Previously, it was examined how the passage rights of foreign commercial ships in and around the Strait of Hormuz and the Kerch Strait might be subject to discriminatory navigational restrictions by the strait State. This chapter seeks to establish whether the Russian Federation has imposed any unlawful limitations to the enjoyment of the right of innocent passage by examining the international legal framework applicable to navigation in the Russian maritime area in the Gulf of Finland. For this purpose, it raises the question of whether the Russian Federation’s maritime area in the centre of the Gulf of Finland proper comprises its internal waters.
This chapter focuses specifically on the Russian Federation’s approach to navigation rights and freedoms in the Gulf of Finland. It first adopts a historical method to briefly explain the Soviet Union’s and the Russian Federation’s approaches to the passage regime of foreign ships in the Gulf of Finland until 2000. The baselines and maritime zones of the Russian Federation in the Gulf of Finland are examined next in order to discuss the legality of the Russian Federation’s permit-based passage regime in that maritime area.
To the extent of the present author’s knowledge, the permit-based passage regime has not caused unlawful restrictions to navigation in that maritime area except for one instance. This concerns the Estonian-Finnish Vironia commercial ferry line, which soon after its opening was declined the right of innocent passage in the Russian Federation’s maritime area and consequently had to be closed in 2007. As explained further in Chapter 16, the Vironia incident should be seen in the context of a hybrid conflict between the Russian Federation and Estonia that was triggered by the relocation of a Soviet war memorial in Tallinn in 2007. This decision triggered massive civil unrest in the Russian-speaking community in Estonia and Russian cyber-attacks against the Estonian institutions. Chapter 16 also sets the impediments to international navigation in the Gulf of Finland in a broader context and compares them with developments in the Russian Arctic and the Sea of Azov as the basis for a discussion of how the Russian Federation has balanced the application of the concepts of mare liberum and mare clausum in its maritime areas.
11.1 Right of Innocent Passage in the Eastern Gulf of Finland from 1920s to 2000
The permit-based passage regime of the Soviet Union/Russian Federation has been applicable in the territorial sea in the Gulf of Finland at least since the middle of the twentieth century, albeit in multiple variations. Erik Franckx notes that the Soviet Union has required such permission from foreign warships since the late 1950s.1 It is less known that a permit-based passage regime was applicable in some small maritime pockets (e.g., near Kotlin Island) in the eastern part of the Gulf of Finland under the 1924 instructions for the navigation of ships in coastal waters within artillery range of coastal batteries in peacetime. Article 2 provided that both Soviet and foreign commercial vessels have the right to unhindered passage, except in special zones, within the limits of territorial waters.2 In the Baltic Sea, these restrictions could have been used only for the defence of Petrograd since the Soviet Union’s maritime area was limited to a small stretch of sea west of Petrograd (the coast to the northwest of Petrograd as well as the islands in the middle of the Gulf of Finland proper were at that time still part of the Finnish territory).
Gene Glenn has referred to an incident which points to the potential applicability of a broader permit-based passage regime to commercial vessels sailing in the Gulf of Finland in the second half of 1940s.3 The incident involved a Swedish fishing vessel, Hamnfjord, that sailed in 1948 into the Gulf of Finland where she was taken into custody by the Soviet Union. The ship and her crew were released after being interrogated by the Soviet Union’s Coast Guard.
