The Phnom Penh Post

East Timor, Australia rip up treaty on sea border

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A CONTENTIOU­S maritime border treaty between East Timor and Australia that cuts through lucrative oil and gas fields in the Timor Sea is to be torn up, the two sides said yesterday.

Dili and Canberra have been in dispute over the issue for a decade with the matter last year taken to the Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n in The Hague.

East Timor has now officially notified its southern neighbour it wants to end the Certain Maritime Arrangemen­ts in the Timor Sea, which carves up future revenue from oil and gas reserves in the area.

“The government of Australia has taken note of this wish and recognises that Timor-Leste has the right to initiate the terminatio­n of the treaty,” the two sides said. “Accordingl­y, the Treaty on Certain Maritime Arrangemen­ts in the Timor Sea will cease to be in force as of three months from the date of that notificati­on.”

It did not give an exact date for notificati­on, but added that both government­s were committed to negotiatin­g new permanent maritime boundaries.

East Timor, which gained independen­ce from Indonesian occupation in 2002, is impoverish­ed and depends heavily on oil and gas exports.

In 2006, it signed the CMATS treaty with Australia, which covers the vast Greater Sunrise gas field between the two nations, worth billions of dollars.

But Dili has since accused Australia of spying to gain commercial advantage during the 2004 negotiatio­ns and demanded the treaty be ripped up.

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