by Britain
and the Governor of the Colony of the Straits Settlements. There was no passing of sovereignty
from Johore to Britain nor to the Colony of the Straits Settlements in the
Articles of these Treaties. Nor was
there any abandonment of sovereignty by the State and Territory of Johore.
Malaysia Pleadings
Malaysia Memorial
MM Para 302. “The authority of maps as evidence in boundary
cases has been discussed by the Court on a number of occasions. In particular
in the Frontier Dispute Case (Burkirza Faso/Mali) the Chamber said:
". . .maps merely constitute information which varies in accuracy from case
to case; of themselves, and by virtue solely of their existence, they cannot
constitute a territorial title, that is, a document endowed by international
law with intrinsic legal force for the purpose of establishing territorial
rights. Of course, in some cases maps may acquire such legal force, but where
this is so the legal force does not arise solely from their intrinsic merits:
it is because such maps fall into the category of physical expressions of the
will of the State or States concerned. This is the case, for example, when maps
are annexed to an official text of which they form an integral part. Except in
this clearly defined case, maps are only extrinsic evidence of varying
reliability or unreliability which may be used, along with other evidence of a
circumstantial kind, to establish or reconstitute the real fact."
MM Para 303. “This passage was cited and applied by the
Court in both the Kasikili/Sedudu case and in the Ligitan and Sipadan
case.”
MM Para 304. “In the present case there is no map having
legal force as such, but there is a substantial record of depictions of the
three features on maps from the 17th century onwards. This record
will be briefly described before any conclusions are drawn.”
ICJ Judgment
ICJ Judgment Para 120. “Any passing
of sovereignty might be by way of agreement between the two States in question.
Such an agreement might take the form of a treaty, as with the 1824 Crawfurd
Treaty and the 1927 Agreement referred to earlier (paragraphs 22, 28 and 102).
The agreement might instead be tacit and arise from the conduct of the Parties.
International law does not, in this matter, impose any particular form. Rather
it places its emphasis on the parties’ intentions (cf. e.g. Temple of Preah
Vihear (Cambodia v. Thailand), Preliminary Objections, I.C.J. Reports
1961, pp. 17, 31).”
ICJ Judgment Para 121. “Under
certain circumstances, sovereignty over territory might pass as a result of the
failure of the State which has sovereignty to respond to conduct à titre de
souverain of the other State or, as Judge Huber put it in the Island of
Palmas case, to concrete manifestations of the display of territorial
sovereignty by the other State (Island of Palmas Case (Netherlands/United
States of America), Award of 4 April 1928, RIAA, Vol. II, (1949) p.
839). Such manifestations of the display of sovereignty may call for a response
if they are not to be opposable to the State in question. The absence of
reaction may well amount to acquiescence. The concept of acquiescence “is
equivalent to tacit recognition manifested by unilateral conduct which the
other party may interpret as consent . . .” (Delimitation of the Maritime
Boundary in the Gulf of Maine Area (Canada/United States of America), Judgment,
I.C.J. Reports 1984, p. 305, para. 130). That is to say, silence may also
speak, but only if the conduct of the other State calls for a response.”
ICJ Judgment
Para 122. “Critical for the Court’s assessment of
the conduct of the Parties is the central importance in international law and
relations of State sovereignty over territory and of the stability and
certainty of that sovereignty. Because of that, any passing of sovereignty over
territory on the basis of the conduct of the Parties, as set out above, must be
manifested clearly and without any doubt by that conduct and the relevant
facts. That is especially so if what may be involved, in the case of one of the
Parties, is in effect the abandonment of sovereignty over part of its territory.”
ICJ Judgment Para 125. “The Court accordingly
will now examine the relevant facts, particularly the conduct of the Parties,
relating to Pedra Branca/Pulau Batu Puteh, to determine whether or not
sovereignty over it has passed and is now with Singapore.”