The Soviet Union claimed that Hamnfjord had unlawfully entered its coastal defence zone (also known as maritime frontier zone) and disregarded orders to stop.4 Pursuant to the Soviet Union’s 1927 instructions,5 the Soviet Union’s
The Soviet Union alleged in its diplomatic note to Sweden that the crew of Hamnfjord had been interrogated since they violated its laws on territorial sea.6 This created legal uncertainty since Hamnfjord was sailing outside the 4-nm-limit as measured from the Soviet Union’s coast. The Soviet Union’s coastal defence zone extended to 12 nm since 1927,7 whereas its territorial sea was 4 nm wide, as first fixed in the 1920 Tartu Peace Treaty between Finland and the Soviet Russia pursuant to Nordic regional customary law.8
Thus, Sweden requested in its diplomatic note information on whether the Soviet Union had established a 12-nm-wide territorial sea, and referred to the right of innocent passage that ought to apply in the territorial sea.9 The Soviet Union did not respond to this enquiry immediately, but acknowledged two years later, in a 1950 diplomatic note to Sweden, that it had extended the width of its previously 4-nm-wide territorial sea in the Baltic Sea to 12 nm.10
The Hamnfjord incident appears to indicate that already by the 1940s, the Soviet Union was denying innocent passage in its territorial sea to foreign ships, including commercial ships, if they had failed to request prior permission. On the other hand, the Soviet Union’s later diplomatic statements and the views of Soviet scholars, as expressed in the relevant legal literature, were less unequivocal on this matter. In his review of Soviet textbooks of the 1950s and 1960s, Butler shows that the views of numerous Soviet jurists favoured a narrow interpretation of the scope of innocent passage that only applies strict requirements to commercial ships in the territorial sea.11 Yet even in the 1950s other Soviet writers disagreed with such statements and claimed that a coastal State cannot hamper the innocent passage of foreign commercial ships.12 A liberal understanding of the right of innocent passage took root in the Soviet publications in the 1970s and 1980s. Franckx has pointed out that many
The Soviet Union had guaranteed under its 1960 statute on the protection of its boundary the right of innocent passage to foreign non-military vessels in its territorial sea (excluding internal waters), while subjecting foreign warships to the permit-based passage regime.16 By contrast, as of the 1989 Jackson Hole statement, the Soviet Union and its successor State, the Russian Federation, have been expected to guarantee the right of innocent passage to all foreign ships absent prior notification or a request for authorisation.17 According to the 1989 statement, all ships, including warships, regardless of cargo, armament or means of propulsion, enjoy the right of innocent passage through the territorial sea, for which neither prior notification nor authorisation is required.18 The Russian Federation has clearly stipulated this also in its domestic law (the 1989 statement itself is legally non-binding). The 1998 Federal Act on the internal maritime waters, territorial sea and contiguous zone provides that foreign ships, foreign warships and other government ships enjoy the right of innocent passage through the territorial sea for which a prior notification or request for authorisation is not required.19 Such a regulation conforms with the rules on innocent passage as stipulated under Article 24(1) of losc.20 However, the Russian Federation’s recent State practice, as discussed below, calls into
11.2 The Russian Federation’s Maritime Zones in the Gulf of Finland
The Russian Federation’s system of straight baselines in the Gulf of Finland is based on the Soviet Union’s 1985 decree on a list of geographic coordinates determining the position of its baselines in the Baltic Sea.21 The Russian Federation does not appear to have revised the coordinates, or notified the UN about any modifications to said decree. Thus, one may expect that this decree is still in force.
According to the 1985 decree, the starting point of the Soviet Union’s straight baselines was on the north-eastern coast of the Gulf of Finland from where the straight baselines proceeded to Vaindloo Island and onwards along the Estonian coast, connecting the outermost islands.22 The last segment of the Soviet Union’s straight baselines in the Baltic Sea connected the Sõrve Peninsula on Saaremaa Island in Estonia with the Ovisi Cape in the Latvian Courland Peninsula. The Soviet Union used normal baselines south of the Ovisi Cape in the remaining parts of its eastern coast of the Baltic Sea.23
If the Russian Federation still measures the breadth of its territorial sea based on the system of straight baselines as established under the 1985 decree, then its extent is by now considerably reduced. Due to the restoration of Estonia’s independence in 1991, the Soviet Union’s/Russian Federation’s system of straight baselines was interrupted and broke off in the middle of the baseline segment that connected Rodsher Island with Vaindloo Island, which is part of the Estonian territory.
For this reason, the Estonian official nautical charts depict the Russian Federation’s last straight baseline segment in the Gulf of Finland as a broken line heading from Rodsher Island to Vaindloo Island. The baseline is abruptly cut at the point where it reaches the Estonian maritime boundary.24 In effect, the Russian Federation’s system of straight baselines, as established under the 1985 decree, are now relevant only to the extent that it connects the Russian
An incomplete system of straight baselines does not allow a State to clearly establish the outer limit of internal waters in a relevant maritime area. In the case of the Gulf of Finland, the internal waters regime ought to apply to the maritime area that falls landward side of the straight baselines that connect Sommers, Gogland, and Rodsher islands. If applicable, such a system of baselines would blur the lines between the Russian Federation’s territorial sea and internal waters, rendering the relevant domestic legislation incompatible with Article 7 of losc. Hence, the 1985 decree no longer can be considered effective in the Gulf of Finland in whole, or in part. The maritime area falling to the landward side of the Russian Federation’s islands in the middle of the Gulf of Finland proper should be considered as its territorial sea, not internal waters.
