Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • For years, China has made expansive claims to the resource-rich South China Sea, despite

  • opposition from much of Southeast Asia.

  • In July 2016, an international tribunal in the Hague categorically rejected China’s

  • claims, saying there was no historical evidence for its exclusive control of the waters.

  • Chinastate news agency called the rulingnull and voidas the Hague hasno

  • jurisdiction”.

  • So what exactly is the Hague?

  • And how much power does it really have?

  • Well, The Hague is the third largest city in the Netherlands and is the country’s

  • seat of government.

  • But the Hague is better known as thejudicial capital of the world”, as the city is home

  • to around 160 international organizations.

  • These include the International Court of Justice, or ICJ, the International Criminal Court and

  • the Carnegie Foundation.

  • Many countries also have foreign embassies in the Hague, and it is one of the main hosts

  • of the United Nations, along with Geneva, Vienna and New York.

  • The Hague has been important to the Netherland’s for more than 200 years, however it didn’t

  • become a global hub until the late 19th century.

  • In 1899, Russian Czar Nicholas II called for an international meeting on peace and disarmament,

  • fearing neighboring aggressions.

  • 26 countries met in the Hague to draft some of the first international treaties on war,

  • and created the Permanent Court of Arbitration, which was the world’s first panel for settling

  • international disputes.

  • A second convention was held 8 years later under the request of President Theodore Roosevelt.

  • Over the next century, a number of other panels and organizations emerged in the Hague.

  • Today, the city houses organizations for ostensibly all international legal issues, including

  • cross border crime, corruption, environmental violations, human rights abuses, as well as

  • land and maritime disputes.

  • For instance the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons has been coercing nations

  • to destroy their illegal chemical weapons for nearly two decades.

  • In 2013, the OPCW was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for facilitating the destruction of

  • Syria’s stockpile.

  • But other initiatives have seen less success.

  • For instance the International Criminal Court has issued two arrest warrants for Sudan’s

  • President, for his alleged involvement in war crimes, human rights violations and genocide

  • between 2003 and 2008.

  • However, because the ICC depends on cooperation from the Sudanese government, the President

  • remains at large.

  • This is perhaps the largest hurdle for the Hague.

  • Although they have thus far been successful in drafting a set of international norms based

  • on universal values, and at compelling member states to sign on to those norms, they have

  • not quite figured out how to enforce them.

  • As brutal leaders and aggressive governments continue to shed light on the shortcomings

  • of international law, the Hague remains more of a symbol

  • of peace than justice.

For years, China has made expansive claims to the resource-rich South China Sea, despite

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it