ICJ Judgment Para 223. In the
Court’s view, the Johor reply is clear in its meaning: Johor does not claim
ownership over Pedra Branca/Pulau Batu Puteh. That response relates to the
island as a whole and not simply to the lighthouse. When the Johor letter is
read in the context of the request by Singapore for elements of information
bearing on the status of Pedra Branca/Pulau Batu Puteh, as discussed above (see
paragraphs 204-209), it becomes evident that the letter addresses the issue of
sovereignty over the island. The Court accordingly concludes that Johor’s reply
shows that as of 1953 Johor
understood that it did not have sovereignty over Pedra Branca/Pulau Batu Puteh. In light of Johor’s reply, the authorities
in Singapore had no reason to doubt that the United Kingdom had sovereignty
over the island. [Emphasis added]
ICJ Judgment Para 230. The above
findings on Singapore’s three additional arguments relating to the 1953
correspondence do not affect the Court’s conclusion stated in paragraph 223
that as of 1953 Johor understood that it did not have sovereignty over Pedra
Branca/Pulau Batu Puteh and that in
light of Johor’s reply, the authorities in Singapore had no reason to doubt
that the United Kingdom had sovereignty over the island. [Emphasis added]
ICJ Judgment Para 267. “The Parties referred the Court to nearly 100
maps. They agreed that none of the maps establish title in the way, for
instance, that a map attached to a boundary delimitation agreement may. They do
contend however that some of the maps issued by the two Parties or their
predecessors have a role as indicating their views about sovereignty or as
confirming their claims.”
Point of Fact
It is clear that Malaysia took a crucially misguided legal stand that
none of the Treaties had Maps attached such that it reflects a physical
expression of the will of the State as stated in the text of the Treaty or
Agreement. A similar stand was adopted
by the Malaysian Team in the earlier Ligitan-Sipadan Case (ICJ Judgment, 17th
December 2002). All major text
books on Treaties on Malaya/Malaysia/Brunei/British North Borneo/Sarawak and Singapore
do not mention that there were Maps/Charts attached to the Treaties. The standard text books are: C. Aitchison, “A Collection of Treaties, Engagements and Sanads
relating to India and neighbouring countries”; William G Maxwell and William S. Gibson, “ Treaties and Engagements affecting the Malay
States and Borneo”, 1924; and more recently J de Y. Allen, A.J. Stockwell,
L.R. Wright, “A Collection of Treaties
and other Documents affecting the States of Malaysia 1761-1963”, 1981.
A few examples will illustrate the point. The 2nd August 1824 “Crawfurd Treaty” had a Map accompanying
it when the Treaty was sent from the Settlement of Singapore to the Government
of India. The instruction to draw such a
Map was reported by John Crawfurd in the Journal
of Indian Archipelago and the said Map was found in an obscure Map Collection
of the New Delhi Archives. This Treaty
and Map attached the Court records the surrender of sovereignty from one State
to another. In this case the surrender
of sovereignty from the State and Territory of Johore to the newly formed
Settlement of Singapore. (ICJ Judgment, Para 120). A similar observation is made by the Court
with reference to the 1927 Treaty which is the retrocession of territories of
the Settlement of Singapore to the State and Territory of Johore.
In the Archives it is a standard practise that when its officers process
original files and come across Maps these Maps are removed and placed in the
Map Room separated from the original Treaty.
The reason being that Maps require special treatment in its preservation
from that of handwritten/typed documents.
Even in the Map collection there is a difference between Colonial Office
Maps and that of Foreign Office Maps. It
is of great significance as to where the Map Sheets are located in the National
Archives, U.K. which is officially explained in the Archival Notes describing
the Map Series.
The Malaysian documents made in the Pleadings in the form of Treaties
and Maps and Agreements and Admiralty Charts attached were not dealt with in
the Judgment. This is most extraordinary
given that the standard International Law practise recognises that there is a
physical expression of the will of the State when Maps are attached to a
Treaty.
The first of the Treaties in this long century of alleged claim that
Johore and its successor Governments did nothing on Pedra Branca is the
Governor of the Colony of Straits Settlements Award in 1868. In this 1868 Award, Governor Ord attached an
Admiralty Chart 2041, Malay Peninsula
Eastern Coast, Singapore to Tioman, drawn by J.T. Thomson, Government
Surveyor, dated 1849 to the Treaty to
show the off shore islands boundary between the neighbouring States of Pahang
and Johore on the East Coast of the Malay Peninsula. (See MR pg. 45 para 99 for the Admiralty Chart attached to the Award)
The text of the Treaty reflected the intentions of the Admiralty Chart attached. That all islands and features south of the
line drawn on the Admiralty Chart 2041
belonged to the State and Territory of Johore.