Notably, the Russian Federation’s practice does not indicate whether or not the incomplete system of straight baselines is effective in the Gulf of Finland. According to the Federal Port Authority Rosmorport, the operational area of its vts system in the Gulf of Finland is limited to the Russian Federation’s territorial sea and ports. Rosmorport does not make any other explicit reference to internal waters in the Gulf of Finland proper.25 According to Navionics charts, which are usually accurate in depicting maritime zones and straight baselines in the northern Baltic Sea, the Russian Federation’s maritime area in the middle of the Gulf of Finland does not include any straight baselines.26
If the Russian Federation drew a new system of straight baselines in the Gulf of Finland, then it could potentially use Tyuters Islands, Vigrund island/rock, and Kurgalsky Peninsula, arguably, as appropriate points for creating new baseline segments and closing the currently incomplete system of straight baselines in the Gulf of Finland.27 Many maps neglect the existence of Vigrund
On the other hand, it is doubtful if such a new system of straight baselines would meet the requirements of Article 7(1) and 7(3) of losc. According to these provisions, the method of straight baselines may be employed if it connects appropriate points on a fringe of islands along the coast in its immediate vicinity and the sea areas lying within the lines is sufficiently closely linked to the land domain to be subject to the regime of internal waters. The Russian Federation’s islands in the middle of the Gulf of Finland proper depart considerably from the general direction of its mainland coast. The westernmost Rodsher Island is located approximately 43 nm away from the nearest points on the southern and northern coasts of the Russian mainland.



Map of the Russian federation’s potential updated system of straight baselines in the Gulf of Finland
source: marineregions.org, ‘russia’, flanders marine institute (vliz) 2021, availableIn addition, the Gulf of Finland proper includes the Russian Federation’s eez that was established initially as a high seas corridor pursuant to the maritime boundary treaties concluded between Finland and the Soviet Union in 1940, 1965, and 1985.31 The existence of this tiny Russian eez in the Gulf of Finland is not widely acknowledged in Estonia and Finland. For example, the Estonian Maritime Administration has had no information about the existence of the Russian Federation’s eez in the Gulf of Finland.32 Similarly, Estonia and Finland presumed when establishing their eez corridor in the Viro Strait that the right of innocent passage would apply (instead of transit passage) in the Viro Strait that leads to the Russian Federation’s maritime area (see Articles 17 and 45(1)(b) of losc).33
Therefore, ships crossing the Russian Federation’s territorial sea and eez in the Gulf of Finland are entitled to the right of innocent passage and freedom of navigation. It is relevant to assess next if the Russian Federation has in practice respected the right of innocent passage through its territorial sea, particularly in the light of the closure in 2007 of the Vironia ferry line that had to cross the Russian Federation’s maritime area while navigating between the Estonian and Finnish ports.
11.3 The Vironia Incident in the Gulf of Finland and Its Aftermath
The significance of the right of innocent passage for global maritime transport was illustrated by an incident involving the Estonian-flagged ship Vironia, which transported goods and passengers between Sillamäe and Kotka ports in the eastern Gulf of Finland.36 This ferry line was launched by the Saaremaa Shipping Company in February 2006.37 The roll-on/roll-off ferry Vironia had a capacity to transport 370 passengers and 940 lane meters of trucks and cars, many of which were heading to the Russian Federation.38 Vironia made 10 weekly departures and its schedule was increased to 12 weekly departures during the summer season.39
After the ferry line was launched, its operator still had consultations with the Russian Federation authorities about receiving permission to use the shortest route through its territorial sea for navigation.40 These negotiations were cancelled by the Russian Federation after Estonia relocated the Soviet
Over the next years, attempts were made to relaunch the ferry line between the ports of eastern Estonia and eastern Finland.45 In a 2015 maritime assembly of the Gulf of Finland’s coastal States in Sillamäe, a member of St Petersburg’s maritime council, Mr Andrei Berezkin, found that the ferry line’s use of the Russian Federation’s maritime area in the eastern Gulf of Finland had so far not been subject to proper consideration at a sufficiently high level by Russian authorities.46 In 2016, representatives of the port town Loviisa in eastern Finland visited Kunda and Sillamäe ports in eastern Estonia. This was followed by the eastern Estonian local government’s officials’ visit to the Finnish port towns Kotka and Loviisa in order to agree on the timeframe for relaunching the ferry line between eastern Finland and eastern Estonia.47 For this purpose, they still considered it necessary to first acquire permission from the Russian Federation authorities to navigate through its territorial sea in the Gulf of Finland.48



Ports and Coastal States of the Gulf of Finland
source: rosmorport, ‘general information/vts coverage areas’, ‘vts services’, available11.4 Potential Legal Basis of the Russian Federation’s Permit-Based Passage Regime in the Gulf of Finland
It follows from the foregoing discussion that the Russian Federation’s permit-based regime for sailing through its territorial sea in the Gulf of Finland still hinders the re-establishment of a ferry line between the ports of eastern Finland and eastern Estonia. The potential legal basis of the permit-based passage regime is, however, subject to debate.
