ETAN Urges Visiting Australian Prime Minister to Follow Rule of
Law in Talks with East Timor
June 3, 2004 - The East Timor Action Network (ETAN) today
urged Australia’s Prime Minister John Howard to allow East Timor a
fair opportunity to achieve economic independence by developing its
own natural resources. The Prime Minister is visiting Washington
this week.
“While Australia welcomed East Timor into the community of
independent nations two years ago, the Australian government
continues to obstruct the new country’s efforts to define a fair
maritime boundary in the Timor Sea. Meanwhile, Australia extracts
billions of dollars worth of oil and gas from disputed undersea
territory,” said John M. Miller, spokesperson for ETAN. “We urge
Prime Minister Howard to respect his new neighbor’s sovereignty by
participating in good-faith efforts to resolve the boundary dispute
quickly and according to current internationally-accepted legal
principles.”
In March, more than 50 members of the
U.S. House of Representatives wrote to Prime Minister Howard,
encouraging Australia to “to move seriously and expeditiously in
negotiations with East Timor to establish a fair, permanent maritime
boundary and an equitable sharing of oil and gas resources in the
Timor Sea.”
In his reply, Mr. Howard
wrote that “Australia is committed to doing what we can to help East
Timor on its road to stable, democratic governance.” Nevertheless,
Mr. Howard declined to “set an end date for negotiations.” In
addition, he rejected the Representatives’ strong suggestion that
“any revenue from disputed areas on East Timor's side of the median
line but outside the Joint Petroleum Development Area defined in the
Timor Sea Treaty be held in escrow until a permanent boundary is
established” by stating that “Australia has exercised jurisdiction
in these areas for an extensive period of time.”
“This claimed jurisdiction is based on an illegitimate treaty
with Indonesia, illegally signed while Indonesia brutally occupied
East Timor,” said Miller. “The East Timorese and their friends
thought that the violent withdrawal of Indonesian troops in 1999 was
the end of foreign occupation of their territory. Australia should
be ashamed to continue to profit from this occupation. Prime
Minister John Howard betrays Australians’ sense of fair play and
legality when he justifies today’s continuing occupation by citing
Australian complicity with Indonesia’s brutal invasion.”
Prime Minister Howard is visiting Washington this week, and met
with President Bush today to discuss Iraq and the new
Australia-U.S. Free Trade Agreement,
among other topics.
“We wonder if the two leaders discussed how their nations can set
a good example by following the rule of law, especially in relation
to smaller, weaker, less affluent nations just developing their
democratic traditions,” said Miller.
Background
Substantial oil and natural gas deposits lie under the Timor Sea
between Australia and East Timor. The fate of tens of billions of
dollars of revenue depends on a permanent boundary agreement. Where
neighboring claims overlap, as is the case with East Timor and
Australia, countries must negotiate a permanent maritime boundary,
usually halfway between their coastlines. If both sides approach the
issue in good faith, such agreements usually take 2-3 years to
negotiate.
Two months before East Timor achieved independence in May 2002,
Australia formally withdrew from international legal mechanisms -
the International Court of Justice and the International Tribunal
for the Law of the Sea - for resolving maritime boundary issues that
cannot be settled by negotiation. Mari Alkatiri, East Timor's
soon-to-be Prime Minister, called this withdrawal an "unfriendly"
act. The withdrawal has prevented the new nation from employing
third-party arbitration to encourage Australia to approach this
issue in a timely and cooperative manner.
In October 2002, East Timor enacted a Maritime Boundary Law,
claiming a 200 nautical mile Exclusive Economic Zone, based on the
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. At the same time,
East Timor’s Prime Minister asked his Australian counterpart to
begin negotiations. The first preliminary round of talks was held a year later,
the first substantive round in April 2004. Neither meeting made significant
progress, although East Timor asked for monthly talks both times,
and Australia has refused to meet more than twice per year.
After last April's talks, the United Nations Secretary-General reported
that “the possibilities for Timor-Leste’s future political
development and social progress are indissolubly linked with its
economic prospects. Progress towards agreement between Australia and
Timor-Leste for development of the mineral resources in the Timor
Sea, in a mutually beneficial manner, through full commitment of the
leadership of the countries involved, would make an essential
contribution in this regard.”
East Timor is among the world's poorest countries, with low
levels of basic services and high unemployment. Its government’s
annual budget of around US $85 million has come largely from donors
during the past few years. The new nation is currently trying to
avoid borrowing from international financial institutions, as it
faces a projected US$30 million budget deficit between 2005 and
2007. Yet between 1999 and today, the Australian government has
taken in more than US$1 billion in oil and gas revenues from
petroleum fields that are twice as close to East Timor as they are
to Australia, and which would belong to East Timor under a fair
boundary settlement.
In March 2004, Representative Barney Frank and 52 others wrote to
Mr. Howard, concluding that, “We trust your country's commitment to
the freedom and security of East Timor will include recognition of
East Timor's territorial integrity and its right to a swift,
permanent resolution of the maritime boundary dispute.” In early
April, more than one thousand East Timorese demonstrated in front of
the Australian Embassy in Dili, calling for Australia to end its
occupation of the Timor Sea and stop stealing East Timor’s oil. East
Timor’s leaders, including President Xanana Gusmăo and Prime
Minister Mari Alkatiri, made similar requests, and pointed out that
this is a life and death issue for the people of East Timor.
Report language accompanying the Senate Foreign Operations
Appropriations bill in July 2003 stated, "The Committee is aware of
negotiations between East Timor and Australia over petroleum
reserves, which will be of critical importance to the future
economic development and security of East Timor. The Committee urges
both governments to engage in good faith negotiations to resolve
their maritime boundary expeditiously in accordance with
international legal principles."
The East Timor Action Network/U.S. supports human dignity
for the people of East Timor by advocating for democracy;
sustainable development; social, legal and economic justice; and
human rights, including women's rights. For more info see
www.etan.org.
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See http://www.etan.org/issues/tsea.htm for additional info
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