There is nothing to quibble about the text and the Admiralty Chart
attached. Britain and the Governor of
the Colony of the Straits Settlements knew that Johore was sovereign over Pedra
Branca. There was never any intention in
the Treaty to show that Johore had an intention to abandon sovereignty over
Pedra Branca nor was there any indication in the Award that Britain nor the
Colony of the Straits Settlements had intentions to take possession of Pedra
Branca.
In its Pleadings the Republic of Singapore tried to point out that the
dispute was only a few off-shore islands at the sea boundary between the two
states and do not extend so far south until Pedra Branca and South Ledge as
shown on the Admiralty Chart. Had that
been the intention of the Award to be reflected in the Chart then the Governor
could have easily cut up the Chart to show the “few islands” North and South of
the sea boundary to make his narrow intention.
The Republic of Singapore overlooked that in the CSO 11293/52 file (MM 68) the Admiralty Chart was
Admiralty Chart Number 2403: “Singapore
Straits and Eastern Approaches” covering parts of the State and Territory
of Johore; the Colony of Singapore and the Province of Rhio-Lingga, Republic of
Indonesia. The Chief of Survey
Department, Colony of Singapore, who prepared the Chart showing the Territorial
Waters of the Colony of Singapore as understood in 1953 extracted the said
Chart from the larger Admiralty Chart 2403 which extended into the China Sea to
include that of Pedra Branca, Middle Rocks and South Ledge. The Chief of Survey did not include Pedra
Branca and the other two features as part of the Territorial Waters of the
Colony of Singapore which was defined by the following Treaties: The Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 17th
March 1824; the Crawfurd Treaty of 2nd August 1824; the 1927 Territorial
Waters of Johore Treaty and more recently the decision of the ICJ on the
Norwegian Fisheries.
The Republic completely disregarded the historical context that started
in 1857 when the deposed Sultan Mahmud IV of Rhio-Lingga crossed the 17th
March 1824 Anglo-Dutch Treaty and went to stay in the Settlement of Singapore
and began moving into the State of Pahang and took sides in the civil war
between two brothers in Pahang and dragged in the ambitious Sultan Ali, son of
Sultan Hussien of Singapore, one of the signatories of the 2nd August 1824 Cession and
engaged the Sultanates of Trengganu, Kelantan and even Selangor and threatened
to bring into play the Kingdom of Thailand.
There was a real possibility that there could have erupted a
conflagration of the east coast of the Malay Peninsula disrupting trade of the
Settlement of Singapore. It makes complete
sense for the Governor to use the Admiralty
Chart 2041 in full as to the North he demarcated the sea boundary with the
State of Pahang with Johore and to the south the Chart stopped at the Main
Straits of Singapore to show Pedra Branca and South Ledge as part of the
Islands and features assigned by the Treaty to the State and Territory of
Johore. (See Attachment THREE CO 700/Eastern28, Eastern Archipelago and China Sea,Index Admiralty Published Charts.) The other Admiralty Charts 1355 and 3543
were not suitable as it went southwards beyond the Straits of Singapore to
include in part Pulau Bintang under Dutch sphere of influence.
It was a standard practise amongst Britain and Dutch officials to
exchange Treaty information with each other after the 17th March 1824
Anglo-Dutch Treaty. The 1868 Ord Award
would have been sent by the Foreign Office to the Dutch Ambassador in London
who would have forwarded the Treaty and Chart to the Netherlands and there
would have been an acknowledgement from the recipient of the Treaty and Chart
in the British Foreign Office records.
The second Treaty that was never evaluated in the Judgment was the 1885 Johore
Treaty. (See MR Para 103-105). Article V reflected the intension that Britain
represented by the Governor of the Colony of Straits Settlements will defend
the territories of the State of Johore.
Furthermore, Article XV provided that Johore may not surrender any part
of its territories to any European State of Power, or any other State or
Nation. It is in this context that the
State and Territory of Johore is to be defended by Britain. The Sultan in 1886
personally presented through his representative Admiralty Charts to outline the
extent of his territories. The Admiralty
Charts were to represent what the Sultan believed is the territorial extent of his
Kingdom. (See MM Para 89-92 and Annex 63).
The Chart Numbers in his letter can easily be crossed checked from the readily
available Index to Admiralty Published Charts, “Eastern Archipelago and China Sea” which is available in Colonial Office
Series 700/Eastern28. (See Attachment
Three) One of the Admiralty Charts he selected to show the off shore
Islands closest to the East Coast of Johore was Admiralty Chart 2041: Malay Peninsula Eastern Coast Singapore to
Tioman, by J. T. Thomson, Government Surveyor, 1849. The Governor of the Colony of the Straits
Settlements certainly knew how to read this Chart and the extent of Johore’s
immediate off-shore Islands.
