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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Daniel Hurst Foreign affairs and defence correspondent

Samoa’s PM says China’s expectation of Pacific-wide deal ‘something we could not agree to’

In this photo taken from video supplied by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs, Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong, right, holds a joint press conference with Samoan Prime Minister Fiame Naomi Mata’afa in Apia, Samoa, Thursday, June 2, 2022
Samoa’s PM Fiame Naomi Mata’afa also welcomed the new Australian Labor government’s climate policy, saying the country was ‘greatly encouraged’ by it. Photograph: AP

Samoa’s prime minister has suggested it was unreasonable for China to expect a Pacific trade and security deal to be rushed through this week, as she warmly welcomed the new Australian government’s climate policy.

The Australian minister for foreign affairs, Penny Wong, announced during a joint press conference in Samoa on Thursday that Australia would provide it with a new Guardian-class patrol vessel to replace the one that was grounded last year.

Wong’s second visit to the region since being sworn in last week signals the intensifying competition with China for influence, although the former climate minister has emphasised she wants to listen to and respect Pacific priorities.

The prime minister of Samoa, Fiame Naomi Mata’afa, played down the bilateral cooperation agreements her country signed when China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, visited the country.

Fiame said the signing ceremony was for bilateral programs and projects, most of which “had started a number of years ago, and it was a formalising process”.

“It just seemed a bit abnormal because the minister of foreign affairs was here and there was this particular proposal from the Chinese, that they were seeking regional agreement on,” Fiame told reporters on Thursday.

“Our position was that you cannot have regional agreement when the region hasn’t met to discuss it, and to be called in to have that discussion and to have an expectation that there would be a comprehensive decision or outcome was something that we could not agree to.”

In a setback for China, Pacific countries declined to sign up to a sweeping regional economic and security deal proposed by Beijing, after a crucial meeting of Pacific foreign ministers and their Chinese counterpart on Monday. Ten Pacific countries were to be part of the deal.

Samoa’s position was that region-wide agreements must first be taken to the Pacific Islands Forum.

Fiame said she believed Pacific countries had concluded that “we need to meet as a region to consider any proposal that is put to us by our development partners that requires a regional agreement”.

Wong, who joined Fiame for a media conference after talks in Apia on Thursday, praised Samoa’s leader for her “very wise intervention” on the issue.

“Your prime minister has shown a lot of leadership and wisdom, not only now, but I think in many of her statements about the importance of robust regional architecture, respectful regional processes to deal with some of the external circumstances we all find ourselves in,” she said.

Wong said Australia believed regional security was “an issue for the Pacific family”.

She said while each nation was sovereign, it was important to have “collective consideration” of decisions that could “ultimately have the potential to affect the nature of the security arrangements of the region”.

China’s proposed deal, which was leaked last week, covered everything from a free trade area with the region to providing humanitarian and Covid relief.

It also laid out China’s vision for a much closer relationship with the Pacific, especially on security matters, with China proposing to be involved in training police, cybersecurity, sensitive marine mapping and gaining greater access to natural resources.

After consideration of the deal was deferred on Monday, China released a “position paper on mutual respect and common development with Pacific island countries”.

The 15 points included offering to combat transnational crime, while appreciating “that Pacific Island Countries firmly abide by the one-China principle, and understand and support China’s core interests and major concerns”. Police training was not mentioned.

The new Australian government wants to persuade countries in the region to view Beijing’s offers of security assistance with scepticism – and consider consequences for their sovereignty 10 years down the track.

But China’s embassy in Canberra said on Wednesday that Beijing “never interferes in the internal affairs of other countries” and it respected Australia’s “historical and traditional ties in the region”.

China’s foreign minister was due to arrive in Papua New Guinea on Thursday, amid tensions in the lead-up to an election.

The former PNG prime minister Peter O’Neill has warned that no agreements should be signed or security equipment accepted before the election. The ABC has reported Beijing would offer 2,000 body armour kits to PNG police.

On a two-day visit to Fiji last week, Wong said Australia wanted to show it was a reliable and trustworthy partner to Pacific countries and was “determined to make up for” what she described as “a lost decade on climate action”.

Pacific leaders have repeatedly said action on the climate crisis is a bigger priority for them than geopolitical rivalries.

At the joint press conference on Thursday, Fiame said Samoa was “greatly encouraged” that the new Australian government’s climate policy “brings them closer to alignment” with advocacy by Pacific countries.

Wong said Australia was committed to a 43% cut in emissions by 2030 and the policy mechanisms to achieve it, and would legislate the net zero by 2050 target. Wong recalled that she had “spent a lot of time trying to change our country’s position on climate”.

Wong is due to travel to Tonga for more meetings before flying back to Australia on Friday.

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