A. High sea
B. Territorial sea
C. Territorial Waters
D. Country sea
Related Mcqs:
- Under the Convention of the Law of the Sea, the breath of the territorial Sea is:
A. 6 nautical miles
B. 8 nautical miles
C. 12 nautical miles
D. None of these - According to the Convention of the Law of the Sea, the breadth of the Territorial Sea is:
A. 6 nautical miles
B. 8 nautical miles
C. 12 nautical miles
D. None of these - Exclusive Economic zone of Pakistan is an area beyond and adjacent to the territorial waters the limit of which is:
A. 200 nautical miles
B. 12 nautical miles
C. 100 nautical miles
D. None of these - Convention on the Territorial Sea and Contiguous Zone, providing new universal legal controls for the management of marine natural resources and the control of pollution were signed in:
A. 1958
B. 1947
C. 1955
D. 1940 - “Convention on the Territorial Sea and Contiguous Zone” providing new universal legal controls for the management of marine natural resources and the control of pollution was signed in:
A. 1960
B. 1980
C. 1958
D. 1950 - The area adjacent to the coastline of a state that is considered part of its national territory is known as:
A. territorial waters
B. a contiguous zone
C. res communis
D. high seas - Under the convention of the Law of the Sea, the breath of the exclusive economic Zones:
A. 100 nautical miles
B. 200 nautical miles
C. 300 nautical miles
D. None of these - Under the Convention of the Law Sea, the breadth of the exclusive Economic Zone is:
A. 100 nautical miles
B. 200 nautical miles
C. 300 nautical miles
D. 400 nautical miles - Under present day International Law:
A. A state can acquire title to territory by conquest
B. A state cannot acquire title to territory by conquest
C. A state can acquire title to the conquered territory through the approval of the Security Council
D. None of these - Actions that would have been illegal under international law that may be legal if taken in response to the illegal actions of another state are:
A. escalations
B. reprisals
C. retaliations
D. extra-legal responses