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East Timor could become failed state: aid agency

Source
Reuters - May 19, 2004

Michelle Nichols, Canberra – East Timor, the world's newest nation, is in danger of becoming a failed state because Australia is dragging its feet on maritime border talks and hindering the development of its neighbour, aid agency Oxfam said on Thursday.

An Oxfam report released to coincide with East Timor's second anniversary of independence showed less than half the nation's 760,000 people could read or write, 41 percent live below the poverty line and one in 10 children die before the age of five.

Australia and East Timor are negotiating a border in the resource-rich Timor Sea. At stake are billions of dollars worth of oil and gas royalties, which East Timor has vowed to use to alleviate poverty, create jobs and improve education.

"Two years after independence, the Australian government's approach to maritime boundary negotiations with East Timor is limiting East Timor's capacity to plan for and finance its future development," Oxfam and Australian arm Community Aid Abroad said.

"This could push newly independent East Timor to the brink of becoming a failed state through no fault of its own," it said.

Australia has said it is only able to meet East Timor twice a year, but East Timor wants monthly meetings in a bid to accelerate maritime border talks that began last month in the East Timor capital Dili. The next meeting is set for September.

Australia denies claims it is cheating East Timor out of A$1 million ($700,000) a day in disputed oil and gas royalties and says it has been more than generous to its tiny neighbour by giving it 90 percent of royalties from a joint development area.

A year ago the two countries agreed to a revenue sharing Timor Sea Treaty for a shared 62,000 square-km (23,900 square-mile) region that splits royalties 90:10 in favour of East Timor until a permanent maritime boundary is negotiated.

Big mistake

East Timor, which gained independence in 2002 after a quarter of a century of often brutal Indonesian rule, wants negotiations on a maritime border completed in three to five years. Australia has refused to put a deadline on an agreement.

"They've made a very big mistake thinking the best way to handle this negotiation is by trying to shame Australia, by mounting abuse on our country, accusing us of bullying, when you consider all we've done for East Timor," Australia's Foreign Minister Alexander Downer told Australian television recently.

"We will do what we believe to be right but, of course, in our interests," he said.

East Timor can claim a sea boundary 200 nautical miles from its coast, consistent with its entitlement under international law and the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. But Australia can also claim a boundary 200 nautical miles from its coast. At the closest point, the countries are about 230 nautical miles apart.

Timor Sea gas fields include the $3.3 billion ConocoPhillips-operated Bayu-Undan project and the $5 billion Woodside Petroleum-run Greater Sunrise venture.

East Timor is one of the world's poorest nations and gets $150 million ($113 million) in aid a year. Australia, Japan and the United States are main donors.

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