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Australia strong-arms East Timor over new oil and gas plan
By Will Marshall
17 March 2005
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The latest round of talks between Australia and East Timor
over the division of disputed Timor Sea oil and gas reserves broke
up last week without any agreement.
After deliberately drawing out negotiations to maximise pressure
on East Timor, Canberras latest manoeuvre was to offer Dili
a bribe in return for deferring a decision on the maritime boundary
between the two countries. This creative solution
would give Australia control over the lions share of the
seabed gas and oil reserves, and thus the profits and royalties,
for what amounts to a pittance.
According to Oxfam Community Aid Abroad executive director
Andrew Hewett: Australia has reportedly increased last Octobers
offer of $3 billion revenue over 30 years, to $4 billion in exchange
for the so-called Hong Kong model: signing away the right to discuss
maritime boundaries for 99 years. This is unacceptable to the
East Timorese, particularly given the knowledge that the undersea
oilfields are still revealing undiscovered riches.
At present the future seabed royalties are estimated to be
more than $32 billion.
Despite having the weight of international law on its side,
East Timor is not in a strong bargaining position. The tiny impoverished
statelet, with a population of less than a million, is dependent
on the UN and major powers, including Australia, politically and
militarily. With few sources of income, East Timor has been counting
on revenue from the oil and gas. The longer the delay in receiving
any money, the greater the economic and social problems on the
half-islanda factor that Canberra has mercilessly exploited.
In a sign of desperation, the East Timorese negotiators announced
at the latest talks in Canberra that they were prepared to accept
a deal that includes deferring a decision on the maritime boundary.
The stage is now set for further haggling over the exact terms
of such an agreement. Canberra has already pressured Dili into
signing the Timor Sea Treaty and International Unitisation Agreement
that give East Timor 90 percent of the revenues from the Bayu-Undan
field, but only 20 percent of the much larger Greater Sunrise
field.
Throughout the protracted dispute, the Howard government has
insisted that the border between the two countries be drawn in
accordance with the 1989 Timor Gap Treaty between Canberra and
Jakarta. Under the agreement with the Suharto dictatorship, Australia
was granted much of the seabed wealth in return for recognising
Indonesias forcible annexation of the former Portuguese
colony in 1975. Australia was the only country to formally recognise
the takeover.
Under the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS),
the border should be set along the median point between the two
countries. If that were the case, East Timor would receive a far
greater proportion of the gas and oil reserves. According to one
estimate, once the downstream benefits are included, Dili will
only receive about one third of its potential benefits. Canberra
has refused to be a party to an International Court of Justice
adjudication on the boundary.
Australias bullying over Timor gas and oil exposes the
hypocrisy of the Howard governments declarations of concern
for the East Timorese people in 1999. The decision to send Australian
troops to East Timor in response to militia violence against pro-independence
supporters had the same motivation as Canberras decision
to sign the 1989 treaty with the Suharto junta: control over Timor
Sea oil and gas.
Nearly three years after formal independence, East Timor remains
one of the poorest countries in the world. It has one of the lowest
per capita income levels in Asia and 46 percent of the population
lives below the poverty line on less than a dollar a day. Food
insecurity is widespread. More than one in ten children are moderately
or severely wasted. One recent report indicates that 50 people
in one village have starved to death.
The Howard governments blatant strong-arm tactics have
provoked growing opposition. An Australian businessman Ian Melrose
has funded a series of TV and newspaper advertisements, condemning
Canberras actions. The Howard government has stolen
two billion Australian dollars in tax revenue from gas and oil
royalties which East Timor needs to create a working health system,
one TV ad stated.
A letter signed by 17 US senators and congressmen sent to Howard
prior to the latest talks called on Australia to settle the border
dispute quickly and fairly. Such equitable sharing of revenue
is not a question of charity; rather it is a matter of self-determination,
sovereignty and East Timors future, the letter declared.
A delegation led by Greens Senator Bob Brown, Catholic Bishop
Hilton Deakin and Melrose last week gathered outside the venue
for the negotiations in Canberra last week to demand a fair deal
for East Timor.
It should be noted, however, that the stance of the Greens
and various radical outfits is just as hypocritical as Howards.
In 1999, all of these parties uncritically supported the Australian-led
military intervention, claiming that it was the only means to
stop the militia violence in East Timor. The Democratic Socialist
Party, for instance, declared that it was a victory that its protests
had forced Howard to intervene. On the contrary, the
demonstrations provided the essential political camouflage for
the Howard governments predatory military adventure. While
these same parties now protest about Howards grab for Timors
oil, none of them bother to explain their support for the 1999
intervention.
The military action in East Timor in 1999 was a precedent for
a far more aggressive assertion of Australian imperialisms
interests throughout the region. Having secured the Bush administrations
backing through its support for the Iraq invasion, the Howard
government dispatched troops, police and officials to the Solomon
Islands in 2003 in what amounted to a virtual takeover of the
tiny Pacific Island state. Canberra has since bullied Papua New
Guinea, Fiji, Vanuatu and Nauru into accepting the insertion of
Australian officials in top administrative posts.
As the case of East Timor clearly demonstrates, the Howard
governments actions have nothing to do with the welfare
of the local populations, but are the means for consolidating
Australian economic and strategic interests in the Asia-Pacific
region.
See Also:
Australia continues
to pressure East Timor on oil and gas
[14 October 2004]
Australia pushes ahead
with grab for Timor oil and gas
[30 April 2004]
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