Timor Gap Treaty
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Officially known as the Treaty
between Australia and the Republic of Indonesia on the zone of
cooperation in an area between the Indonesian province of East Timor and
Northern Australia, the Timor Gap Treaty is a treaty between the governments of Australia and Indonesia.[1] The signatories to the treaty were then Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Gareth Evans and then Indonesian Foreign Minister Ali Alatas. The treaty was signed on December 11, 1989 and came into force on February 9, 1991.
It provided for the joint exploitation of petroleum resources in a
part of the Timor Sea seabed which were claimed by both Australia and
Indonesia.
The portion of the seabed was known as the Timor Gap as it formed a break or gap in the Australia-Indonesia maritime border
which had been earlier agreed to because Portugal, the administering
power of East Timor, did not wish to participate in a separate round of
boundary negotiations as they were already under discussion at the Conference on the Law of the Sea.
After the Indonesia invasion and annexation of the colony in 1975–1976,
East Timor was made a province of Indonesia and both Australia and
Indonesia began negotiations to solve issues arising over claims to the
seabed in the area.
Less than two weeks after the treaty came into force, Portugal
instituted proceedings against Australia at the International Court of
Justice. As Portugal was still recognized by the U.N. as the lawful
administering power of East Timor, Portugal requested to dispute the
lawfulness of Australia's negotiations as a party to the Timor Gap
Treaty on behalf of the people of East Timor. The court ruled that it
could not adjudicate the dispute as it would require the court to rule
upon the lawfulness of Indonesia's annexation of East Timor, a decision
that could not be made, nor could it become binding, without the consent
of Indonesia. the court ruled 14 to 2 with Judge Weeramantry and Judge
Skubiszewski dissenting. [2]
Judge Skubiszewski condemned the ruling of the court, stating that
his primary opposition to the ruling was that, "recognition of
annexation erodes self-determination." And that the courts adherence to
legal correctness alone had been to the detriment of justice and was,
"cause for concern."
The treaty was no longer in force when East Timor seceded from
Indonesia in 1998. A new treaty to replace the Timor Gap Treaty was
negotiated, resulting in the Timor Sea Treaty.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timor_Gap_Treaty
References
- "East Timor (Portugal v. Australia)". International Court of Justice. 30 June 1995. Retrieved 2014-11-26.
Further reading
- Francis M. Auburn, David Ong and Vivian L. Forbes (1994) Dispute resolution and the Timor Gap Treaty Nedlands, W.A. : Indian Ocean Centre for Peace Studies, University of Western Australia. ISBN 1-86342-345-1 Occasional paper (Indian Ocean Centre for Peace Studies); no. 35.
- Dubois, B. (2000) [The Timor Gap Treaty : where to now? [ based on initial research by Monique Hanley and Kirsty Miller]. Fitzroy, Vic.: Community Aid Abroad, Oxfam in Australia. Briefing paper (Community Aid Abroad (Australia)) ; no. 25.
- Robert J. King, “A Gap in the Relationship: the Timor Gap, 1972-2013”, March 2013, submission to the inquiry by the Australian Parliament Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade into Australia's relationship with Timor-Leste. [1]
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Categories:
- Indonesian occupation of East Timor
- History of Australia since 1945
- Australia–East Timor border
- Australia–Indonesia border
- Joint development areas
- Treaties of Australia
- Treaties of Indonesia
- 1989 in East Timor
- 1989 in Indonesia
- 1989 in Australia
- Boundary treaties
- Treaties concluded in 1989
- Treaties entered into force in 1991
- Australia–Indonesia relations
- 1989 in Australian law
- Energy in East Timor
- East Timor stubs
- International law stubs
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