Movement Against the Occupation of the Timor
Sea Launched
see also
On 19-22 April, the next round of Australia-East Timor Maritime
Boundary talks will take place in Dili. East Timor's civil society
is strongly opposed to the actions of
Australia on this issue up to now, and is organizing a series of
demonstrations and other actions this week to encourage Australia to
rethink their position. There will be
peaceful protests in front of the Australian Embassy from 9 am to
12:00 noon on the next three mornings, April 14, 15, and 16,
and an information booth will operate there each afternoon. The
following statement is being issued by the
new East Timorese Movement Against the Occupation of the Timor Sea.
Statement
14 April 2004
The Movement Against the Occupation of the Timor Sea was formed
in Dili, East Timor in April 2004 to help the Australian government
and people better understand how people in East Timor feel about
Australia’s violations of our rights, occupation of our maritime
territory, theft of our resources, and denial of our nationhood. We
include NGOS, individuals, and other parts of East Timor’s civil
society.
Through this statement and by our activities over the next two
weeks, we hope to strengthen the efforts of our democratically
elected government to:
- Complete our struggle for independence by defining the
maritime territorial extent of our nation.
- Obtain recognition from Australia that we are a sovereign,
independent nation, with the rights and duties that accompany that
status.
- Ensure that the birthright of the East Timorese people -- our
natural resource entitlement -- will benefit current and future
generations of citizens of our nation.
- Be a good neighbor to Australia, and encourage Australia to be
a good neighbor to us.
Occupation
Last month, the Australian government released new offshore areas
for companies to bid for permits to explore for petroleum. These
include territory that is much closer to East Timor’s coast than to
Australia, which East Timor’s government claims as part of our
national territory. Your government wrote that “Australia does not
accept the East Timorese claim to the extent that it overlaps areas
over which Australia exerts jurisdiction. Australia has exercised
exclusive sovereign rights over this area for an extended period of
time, and has notified East Timor that it will continue to do so."
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April 14 in
Dili. Photo by Charles Scheiner |
We appreciate your honesty in admitting that your current
exploitation of contested areas is a direct continuation of
Australia’s support for and profiting from Indonesia’s illegal
occupation of our land. But we do not appreciate your brute-power
approach. It is not up to Australia alone to “accept” East Timor’s
claim -- this is a matter to be resolved through negotiations or, if
negotiations do not succeed, by an impartial legal process. It is a
question of right, not might.
Unlike Australia, we are not a “lucky country.” One third of our
people gave their lives for our independence, resisting and
eventually overcoming a brutal invasion and occupation by Indonesia.
Although your government finally came to our assistance when
independence was almost assured in 1999, we remember that between
1975 and 1998 Australia gave diplomatic, military and political
support to Indonesia’s illegal annexation. One significant factor in
Australia’s deciding to abandon our people, who had helped you so
much during World War II, was that you believed Australia would have
easier access to Timor Sea petroleum under an Indonesian-controlled
regime. Australia still bears the shame that you were more
interested in oil money than human lives.
Although we cannot forget, we are ready to move on. Now that East
Timor has achieved independence, we want respectful, friendly and
mutually beneficial relations with our neighbors. We expect and hope
that Australia and Indonesia have the same wish.
We do not ask for reparations from those who helped occupy and
destroy our territory and our lives. We accept conciliation in the
pursuit of justice for many of the individuals and governments who
committed or abetted crimes against humanity inflicted on our
people. But we cannot and will not compromise the sovereignty that
so many East Timorese struggled and died for over the last
quarter-century.
Generosity
Australians think of yourselves as generous toward East Timor,
and we believe that most Australian people genuinely want to help,
and are rightfully proud of the role you played in InterFET. It is
in your interest, as well as ours, that East Timor succeeds as a
democracy, with economic, political and social conditions which will
allow our people to enjoy peace, justice, and adequate levels of
health and education. As well as making our lives better, this will
prevent the need for refugees to flee to safer lands, or for the
international community to mount another crisis response
intervention.
But when it comes to the Timor Sea, your generosity rings hollow.
Since our liberation in 1999, Australia has been collecting money
from the Laminaria-Corallina oil field, far closer to our shores
than to yours. Your government has taken in more than US $1 billion
in revenues from this area, and we have received nothing. During the
same period, AusAID programs in East Timor have cost you about $100
million, with some additional expenses for your soldiers here
(although you would have pay and feed those soldiers even if they
stayed home). During 2003, the Commonwealth collected about US $172
million from Laminaria-Corallina, more than twice our government’s
entire budget.
In reality, East Timor is the largest international donor to
Australia. The relatively small amounts you spend to help us do not
compare with the amount you are stealing from our resource
birthright. We face a $126 million deficit during the next three
years because Bayu-Undan is later than international advisors
predicted, but the Laminaria revenues could fill that deficit ten
times over, freeing us from dependence on foreign aid or becoming
trapped in a vicious cycle of debt.
Australia is a wealthy country, with a high standard of living
and vast amounts and variety of natural resources. East Timor, on
the other hand, suffers the legacy of centuries of colonialism and
war. We have only one significant material resource -- the petroleum
deposits under our part of the Timor Sea. Our people are dying of
malaria and tuberculosis; many of us have not had the chance to
learn to read; our roads, housing, water, electricity and other
services are far below what any Australian would tolerate. We are
just beginning to develop our economy, as we prepare for future
generations when our oil and gas has been used up.
Although maternal mortality is 150 times higher in East Timor
than it is in Australia, we do not ask for your charity. We only
want what is rightfully ours under international law.