In 1868 the Office of the Governor of the Colony of the Strait Settlements
used this Chart to demarcate the off-shore Islands belonging to Pahang and
those belonging to Johore. Its
predecessor Office under the East India Company period knew the demarcation of
the Straits of Singapore under the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 17th March
1824 and none of the Islands on this Chart were under the Dutch sphere of
influence. It certainly knew the
territorial extent of the Settlement of Singapore ceded by Johore in full
property and sovereignty on 2nd August 1824. There was no objections by Britain that these
off-shore islands as depicted in Adm
Chart 2041 were to be defended by Britain under the terms of the 1885
Treaty.
Indeed had the Settlement of Singapore had taken possession of Pedra
Branca after the period 1847-1851 then the Governor of the Colony of the
Straits Settlement should have made the qualification when he gave the Award in
1868; and again the Governor of the Colony of the Straits Settlements should
have raised objections to the 1886 submission of the Admiralty Chart 2041 by the Sultan of Johore himself in London and
pointed out that the Straits Settlements or Britain had earlier taken
possession of the said Rock for the British Crown.
The third Treaty with a Map attached was the 1927 Treaty that was
rectified by the British Parliament in 1928.
This is the only case where the Court made reference to a Treaty and a
Map attached and concluded based on the evidence it had before the Court that
the Treaty and attached Map were specific to the overlapping territorial waters
between the Settlement of Singapore and the State and Territory of Johore in
the Straits of Tebrau and did not include of the overlapping claims between the
Republic of Singapore’s alleged possession of Pedra Branca and the off-shore
islands of Southeastern Johore. However,
recent New Facts (Emphasis
added] released only in 2013 shows that intention of the 1927 Treaty
was to cover all outstanding overlapping territorial waters between the
Settlement of Singapore and that of the State and Territory of Johore in the
Straits Of Singapore.
There is one other Britain-Johore Agreement in the records of the
British Archives that was never published in the standard Malaya/Malaysia
Treaty text-books. This is a negotiated
1923 Agreement between the War Office directly with the Sultan of Johore
representing the State of Johore for the Survey of the Southeast portion of
Johore by the Military Mapping Directorate of the War Office with some
financial assistance by the State of Johore.
In exchange the Sultan was promised that he would receive a copy of all
the Map Sheets printed and published by the Geographical Section, General Staff
(GSGS).
In 1928 the archival records show definitely that a red leather bound
album was purchased by the War Office with the words printed “THE STATE AND TERRITORIES OF JOHORE”;
“PRESENTED TO HIS HIGHNESS IBRAHIM, G.C.M.G., K.B.E., SULTAN OF THE STATE AND
TERRITORY OF JOHORE” [Emphasis added] to include Map sheets of the State and
Territory of Johore. One of the Map
Sheets was Map Sheet 4 1/10
published by GSGS titled Johore, Punggai showing its off-shore islands and
features including that of Pedra Branca and Middle Rocks and South Ledge. This is a decisive evidence that Britain knew
that Pedra Branca belonged to Johore and its War Office went on to survey the
area within the Map Sheet with the full knowledge and permission and financial
assistance of the Sultan of Johore involving the British Army, Navy and Air
Force. Thirty years later during the
long reign of Sultan Ibrahim, certain correspondence between the Colonial
Secretary, Colony of Singapore and the British Adviser, Johore triggered
processes that resulted in the Republic of Singapore advancing the point that
the State and Territory of Johore had abandoned her sovereignty over Pedra
Branca.
A search has been made without success to locate this Album and the Map
Sheets that contained the decisive evidence.
It is not with the Malaysian archives; nor that of the Johore Archives. A letter has been addressed to the Defence
Ministry, UK requesting the date when the Album was presented to HRH the Sultan
of Johore. They replied that they do not
have the records and asked to refer to the National Archives, UK which so far
has been fruitless. It is known that
during the period when the Album was been ordered and the Map Sheets collated
that HRH the Sultan was touring Europe and UK and it would be fair to assume
that HRH received the gift in London and could have kept in one of the
Libraries of his residence in London or in the process of time the said Album
could be in one of the Rare Books collection of a British Research Institution
or even a Specialised Book shop dealing with Rare Documents. The GSGS Series for Johore was reprinted and
updated and sold to the public until the late 1950’s when it was replaced by
the newer Malaya led Map Series L 7010
which divided Peninsula Malaya into 135 Map Sheets.
