Timor wins right to have border dispute resolved
The Australian Government deserves to be kicked in the head over its treatment of Timor in the dispute over oil and gas revenues in the Timor Sea.
Timor-Leste's case against Australia over a disputed maritime boundary will be heard by the permanent court of arbitration in the Hague after the court rejected Australia’s claim that the court had no jurisdiction.
Timor-Leste asked for the process which could decide on the border covering a large oil and gas field (worth over $40 billion) over which the two countries have a revenue-sharing agreement.
Australia has resisted negotiating a permanent border until 2056 at the earliest. The conciliation process will now take place behind closed doors over the next year.
Timor-Leste argues that treaty should be scrapped because, six years after it was signed, it was revealed Australia had bugged the Timor-Leste government’s cabinet room, with listening devices implanted by Australian Security Intelligence Service agents pretending to be aid workers renovating the office.
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