Google – AFP, 19 December 2013
The Hague — East Timor has launched legal action against Canberra at the UN's top court, alleging Australian intelligence officials illegally seized documents from a lawyer representing Dili in a row over spying.
![]() |
East
Timorese policemen stand guard during a protest outside the Australian
embassy
over claims of espionage in Dili, December 6, 2013 (AFP, Valentino
De Sousa)
|
The Hague — East Timor has launched legal action against Canberra at the UN's top court, alleging Australian intelligence officials illegally seized documents from a lawyer representing Dili in a row over spying.
Australia's
domestic spy agency earlier this month raided the Canberra offices of Bernard
Collaery and seized electronic and paper documents.
Collaery is
representing East Timor's government in an arbitration hearing at The Hague
which accuses Australia of espionage over a controversial Timor Sea oil and gas
treaty. The raid came ahead of a hearing in the case.
![]() |
East
Timorese protest against the Australian
government outside its embassy in Dili
over
claims of espionage, December 6, 2013
(AFP, Valentino De Sousa)
|
East
Timor's Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao has labelled the action
"unconscionable" and on Wednesday the deeply poor half-island nation
launched action at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague.
Dili
contends that the seizure of documents violated its sovereignty and rights
"under international and any relevant domestic law", according to a
court statement.
The country
that last year celebrated a decade of independence after years of brutal
Indonesian occupation demanded Australia return the documents and destroy any
copies.
It also
asked for "provisional measures" until the ICJ rules on the case,
including that the documents be handed to the court and that Australia
guarantee it will not intercept communications between East Timor and its legal
advisers.
Cases at
the ICJ can take months or even years to resolve.
Australian
Attorney-General George Brandis has dismissed any suggestion that the raids
were an attempt to interfere in the case, and Prime Minister Tony Abbott has
defended them as in the national interest.
A key
witness who is an ex-intelligence agent will allege that Australia's foreign
intelligence service used an aid project refurbishing East Timor's cabinet
offices as a front to plant listening devices in the walls in order to
eavesdrop on deliberations about the treaty in 2004.
That
treaty, Certain Maritime Arrangements in the Timor Sea, or CMATS, set out a
50-50 split of proceeds from the vast maritime energy fields between Australia
and East Timor estimated at some Aus$40 billion (US$36 billion).
Dili is now
seeking to have the document ripped up on the grounds that Australia spied on
ministers to gain a commercial advantage.
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