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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Guardian staff

Rex Tillerson gets frosty welcome in New Zealand – complete with single finger salutes

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (R) speaks to the media beside New Zealand’s Prime Minister Bill English.
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (R) speaks to the media beside New Zealand’s Prime Minister Bill English. Photograph: Marty Melville/AFP/Getty Images

The US Secretary of State has been met with a frosty reception and a backhanded compliment from the prime minister while on a flying visit to New Zealand.

Rex Tillerson arrived in wet and windy Wellington for an eight-hour visit on Tuesday, with his motorcade greeted by middle fingers and thumbs-downs.

Fairfax Media reported that the US media contingent were surprised by the hostile reception from members of the public.

“I’ve never seen so many people flip the bird at an American motorcade as I saw today,” the New York Times’ Washington correspondent, Gardiner Harris, told Stuff.co.nz.

About 200 protesters with the climate change action group 350 Aotearoa were gathered outside Parliament to “unwelcome” Tillerson, following president Donald Trump’s decision to pull out of the Paris accord.

Greenpeace New Zealand referred to Tillerson as Trump’s “henchman”.

US protection officers travelling were overhead joking about the “warm” welcome, Fairfax reported.

New Zealand’s National-led government remains committed to the Paris agreement and its target to cut emissions by 11% of 1990 levels by 2030.

The opposition Green and Labour parties want the target to be lifted to 40%. The Greens co-leader, James Shaw, and the local Labor MP, Grant Robertson, spoke at the protest at Parliament.

Greenpeace New Zealand also unfurled an anti-climate change denial banner from a nearby crane.

The prime minister himself was less than effusive over Tillerson’s visit.

At a press conference, Bill English said: “New Zealanders have for a long time not liked various presidents of the US and disagreed with their views about our anti-nuke policies for 30 years – but that doesn’t prevent us confirming our shared values and cooperating with them on security and defence.”

English later told news media that he and Tillerson “discussed our disagreement over the withdrawal from the Paris agreement”. According to Stuff’s report, Tillerson stood by Trump’s decision to exit the deal that he said did not serve US interests.

James Shaw said later in parliament that New Zealand had a “proud history” of standing up to the US over nuclear weapons: “Today we should stick up for the climate.”

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