Arigo V Swift
Arigo V Swift
Arigo V Swift
, Petitioners,
vs.
SCOTT H. SWIFT, et. al., Respondents.
including fishing, gathering, destroying and disturbing the resources within the
TRNP.
On January 15, 2013, the USS Guardian departed Subic Bay for its next port of call
in Makassar, Indonesia. On January 17, 2013 at 2:20 a.m. while transiting the Sulu
Sea, the ship ran aground on the northwest side of South Shoal of the Tubbataha
Reefs, about 80 miles east-southeast of Palawan. No one was injured in the
incident, and there have been no reports of leaking fuel or oil.
ISSUE:
There are 3 issues to be resolved by the Court in this case
on the novel element in the class suit filed by the petitioners minors in Oposa,
this
Court ruled that not only do ordinary citizens have legal standing to sue for the
enforcement of environmental rights, they can do so in representation of their own
and
future generations.
2. As a general rule, a state may not be sued without its consent , is one of the
generally accepted principles of international law that we have adopted as part of
the law of our land under Article II,
Section 2.
But during the case, Sr. Associate Justice Carpio took the position that the
conduct of the US in this case, when its warship entered a restricted area in
violation of R.A. No. 10067 and caused damage to the TRNP reef system, brings the
matter within the ambit of Article 31 UNCLOS.
He explained the conduct of the US in this case, when its warship entered a
restricted area in
violation of R.A. No. 10067 and caused damage to the TRNP reef system, brings the
matter within the ambit of Article 31 of UNCLOS
In the case of warships, as pointed out by Justice Carpio, they continue to enjoy
sovereign immunity subject to the following exceptions:
Article 30: Non-compliance by warships with the laws and regulations of the coastal
State. If the any warship did not comply with the laws of the coastal state, they
may require them to leave the territorial sea immediately.
Article 31: Responsibility of the flag State for damage caused by a warship or
other government ship operated for non-commercial purposes. The flag State shall
bear international responsibility for any loss or damage to the coastal State
resulting from the non-compliance by a warship
Article 32: Immunities of warships and other government ships operated for non-
commercial purposes. A foreign warship’s unauthorized entry into our internal
waters with resulting damage to marine resources is one situation in which the
above provisions may apply.
The Court also fully concurred with Justice Carpio’s view that non-membership in
the UNCLOS does not mean that the US will disregard the rights of the Philippines
as a Coastal State over its internal waters and territorial sea. We thus expect the
US to bear “international responsibility” under Art. 31 in connection with the USS
Guardian grounding which adversely affected the Tubbataha reefs. Indeed, it is
difficult to imagine that our long-time ally and trading partner, which has been
actively supporting the country’s efforts to preserve our vital marine resources,
would shirk from its obligation to compensate the damage caused by its warship
while transiting our internal waters. Much less can we comprehend a Government
exercising leadership in international affairs, unwilling to comply with the UNCLOS
directive for all nations to cooperate in the global task to protect and preserve
the marine environment as provided in Article 197 of UNCLOS.
3. No
The waiver of State immunity under the VF A pertains only to criminal jurisdiction
and not to special civil actions such as the present petition for issuance of a
writ of Kalikasan. In fact, it can be inferred from Section 17, Rule 7 of the Rules
that a criminal case against a person charged with a violation of an environmental
law is to be filed separately.
The Court considered a view that a ruling on the application or non-application of
criminal jurisdiction provisions of the VFA to US personnel who may be found
responsible for the grounding of the USS Guardian, would be premature and beyond
the province of a petition for a writ of Kalikasan.