Australia
and East Timor strike 'landmark' deal to end Greater Sunrise dispute
Australia and East Timor
have reached agreement on developing billions of dollars of oil and gas
reserves in the Timor Sea, ending years of bitter disagreement.
A deal has been reached on a
maritime boundary as well as sharing arrangements for the $US50 billion Greater
Sunrise oil and gas field.
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop
hailed the agreement struck in confidential talks at The Hague as a
"landmark day" in relations between the two countries.
Xanana Gusmao, the hero of East
Timor's struggle for independence and leader of his country's delegation
in the talks, described it as an "historic agreement that marks the beginning
of a new era in Timor-Leste's [East Timor's] friendship
with Australia".
He said it will "help
us achieve our dream of full sovereignty and to finally settle our maritime
boundaries with Australia".
Mr Gusmao had demanded that gas
from Greater Sunrise be piped to a yet-to-be built industrial complex
on East Timor's remote western coast.
A joint statement released on
Saturday said the countries have agreed on establishing a "special
regime" for Greater Sunrise that addresses legal issues and is a pathway
to the development of the field and the sharing of revenue.
The two parties also agreed on
"central elements" of a maritime boundary in the Timor Sea, it
said.
The deal will be finalised in
October under the watch of the Permanent Court of Arbitration at The
Hague. Until then details will remain confidential.
Michael Leach, an expert on
the Timor Sea from Swinburne University of Technology, told Fairfax
Media that while the full details are needed to understand "the full
parameters" of the agreement "it is clearly a major step forward for
resolution of the long-running dispute".
Professor Leach said the
announcement was a "clear endorsement" of a conciliation process
triggered by East Timor under the UN Convention of the Law of the
Sea. The negotiations were the first of their kind under the UN convention.
"A resolution to this
dispute clearly opens the way for a major improvement in relations between the
two neighbours, which have been at a low point in recent years, with no
ministerial visits since 2013," he said.
Participation in the conciliation
process was compulsory for both countries but the outcomes are not
binding.
The agreement will be seen by the
Timorese as a huge victory by Mr Gusmao who doggedly pursued a better deal for
his country.
Mr Gusmao's party was narrowly
defeated at elections in July.
Agio Pereira, East Timor's agent
in the proceedings, said "this agreement was made possible because of the
strength and leadership" of Mr Gusmao who had "secured the future of
our nation".
The key breakthrough in
negotiations came on the night of August 30, the anniversary of the
UN-supervised 1999 referendum when Timorese voted to break away
from Indonesia and become the world's newest nation.
Professor Leach said the Labor
Party's change in policy to favour East Timor, which shifted a previously
bipartisan consensus with the Turnbull government, had an impact behind the
scenes.
He said there was little doubt
also that recent pressure from the United States for a resolution of the
maritime boundary dispute, with the South China Sea controversy in the background,
further pushed Canberra to reach an agreement.
Peter
Taksoe-Jensen, chairman of the conciliation commission, said the
negotiations "have been challenging and this agreement has only been
possible because of the courage and goodwill shown by leaders on both
sides".
Shadow foreign minister Penny
Wong welcomed the breakthrough and said the dispute had gone on for too
long.
She said Labor committed last year to reaching a binding international resolution, either through bilateral negotiation or international arbitration.
"This ruling vindicates Labor's position and brings an end to more than 40 years' uncertainty over this maritime border."
She said Labor committed last year to reaching a binding international resolution, either through bilateral negotiation or international arbitration.
"This ruling vindicates Labor's position and brings an end to more than 40 years' uncertainty over this maritime border."
Lindsay
Murdoch
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