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Throughout history, there have been many territorial disputes concerning the Russian Federation.
- Caspian Sea boundaries are not yet determined among all littoral states. Issues between Russia and the states bordering it - Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan - were settled in 2003. Russia has no common land or Caspian-sea border with Turkmenistan and Iran, which do not agree with the Caspian Sea settlements.
- An additional ocean boundary dispute exists in the Barents Sea with the neighbouring Kingdom of Norway. Russia applies a sector line spanning from Cape Nemetskii to the North Pole for delimitation purposes whilst Norway applies the equidistance principle. Neither method is acceptable for either state since they arguably lead to an inequitable result, so the matter is subject to negotiation where a compromise is likely to be attained.
- Russia has made no territorial claim in Antarctica (but has reserved the right to do so) and does not recognize the claims of any other nation. The Soviet Union signed the Antarctic Treaty in 1960.
- Disputes over the boundary with Georgia relating to Russia's legal recognition of Georgian regions, South Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent states.
[edit] References
- ^ Business Standard Article - source for 174 km² figure
- ^ Economist article including map of new Russia-China Border
[edit] External links
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