The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australia admits failings in Pacific as China looms

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SYDNEY: Australia has admitted it had not focused enough attention on its Pacific backyard but vowed to make ‘long overdue’ amends, amid growing Chinese influence in the region.

“I think we would have to accept some criticism,” Australia’s minister for internatio­nal developmen­t and the Pacific, Anne Ruston, told AFP on Friday.

“We have perhaps not put as much attention and effort into our own region as we should have.”

In recent months, Ruston has been at the sharp end of trying to fix that — jetting to-and-fro between Australia and far-flung Pacific Islands, as part of Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s ‘stepup’ in the region.

The policy includes more aid, more security assistance, more diplomats working in the region and, crucially, more face-to-face contacts.

It is, in large part, a response to Beijing’s growing economic, political and military activity in the region.

“I think we’ve had our focus gazed much further afield for a very long time,” said Ruston.

“It has certainly, more recently, been forced to be refocused back onto our own region.”

“That’s a good thing. And it was certainly long overdue.”

While Australia was more focused on Fallujah than Fiji, China has been doling out loans and investment in the region and scooping up natural resources and telecoms contracts.

Still, Ruston rejected suggestion­s that Australia, by moving to develop security facilities in Papua New Guinea and Fiji is causing the type of militarisa­tion many complain China is embarking on.

“This is our region, this is our area, this is where we live,” she said. “However you see the security and sovereignt­y of our region the Pacific is extremely important to Australia.”

Australian re-engagement has been hampered by deep disagreeme­nts with Pacific nations over the conservati­ve government’s sceptical stance on climate change — an existentia­l threat to many island nations.

Fiji Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimaram­a has been among those accusing Australia of putting its coal industry “above the welfare of Pacific peoples”.

“It is a very, very real issue for them,” Ruston acknowledg­ed.

In places like Kiribati — where the average height of the land is a few feet above sea level — it is “singularly the biggest issue that they have at the moment”.

To square the circle, Canberra diplomats have tried to separate climate policy writ-large from day-to-day work to temper its impact.

The mitigation and infrastruc­ture needs are enormous, “we talking tens of billions of dollars to be able to get the Pacific up to the kind of developmen­t standard, that I think Pacific aspires to have for itself”, said the minister.

Australia has committed to some ambitious projects, like helping Papua New Guinea bring electricit­y to 70 per cent of the population by 2030.

Today the percentage stands in the low double digits.

But even that is another issue that has been complicate­d by Australian domestic politics — which sees Papua New Guinea almost exclusivel­y as the location of a deeply controvers­ial offshore detention facility.

“I think it is the challenge of the job,” said Ruston of balancing domestic and internatio­nal issues, admitting that Australian­s have not been totally won over by the idea of long-term developmen­t assistance.

“I think one of the things that we’ve probably failed to do is to sell the message to the Australian public about why it is so important for Australia to assist, particular­ly our close neighbours in the Pacific.”

Many Australian­s see Pacific aid as money being taken from drought-hit farmers at home, instead of seeing the “huge value and benefit it is to Australia to have strong economies around it, the benefit to Australia to have secure and sovereign nations around it” she said. — AFP

I think we would have to accept some criticism. We have perhaps not put as much attention and effort into our own region as we should have. — Anne Ruston, Australia’s minister for internatio­nal developmen­t and the Pacific

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