The Vironia incident exemplifies how the Russian Federation can make use of a permit-based passage regime in its maritime area to the detriment of international commerce. Pursuant to its national regulations, all ships entering the Russian Federation’s maritime area in the Gulf Finland from the west, including by crossing the Estonian-Russian maritime boundary, are required to gain prior authorisation from its vts centre.51 Its broader implications to international navigation are illustrated by the fact that a group of merchant ships are constantly waiting at the eastern end of the Estonian and Finnish eez corridor in the Gulf of Finland to receive permission to enter the Russian Federation’s territorial sea and enter a port.52 This practice is permitted under international law based on the absence of a right of access to ports and a State’s territorial sovereignty over its ports.53 However, it is doubtful if the permit-based regime is lawful in respect of commercial ships that simply seek to navigate under the right of innocent passage through the Russian Federation’s territorial sea without calling on any Russian ports, as illustrated by the Vironia incident.
The Russian Federation could potentially subject the passage of foreign ships to the permit-based regime in the middle of the Gulf of Finland proper if this maritime area constitutes so-called long-standing internal waters, i.e. internal waters that also were considered internal waters prior to the establishment of straight baselines. This follows from Article 8(2) of losc, which stipulates that where the establishment of a straight baseline in accordance with the method set forth in Article 7 of losc has the effect of enclosing as internal waters areas which had not previously been considered as such, a right of innocent passage exists in those waters.
The 1985 decree lists the following maritime areas, the waters of which historically belong to the Soviet Union: the White Sea south of the line connecting Cape Svyatoy Nos with Cape Kanin Nos, the waters of Cheshskaya Bay south of the line connecting Cape Mikulkin with Cape Svyatoy Nos (Timansky), and the waters of Baidaratskaya Bay south-east of the line connecting Cape Yuribeisalya with Cape Belushy Nos.56 This list does not include any references to maritime areas of the Gulf of Finland. This, however, does not exclude the possibility that some bays in the eastern Gulf of Finland could be considered as long-standing internal waters where the right of innocent passage does not apply, for example, Vyborg Bay, Luga Bay, and the narrow maritime area near Kronstadt and St Petersburg.
Most Baltic Sea coastal States extended the breadth of their internal waters under the definition and scope of internal waters as established under the 1912 and 1938 Nordic Rules of Neutrality. Under these rules, the Scandinavian and Baltic States delimited the scope of their internal waters so that they included ports, entrances to ports, gulfs and bays, and the waters between those islands, islets and reefs which are not constantly submerged, and between the said islands, islets and reefs and the mainland.57 The Soviet Union as a non-neutral
The Russian Federation may potentially exclude the right of innocent passage in its territorial sea under Article 21(1)(a) of losc, which stipulates that the coastal State may adopt laws and regulations relating to innocent passage through the territorial sea in respect of the safety of navigation and the regulation of maritime traffic. The Russian Federation’s permit-based passage regime in the Gulf of Finland can potentially serve a legitimate aim of ensuring safety of navigation in a particularly sensitive sea area that exhibits a high shipping traffic density around numerous islands and shoals that pose hazards for maritime transport.
It is possible that the permit-based passage regime is also aimed at safeguarding the Russian Federation’s security interests. Gogland Island in the centre of the Gulf of Finland proper bears strategic importance, which is illustrated by the Russian Federation’s recent investments into its military facilities on the island, including the construction of a helipad. However, it is not entirely clear if Article 21(1)(a) of losc permits the coastal State to regulate the right of innocent passage based on general security considerations. One could argue that coastal States are allowed to prohibit innocent passage by foreign vessels in parts of the territorial sea that are near to features with security relevance. Clearly, the Russian Federation’s fortifications on Gogland Island fall into this category. While under the above-mentioned 1924 Revolutionary Military Council’s instructions on innocent passage such special areas concerned prima facie Kotlin Island next to St Petersburg, the extension of the Russian Federation’s territory as a result of its title over the islands in the middle of the Gulf of Finland proper now potentially allow it to establish such special areas also near its military facilities around Gogland Island.