Beyond this period of silence, 1852-1952, there was at least one other
Agreement in the early 1960s between the Surveyor General Malaya and the Far
East Land Forces (FARELF). This involves the topographical survey of the
respective territories of Malaya and Singapore and in the case of Thailand,
showing its common boundaries with Malaya.
There was a published Map
Specification attached to this Agreement providing significant details down
to the size of Fonts to represent a distinct Territory marked with the standard
symbols of an International Boundary.
The Agreement resulted in the publication of the Map Series L 7010 and L 8010
and provides decisive evidence on the alleged “Against Malaysia Interest” Map Sheet 135 by the Republic of
Singapore.
The inclusion of Singapore under Horsburgh has no International Territorial
Demarcation significance. Its FONT size
were not that defined in the Map Specification and there was no International
Boundary around Pedra Branca to represent Pedra Branca as a distinct Island
with its own territorial waters sovereign to Singapore. There was no reason for Malaya to
object. Furthermore, Singapore could
have exercised its right to insert a cut out of Pedra Branca and its
Territorial Waters when Map Sheet 134
was published for Singapore which Singapore did not. The cut out of Pedra Branca was used in the Map Sheet 135 Series L 8010
showing decisively that Pedra Branca was
part of the State and Territories of Johore and Singapore did not object.
Conclusion
The ICJ in its Judgment explained that in the light of Johore’s 1953
Reply the Singapore authorities had no reason to doubt that the U.K. had sovereignty
over Pedra Branca. (See ICJ Judgment Para 223)
The evidence presented in Report
Three advanced the claim and supported by facts, not assumptions
interpreting silence, that Britain knew where the sovereignty over Pedra Branca
was. The Colonial Office knew. The Foreign Office knew. The War Office
knew. The Ministry of Defence knew. The Ministry of Trade knew. The Governor of
the Colony of the Straits Settlements knew.
Sovereignty over Pedra Branca and its Territorial Waters continued in this
one hundred period to be with the State and Territory of Johore who had the
historical title. There was no
abandonment over Pedra Branca and its territorial waters by the State and
Territory of Johore
It is the Republic of Singapore that chose not to know that these facts
are embedded in the legal records of the Colony of the Straits Settlements, of
which the Settlement of Singapore was one such Settlements. It is in the records of the Colony of the
Straits Settlements and Colony of Singapore, the predecessor Governments of the
Republic of Singapore. The readily
available Government Gazettes of the
Colony of the Straits Settlements and the Crown Colony of Singapore and the Annual Reports of the Marine Departments as
well as contemporary newspapers published in Singapore during this imagined
silent period illustrates the legal regime under which the Marine Court of
Investigation operated.
In addition to assembling the members that make the Colony of the
Straits Settlements Marine Court of Investigation; the Governor of the Colony
of the Straits Settlements represented the Colonial Office in signing all the
Treaties involving Johore in this one hundred year period. The 1862 Johore-Pahang Treaty; the 1868
Governor Ord Award; the 1885 Agreement with Defence of Johore Territories
obligations and 1927 Johore Territorial Waters Treaty.
Malaysia could well be held negligent by the ICJ rules for not advancing
the “known facts” as outlined in this Report.
The next obvious question is what
is the responsibility of the Republic of Singapore. It did not disclose that the Governor of the
Colony of the Straits Settlements convened Marine Court of Investigations
pursuant to the Merchant Shipping Ordinance in the 100 year period examined in
territorial waters of many nations.
Finally, which party is responsible for ignoring all the Treaties and
Agreements with Maps/Charts attached in this 100 year period that led the Court
to hold the view that the State of Johore and its Territory did nothing before
turning to the correspondence of 1953.
The 1953 Letters will be given its due attention in Report Four.
The missing Album of 1928 from the War Office to the Sultan Ibrahim of the
State and Territory of Johore will decisively establish that Britain knew that
sovereignty over Pedra Branca continued to be with the State and Territories of
Johore as represented in the GSGS Map
Sheet 4 I/10. This discovery when
made will be reinforced by other “New Facts” released by the National Archives,
UK after the 2008 ICJ Judgment as legal grounds for an Appeal to be lodged.
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