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Subject: SMH: Coalition stretches credibility with Australia's elastic
borders
Coalition stretches credibility with Australia's elastic borders
November 27, 2003
URL: http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/11/26/1069825836064.html
Coalition stretches credibility with Australia's elastic borders
November 27, 2003
Pity the many confused students of Australian geography who, until
recent weeks, thought the country's national borders were clearly
established. In a bizarre month of border tampering, the long-standing
tradition of setting Australia's national boundaries according to
international law has been abandoned in favour of a new "elastic
band" approach to fencing our borders.
This new and innovative policy approach involves the Federal Government
simultaneously shrinking or stretching our borders according to the
principles of self-interest and greed.
The supposed threat posed by 14 asylum seekers beaching on Melville
Island - 50 kilometres off our northern coast - triggered a frenzy of
activity in Canberra designed to tighten our borders by excising Melville
and thousands of other islands from the Australian migration zone. Towed
back out of Australian waters, the asylum seekers face deportation from
Indonesia, a country which has not ratified the 1951 Refugee Convention.
At the same time in Darwin, Australian Government negotiators were
furiously stretching our elastic border to a point hundreds of kilometres
off our northern coast in negotiations over a new maritime boundary with
East Timor.
Under the waters of the Timor Sea between Australia and the world's
newest nation lie vast reserves of oil and natural gas over which
political tensions between Canberra and Dili are rapidly heating up.
Central to the tensions are the tens of billions of dollars worth of oil
and gas from an area of the Timor Sea that is currently subject to
overlapping maritime boundary claims by the two countries.
With this sort of money at stake, Government negotiators claimed that
our maritime boundary in fact extends to the edge of the Australian
continental shelf - 400 kilometres off our northern coast - and
unsurprisingly, far closer to East Timor than Australia. Such an outcome
to boundary negotiations would bring the vast bulk of revenue from the oil
and gas deposits into Canberra's rather than Dili's coffers.
East Timor, one of the poorest countries in the world, desperately
needs revenues from the Timor Sea oil and gas reserves to meet its
development challenges. Only 60 per cent of its people can read and write.
Life expectancy is just 57 years and more than one in 10 East Timorese
children born today will likely die before the age of five. To confront
these challenges, East Timor's paltry annual budget of $US79 million ($110
million) is heavily reliant on foreign aid money - most of which is set to
rapidly decline over the next three years, leaving East Timor with an
anticipated budget deficit of more than $US130 million.
Against this backdrop there is growing resentment in East Timor towards
what is widely perceived as the Australia's lack of good faith in the
maritime boundary negotiations which will determine our relative shares of
the oil and gas reserves.
The East Timorese appear to have a point. Under interim treaty
arrangements, the major oil and gas fields lie in territory exclusively
claimed by Australia, sending the vast bulk of revenue flows to Canberra.
However, under international maritime law, East Timor could successfully
lay claim to a far greater proportion of the oil and gas reserves of the
Timor Sea.
This would be achieved by the establishment of a maritime boundary
along a middle line between the Australian and East Timorese coasts,
through the provisions of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea (UNCLOS), as judged by an independent umpire, the International Court
of Justice (ICJ).
But Australia doesn't just play hardball with asylum seekers. Last
year, the Government ruled out this option for East Timor by withdrawing
from the arbitration mechanisms of UNCLOS and the ICJ. This effectively
prevents East Timor from seeking independent resolution under
international law of the disputed maritime boundary between the two
countries and, at the same time, ensures Australia can continue to delay
maritime boundary negotiations.
It is an approach not lost on the East Timor Prime Minister, Mari
Alkatiri, who after last week's negotiations in Darwin accused Australia
of dragging out the talks to keep revenues flowing disproportionately to
Canberra for as long as possible. "We have proposed monthly meetings;
they are only ready for twice-a-year meetings," he said.
Australia should conduct its affairs in a manner consistent with
international maritime law and our obligations under the 1951 Refugee
Convention.
We should agree to process those people seeking asylum as well as
commit to achieving a permanent agreed maritime boundary with East Timor.
This agreement must be reached within five years or otherwise be referred
to the independent umpire for arbitration - the ICJ.
James Ensor is the director, public policy and outreach, Oxfam
Community Aid Abroad.
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