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Subject: Australia's greedy oil deals in E Timor
The Nation (Thailand)
April 1, 2004, Thursday
Australia's greedy oil deals in E Timor
The Nation.
>Canberra's insistence on a bilateral resolution to sea border issue
is not fair
As the world's newest country, East Timor faced a steep learning curve
when it gained independence in 2002. And among the first and harshest
lessons it learned was that when it comes to international relations,
there are no such things as true friends, only self interests. Dili's
relationship with Canberra is a case in point. Australia won deserved
plaudits for the leading role it played in ending the Jakarta-inspired
bloodshed on the half island in 1999 and for eventually ushering East
Timor through to independence. But any thoughts Dili might have had about
maintaining a 'little brother' relationship with its much larger neighbour
must surely have been knocked out over the past couple of years.
Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer made that all too clear in
a conversation with East Timor Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri last year. 'We
are very tough,' Downer told Alkatari, according to a leaked transcript of
their meeting. 'We don?t care if you give information to the media. Let me
give you a tutorial in politics - there's not a chance [of you getting
your wish],' he reportedly said. What the two were talking about was the
gas fields that lie under the sea that separates East Timor from Australia
and which are the island?s only real economic asset and its only hope of
financial security. Downer's bullying tone was not unusual - it has
typified Australia's negotiations on the gas fields.
Last year, the two governments sealed the Timor Sea Treaty giving East
Timor 90 per cent of the revenues from a joint-development area, where one
field, Bayu Undan, is ready for development. But Australia held up
ratification of the deal until East Timor agreed to Canberra's terms for
sharing revenues from the much larger Greater Sunrise field, which holds
59 per cent of Timor's petroleum reserves and is expected to generate US$8
billion (Bt320 billion) in revenue over the next four decades. With the
threat that developers would pull out of Bayu Undan and deprive
cash-strapped East Timor of much needed funds, Australia was able to
obtain its demand for more than an 80 per-cent share of revenue from
Greater Sunrise until the two countries settle where their maritime
boundary should fall.
Australia wants to keep the maritime border agreed with Jakarta after
Indonesia invaded East Timor in 1975, which would give it the lion's share
of the reserves. But that deal was a transparent pay-off from Jakarta for
Canberra's recognition of its illegal annexation of East Timor and Dili
says the border should lie at the mid-point between the two countries, in
line with standard international practice. Such recognition would put all
of Greater Sunrise inside East Timor's waters. Australia, however, refused
to accept any decisions by independent arbitrators such as the
International Court of Justice, thus leaving tiny East Timor at the mercy
of bilateral negotiations.
By repeatedly threatening to stall development of nearly all of Timor's
gas reserves Canberra eventually got what it wanted. And on Monday this
week the Australian Parliament signed a treaty that gives Canberra interim
rights to 82 per cent of the Greater Sunrise revenues until the two
countries settle where their maritime boundary should fall. Crucially,
however, it provides no timeframe for settling the border issue.
Canberra is essentially robbing East Timor - the poorest country in
Southeast Asia - of billions of dollars, and perhaps even more
distastefully, dressing it up as an act of generosity.
If Australia had really taken the high road it would have agreed to
international arbitration of the border, dropped the numerous tax breaks
that it insisted on for its developers and worked toward a fair and equal
share of the spoils.
Australia likes to claim it has an 'enlightened' approach to foreign
affairs. It is this that justifies its condemnation of Southeast Asian
dealings with the junta in Burma, Vietnam's human rights record and
Malaysian logging practices. Yet its harsh dealings with asylum seekers,
its stalling over paying compensation for the epic Ok Tedi mining disaster
in Papua New Guinea and now East Timor undermine whatever pretensions it
has to a 'principled-based' approach to international dealings.
Sadly, it also raises questions about Australia's involvement in East
Timor in 1999, one of Canberra's biggest foreign-affairs successes in
decades. Was it really just about gas and oil?
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