Weekend Herald

Troops in Iraq hot topic for Bishop

Australia Foreign Minister hopes to hold NZ to Anzac training promises We are very keen to continue a strong working relationsh­ip with New Zealand.

- Audrey Young

Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop says she will be asking the New Zealand Government today whether it intends staying with the Anzac training mission in Iraq — a mission that all parties of the new Government opposed.

She would also like to talk about the need to prevent any peoplesmug­gling starting up around Australian waters and the offshore processing of asylum seekers in Papua New Guinea and Nauru.

Bishop is due to have her first official talks — on Waiheke Island — with Foreign Minister Winston Peters, whom she first met in Danang, Vietnam in November.

“I struck up a good rapport with him so this is an opportunit­y to deepen that relationsh­ip, which I hope will turn into a friendship,” she told the Weekend Herald.

She said they would be discussing bilateral, regional and global issues, including what will happen in Iraq.

“We will obviously discuss our joint mission in Iraq and I will be seeking an indication of New Zealand future intentions.”

Australia has about 300 personnel at Camp Taji, north of Baghdad, and New Zealand has about 110. Together, they have trained more than 28,000 Iraqi soldiers and security officers in the fight against Isis but Labour, New Zealand First and the Greens all opposed the deployment in Opposition.

Bishop indicated she would like to see New Zealand extend the current mandate, which expires in November, a date set by the previous Government. “We work very closely with New Zealand,” she said. “I think it has been a very successful mission in Taji and of course we would want that to continue, but that is a matter for the New Zealand Government, but I will be seeking some indication of New Zealand’s intentions.”

Bishop said she would attend a meeting in Kuwait next week, cohosted by United States Secretary of State Rex Tillerson to discuss with contributi­ng countries what might happen next. New Zealand will be represente­d at that meeting by a senior official from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Bishop told the Weekend Herald that Australian foreign fighters were an ongoing threat in the region. “It is still an issue for us, monitoring and tracking those Australian citizens whom we deem to be foreign terrorist fighters in the Middle East.

“There are over 100 that we know of and I’ve cancelled over 200 passports of those who security agencies tell me pose a risk to the nation in terms of being potential foreign terrorist fighters.”

There were also local examples of terrorists seeking to recruit fighters in the Philippine­s. “So we are ever alert to what is an ongoing threat.”

There have been a number of pressure points in New Zealand’s relationsh­ip with Australia, including deporting criminals — many who lived almost all their lives in Australia — limiting citizenshi­p opportunit­ies for Kiwis in Australia, the assistance Labour MP Chris Hipkins gave Labor friends in Australia to uncover New Zealand citizenshi­p for Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce and repeated offers by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern to take up to 150 refugees from Australia’s offshore processing centres on Manus Island and Nauru.

“We have moved on from a number of those issue,” Bishop said.

“But we are very keen to continue a strong working relationsh­ip with New Zealand at ministeria­l level and given the change of Government, it is an opportunit­y for us to get to know new members of the Government.”

Bishop indicated she would convey a strong message about peoplesmug­gling, although she avoided criticisin­g Ardern’s repeated offer to take refugees. “I will be stressing that we need to be mindful of not undoing the efforts that have been made to combat people-smuggling. That of course is a priority for us.”

Operation sovereign borders, which refuses entry to any asylum seeker from a boat and sends them to offshore processing centres, had protected Australia’s borders and prevented deaths at sea.

“We need to continue to be vigilant to combat the threat from peoplesmug­glers.”

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