Timor Sea Treaty
Under pressure from your government, oil companies, and the
United Nations, our Government signed and ratified the Timor Sea
Treaty in our first day and year of independence. Many of us believe
that this is a bad treaty, not sufficiently protective of East
Timor’s rights and resources. We see the Timor Sea Treaty as a
direct descendent of the illegal 1989 Timor Gap Treaty, when your
government profited from our suffering by conspiring with Indonesia
to sell our resources.
The Timor Sea Treaty is now law, and we recognize that East
Timor, as a sovereign nation, should follow the law and keep its
word. The signers of the Timor Sea Treaty were “convinced” that it
would “provide a firm foundation for continuing and strengthening
the friendly relations between Australia and East Timor,” but this
has not been the case.
We are disappointed that Australia has not kept its word to
respect our independence and to work in good faith for a permanent
maritime boundary. Your actions and your diplomacy belie the
Treaty’s status as an interim agreement, “without prejudice” to a
future seabed delimitation. Although we do not suggest unilateral
abrogation of the Timor Sea Treaty, we urge Australia to restore
your good name by replacing it with a boundary as quickly as
possible.
Negotiation and Justice
Thirty years ago, Australia and Indonesia delimited the seabed
between your two nations (albeit intruding into our territory as
well). You began negotiations in March 1970, and signed the
“Agreement between the Government of the Commonwealth of Australia
and the Government of the Republic of Indonesia Establishing Certain
Seabed Boundaries” in May 1971 and a supplemental agreement in
October 1972, after less than three years of discussions.
Delimitation of the East Timor-Australia boundary should not take
even this long -- it is a much shorter line, and much of the
preliminary work has already been done.
The only obstacle is Australia’s unwillingness to come to the
table in good faith, with the desire to reach a fair and just
agreement. When your government wanted to negotiate the interim
Sunrise International Unitization Agreement quickly, you asked to
meet monthly and our government agreed, even though we are busy
creating a new nation and have few human and material assets. But
when our government asked you to meet monthly to resolve our mutual
boundary, you plead lack of resources and refuse.
Two months before we became independent, your government withdrew
from legal processes for resolving maritime boundary disputes. We
learned from this action that you expect Australia to profit more
from an inherently unbalanced bilateral process than if an impartial
arbiter decides on the basis of law. In other words, you want no
referee to ensure that the rules are followed, the game is fair, the
clock keeps running, and good sportsmanship prevails.
Australian officials say that you “prefer negotiation to
litigation”. At first, we understood this to mean that you prefer to
use your greater size, wealth, experience and flexibility to bully
us, rather than allow East Timor to employ internationally accepted
legal principles, administered by a third party. But we now realize
that even this was naïve -- that you do not even want to negotiate.
It would be more honest to say that you prefer occupation by force
to relating to East Timor as a sovereign nation.
We thought foreign occupation of our territory had ended in 1999.
We did not expect to emerge from Indonesia’s bloody occupation of
our land only to face Australia’s greedy occupation of our sea. We
believed that Australia, with its democratic traditions and lofty
ideals, would be more moral and less ruthless than Suharto’s
military regime.
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April 14,
2004. Photo by Charles Scheiner. |
We ask Australia
It is not too late for Australia to re-establish a friendly
relationship with East Timor. But time, like the Laminaria-Corallina
oil reserve, is running out. We request the Australian government to
take the following actions:
1. Respect our independent and sovereign state. Our government’s
legitimacy and authority are equal to yours. We may be small and
new, but we are just as much a nation as you are.
2. Negotiate a fair maritime boundary, including seabed and water
column economic zones, with East Timor, according to contemporary
legal principles as expressed in the United Nations Convention on
the Law of the Sea, based on a median line. If both sides approach
the process in good faith, it should take no more than three years
to reach an agreement. We ask Australia to meet monthly or as often
as East Timor’s government requests, since your resources are far
greater than ours, and our need for a solution is more pressing than
yours.
3. Rejoin the maritime boundary dispute resolution mechanisms of
the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea and the
International Court of Justice, so that East Timor and Australia
will have boundaries consistent with the law if negotiations do not
result in a just and prompt solution.
4. Stop issuing new exploration licenses in seabed territory that
is closer to East Timor than to Australia. During each of the last
three years, including last month, Australia offered such areas to
oil companies, and your government signed one contract as recently
as 23 February 2004. This is our property, and you have no right to
sell it.
5. Deposit all revenues received by the Australian government --
including taxes and rents -- from Laminaria-Corallina, Buffalo,
Greater Sunrise, and other petroleum fields that are closer to East
Timor than they are to Australia into an escrow account. When a
permanent seabed boundary is established, this account will be
divided appropriately between our two nations. Australia has already
received more than $1 billion U.S. dollars from Laminaria-Corallina
and other fields since 1999, which should also be put into escrow.
Section Coordinators of the Movement Against the Occupation of
the Timor Sea:
Tomás Freitas, Program
Nuno Rodrigues, Logistics
Sisto dos Santos, Socialization and Mobilization
Tomé Jerônimo, Outreach
Domingos Ati, Security
João Sarmento, Spokesperson
Movimento Kontra Okupasun Tasi Timor
Movement Against the Occupation of the Timor Sea:
La’o Hamutuk, HAK Association, Haburas Foundation, NGO Forum,
Mirror for the People (LABEH), East Timor Agriculture and
Development Foundation (ETADEP), Labor Advocacy Institute for East
Timor (LAIFET), Sah’e Institute for Liberation, KSI, ARI,
Proletariat Group, Sustainable Agriculture Network (HASATIL), Arte
Moris, East Timor Socialist Labor (SBST), East Timor Labor Union
Confederation (KSTL), Independent Center for Timor Sea Information (CIITT),
Association of Men Against Violence (AMKV), Bibi Bulak, Student
organizations.
For further information: João Sarmento, +670-723-5043 or
laohamutuk@easttimor.minihub.org
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