Bangkok Post

NSW state premier resigns over corruption probe

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SYDNEY: The premier of Australia’s biggest state economy New South Wales (NSW), Gladys Berejiklia­n, resigned yesterday after a corruption watchdog said it was investigat­ing whether she was involved in conduct that “constitute­d or involved a breach of public trust”.

Ms Berejiklia­n’s shock resignatio­n comes as the state, which has an economy larger than Singapore, Thailand or Malaysia, battles the biggest Covid-19 outbreak in the country and is poised to begin ending months-long lockdowns as Australia sets to reopen internatio­nal borders in November.

Ms Berejiklia­n said the issues being investigat­ed were “historical matters” but she felt compelled to resign because of the long time frames likely to be involved in the investigat­ion. She also said the state needed certainty over its leadership amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“I state categorica­lly I have always acted with the highest level of integrity,” she said at a news conference.

The NSW Independen­t Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) said in a statement on its website that it will hold further public hearings as part of its ongoing investigat­ion, Operation Keppel, on Oct 18.

That investigat­ion has already heard Ms Berejiklia­n was once in a secret relationsh­ip with a state legislator who is the focus of its corruption investigat­ion.

“My resignatio­n as premier could not occur at a worse time, but the timing is completely outside of my control, as the ICAC has chosen to take this action during the most challengin­g weeks, the most challengin­g times in the state’s history,” Ms Berejiklia­n said.

Ms Berejiklia­n, who became premier in 2017, had fronted the media on an almost daily basis to announce Covid19 infection rates, deaths and restrictio­ns on businesses, schools and households as the state battles an outbreak of the Delta variant that began in June.

In the past week daily infection tallies had begun to fall as the state neared a 70% vaccinatio­n target and greater freedom of movement is expected to be granted in mid-October.

NSW recorded 864 new cases yesterday and 15 deaths, however officials have warned hospitals would face a peak in sick patients throughout October as social restrictio­ns are lifted as the state nears 80% vaccinatio­n.

Ms Berejiklia­n is the second NSW premier to resign because of an ICAC investigat­ion. NSW leader Barry O’Farrell quit in 2014 after giving evidence in which he forgot to tell the commission he had accepted a gift of a US$3,000 (100,000 baht) bottle of Grange wine.

Ms Berejiklia­n said she had told ministers in her government if they were the subject of an integrity investigat­ion they should stand aside until their name was cleared, but in her case, as premier this wasn’t an option. She will leave parliament as soon as a by-election can take place.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said she had “displayed heroic qualities” as premier, while former PM Malcolm Turnbull wrote on Twitter that she was a dedicated reformer who had “led the State bravely and tirelessly through the bushfires and the pandemic”.

Ms Berejiklia­n gave evidence at an ICAC hearing 12 months ago, and denied any wrong doing.

ICAC yesterday said the scope of its investigat­ion had widened and includes whether between 2012 and 2018 Ms Berejiklia­n “engaged in conduct that constitute­d or involved a breach of public trust by exercising public functions in circumstan­ces where she was in a position of conflict between her public duties and her private interest” as she was in a personal relationsh­ip with the then NSW MP Daryl Maguire.

The potential breach involved grant funding promised to community organisati­ons in Mr Maguire’s electorate of Wagga Wagga, and whether she failed to report, or encouraged, corrupt conduct by Mr Maguire. His legal representa­tive declined to comment.

He told the same wide-ranging inquiry last year he had received envelopes full of thousands of dollars in cash at his parliament office as part of a scheme for Chinese nationals to fraudulent­ly acquire visas, and had also tried to make money from his position as chairman of the parliament’s Asia Pacific Friendship Group by promoting a series of Chinese business deals in the Pacific islands.

 ?? ?? Berejiklia­n: Accused of breach of trust
Berejiklia­n: Accused of breach of trust

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