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Complementary Treaty and Protocol to Resolve the Question of Tacna and Arica | |
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Type | Border treaty |
Drafted | 3 June 1929 |
Signed | 3 June 1929 |
Location | Lima, Peru |
Effective | 28 August 1929 |
Signatories | |
Parties |
The Tacna–Arica compromise or Treaty of Lima[a] was a series of documents that settled the territorial dispute of both Tacna and Arica provinces of Peru and Chile respectively. According to the Treaty, the Tacna-Arica Territory was divided between both countries; Tacna being awarded to Peru and with Chile retaining sovereignty over Arica. Chile also agreed to pay up to US$6 million (about £1.23 million; equivalent to $106 million in 2023) in compensation to Peru. The Treaty was signed on 3 June 1929 in Lima by then-Peruvian Representative Pedro José Rada y Gamio and Chilean Representative Emiliano Figueroa Larrain.[1]
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