Niue–United States Maritime Boundary Treaty Explained

Niue–United States Maritime Boundary Treaty
Long Name:Treaty between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of Niue on the delimitation of a maritime boundary
Type:Boundary delimitation
Location Signed:Wellington, New Zealand
Parties:
Depositor: United Nations Secretariat
Language:English

The Niue–United States Maritime Boundary Treaty is a 1997 treaty that delimits the maritime boundary between Niue and American Samoa.

The treaty was signed in Wellington, New Zealand on 13 May 1997 by Niuean Premier Frank Lui and United States ambassador Josiah Beeman.[1] In the treaty, the boundary is 279 nautical miles long, runs in a rough east–west direction, and is composed of 18 straight-line maritime segments defined by reference to 19 individual coordinate points.

The treaty was submitted to the United States Senate for ratification by U.S. President Bill Clinton on 23 June 1998.[2]

The full name of the treaty is the Treaty between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of Niue on the delimitation of a maritime boundary.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.niue.de/files/Niue-US_treaty.pdf Treaty between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of Niue on the delimitation of a maritime boundary
  2. http://bulk.resource.org/gpo.gov/papers/1998/1998_vol1_1029.pdf Bill Clinton: Message to the Senate transmitting the Niue-United States Maritime Boundary Treaty, 23 June 1998.