Although the permit-based passage regime may serve legitimate aims of safeguarding navigation safety, coastal State security and protection of marine environment, this does not mean that such a measure is lawful. Pursuant to Article 21(1) of losc, such a measure needs to be in conformity with the provisions of losc and other rules of international law. The permit-based passage regime in respect of ships that seek to continuously and expeditiously traverse the Russian Federation’s territorial sea contradicts the losc rules on innocent passage, as discussed above. Thus, the Russian Federation’s requirement of prior authorisation for the passage of foreign ships through its territorial sea fails to meet the criteria of Article 21(1)(a) of losc. In the example of the Vironia incident and its aftermath, the said measure has amounted to completely extinguishing regular north-south traffic of foreign commercial vessels in the area.
The Russian Federation’s prior permission requirement to the extent that it is applied in respect of ships that are not calling at the Russian Federation’s port is not in conformity with the imo Resolution A.857(20),60 which the Russian Federation refers to as the legal basis for the vts in the relevant maritime area.61 The Russian Federation’s maritime area in the Gulf of Finland proper is almost entirely covered by the St Petersburg vts, which complements the smaller vts systems of the ports of Ust-Luga, Vysotsk, Vyborg, and Primorsk.62 Pursuant to the imo resolution, a coastal State may exercise its discretionary right to establish and operate under its vts a system of traffic clearances or vts sailing plans, or both, in relation to priority of movements, allocation of space, mandatory reporting of movements in the vts area, routes to be followed, speed limits to be observed, and adopt other appropriate measures.63 Yet such measures cannot, by the very nature of a vts, exclude in toto the expeditious navigation of a particular ship through the territorial sea that is distant from the ports of a coastal State. This is especially the case if the ship poses a marginal threat to the marine environment, for example, a commercial ferry line. Pursuant to Annex 1 of Resolution A.857(20), the aim of a vts is to improve the safety and efficiency of vessel traffic and to protect the environment. Thus, it cannot amount to extinguishing foreign vessel traffic completely.
E Franckx, ‘The U.S.S.R. position on the innocent passage of warships through foreign territorial waters’ (1987) 18(1) Journal of Maritime Law and Commerce, 56–58, 63.
Instructions for the navigation of ships in coastal waters within artillery range of coastal batteries in peacetime (‘Инструкции для плавания судов в береговых водах в пределах зоны обстрела береговых батарей в мирное время’), Order no 897 from the Revolutionary Military Council of 5 July 1924, Article 2. This provision is quoted in A Uustal, Международно-правовой режим территориальных вод (Tartu State University Press, Таrtu, 1958), 61. For the translation, see WE Butler, The Soviet Union and the Law of the Sea (The Johns Hopkins Press, Baltimore/London, 1971) 50–51.
G Glenn, ‘Notes and comments: The Swedish-Soviet territorial sea controversy in the Baltic’ (1956) 50(4) American Journal of International Law, 942–947.
Ibid., 942.
Butler, op. cit., 52.
Glenn, op. cit., 942.
LB Schapiro, ‘The limits of Russian territorial waters in the Baltic’ (1950) 27 The British Yearbook of International Law, 447.
Treaty of Peace between Finland and Soviet Government of Russia, adopted 14 October 1920, entered into force 31 December 1920, 3 lnts 65, Article 3.
Glenn, op. cit., 943.
Ibid., 944.
Butler, op. cit., 54–57.
Ibid., 56–57.
1989 Joint Statement by the United States of America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, op. cit.
Franckx, op. cit., 37–40.
A Uustal, Rahvusvaheline õigus (Eesti Raamat, Tallinn, 1984), 260, 263.
Butler, op. cit., 52–53.
See, e.g., Hakapää, Molenaar, op. cit., 143.
Ibid.
See Federal Act on the internal maritime waters, territorial sea and contiguous zone of the Russian Federation, Articles 12–13.
The coastal State cannot deny innocent passage through its territorial waters, inter alia, to tankers, nuclear-powered ships and ships carrying nuclear or other inherently dangerous or noxious substances or materials (losc Article 23). However, in conformity with Article 25(1) of losc, the coastal State may take the necessary steps in its territorial sea to prevent passage which is not innocent. This provision grants coastal States necessary discretion in applying proportional measures.
Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union, 1985 Decree no. 4450, op. cit.
Ibid., points 1–32.
Ibid., points 31–32.
See Chart no. 300, ‘Soome laht: Paldiskist Narvani’ (Estonian Maritime Administration, Tallinn, 2010); see also Charts of Estonia, vol 1, ‘Gulf of Finland: Suurupi Peninsula to Narva’ (Estonian Maritime Administration, Tallinn, 2015), 2.
See Rosmorport, North-Western Basin Branch, ‘VTS coverage areas’, available
Navionics, op. cit., ‘The Gulf of Finland’.
See Map 9. The map depicts the potential updated system of straight baselines in the Russian Federation’s maritime area.
See, e.g., Marineregions.org, op. cit., ‘Russia’.
Vigrund lighthouse was mentioned already in the 1920 Finnish-Soviet Peace Treaty, op. cit., Article 3(4).
See Russian Geographical Society, ‘Complex Expedition “Hogland”, Islands’, available
See further in Oude Elferink 1994, op. cit., 189; see also Lott, op. cit., 74–75.
Lott, op. cit., 76.
Ibid., 75.
Ibid., 74.
See Navionics, op. cit., ‘The Gulf of Finland’.
See, e.g., Anonymous, ‘Päivittäinen laivaliikenne Kotkan ja Sillamäen välillä päättyy’, Yle Uutiset (17 October 2007); J Niemeläinen, ‘Kotkan ja Sillamäen välinen laivalinja lopettaa’, Helsingin Sanomat (18 October 2007).
Anonymous, ‘Sillamäe-Kotka laevaliin teeb avareisi 17. veebruaril’, Postimees (12 January 2006).
Ibid.
Anonymous, ‘Sillamäe-Kotka laevaliin on Ida-Viru tänavune turismitegu’, Logistikauudised (8 December 2006).
Yle Uutiset 2007, op. cit.; see also Map 10.
H Ellam, ‘Pronksiöö tulemus: Sillamäe-Kotka laevaliin suletakse’, Äripäev (17 October 2007).
Ibid. See also Niemeläinen, op.cit.
G Romanovitš, ‘Soome ja Eesti otsisid mereühenduse võimalusi’, Põhjarannik (30 June 2016); see maps 9 and 10.
J Eelmets, ‘Sillamäe-Kotka laevaliini taastamine sõltub kokkuleppest Venemaaga’, err Uudised (20 November 2015).
See, e.g., Anonymous, ‘Kotkan ja Viron välistä laivaliikennettä viritellään taas’, Yle Uutiset (1 February 2011).
Eelmets, op. cit.
G Romanovitš, ‘Laevaliin vajab tasuvusanalüüsi’, Põhjarannik (3 November 2016).
Ibid.
A Reimer, ‘Vähi ja Vallbaum ristasid laevaliini nimel mõõgad’, Virumaa Teataja (17 January 2018).
I Kuus, ‘Kunda sadam kaalub laevaliini Loviisasse’, err Uudised (11 May 2019).
Rosmorport, North-Western Basin Branch, ‘Terms and conditions of navigation VTS services with the use of Saint Petersburg VTS’, available
See Marine Traffic, ‘Gulf of Finland’, available
See Military and Paramilitary Activities in and against Nicaragua, op. cit., para 213.
See further, e.g., Churchill, Lowe, op. cit., 44; Symmons, op. cit., 33.
See 1940 Peace Treaty, op. cit., Article 2.
Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union, 1985 Decree no. 4450, op. cit., 1.
‘Declaration by Norway, Denmark and Sweden relative to the Establishment of Uniform Rules of Neutrality. Stockholm, 21.12.1912’ (1913) 7(3) American Journal of International Law, 187–191; see also Nordic 1938 Declaration, op. cit.; see also, e.g., Neutrality Act of Sweden (‘Innefattande vissa neutralitetsbestämmelser’), No. 187, 27 May 1938, Section 2(2).
Navionics, op. cit., ‘Gulf of Finland’.
See Map 9.
imo Resolution A.857(20), op. cit.
Rosmorport, North-Western Basin Branch, ‘Terms and conditions of navigation VTS services’, available
Rosmorport, op. cit., ‘VTS coverage areas’.
imo Resolution A.857(20), op. cit., Annex 1, para 2.3.3.