Vanuatu is not yet ready to sign a security and economic treaty with Australia over concerns the bilateral pact could restrict the South Pacific island nation’s ability to secure infrastructure funding from a third country, Vanuatuan Prime Minister Jotham Napat said yesterday.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese had hoped to sign the A$500 million (US$330.9 million) agreement during a visit to the capital, Port Vila, yesterday. The agreement is one of several that Australia is pursuing to prevent China from gaining security influence in the region.
However, hours before flying from Australia, Albanese told Australian Broadcasting Corp that he did not expect to sign the landmark pact yesterday.
Photo: the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade via AFP
Napat said at a news conference with Albanese after the pair met in Port Vila that some members of the Vanuatuan government “feel it requires more discussions, particularly on some of the specific wordings in the agreement.”
Asked if there were concerns the pact could limit Vanuatu’s ability to get funding from other countries for critical infrastructure, Napat replied: “Yes.”
Albanese said he was confident the agreement would be signed soon.
“The prime minister and I confirmed our commitment to keep working towards the upgrade of our relationship through a new treaty-level agreement. We’ve made good progress towards that goal today,” Albanese said.
Meg Keen, who heads the Australian National University’s Pacific Research Program, said Vanuatu wanted to maintain its close relationship with Australia without excluding China.
Vanuatu has received large loans and aid from China for buildings, wharves and other infrastructure.
“It’s a delicate political navigation that the prime minister of Vanuatu is having to take, and he’s got to bring his political supporters along with him if he wants to sustain the deal,” Keen said.
Albanese accompanies Napat today to the Pacific Islands Forum on the Solomon Islands.
VENEZUELAN ACTION: Marco Rubio said that previous US interdiction efforts have not stemmed the flow of illicit drugs into the US and that ‘blowing them up’ would US President Donald Trump on Wednesday justified a lethal military strike that his administration said was carried out a day earlier against a Venezuelan gang as a necessary effort by the US to send a message to Latin American cartels. Asked why the military did not instead interdict the vessel and capture those on board, Trump said that the operation would cause drug smugglers to think twice about trying to move drugs into the US. “There was massive amounts of drugs coming into our country to kill a lot of people and everybody fully understands that,” Trump said while hosting Polish President
China on Monday announced its first ever sanctions against an individual Japanese lawmaker, targeting China-born Hei Seki for “spreading fallacies” on issues such as Taiwan, Hong Kong and disputed islands, prompting a protest from Tokyo. Beijing has an ongoing spat with Tokyo over islands in the East China Sea claimed by both countries, and considers foreign criticism on sensitive political topics to be acts of interference. Seki, a naturalised Japanese citizen, “spread false information, colluded with Japanese anti-China forces, and wantonly attacked and smeared China”, foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian told reporters on Monday. “For his own selfish interests, (Seki)
Japan yesterday heralded the coming-of-age of Japanese Prince Hisahito with an elaborate ceremony at the Imperial Palace, where a succession crisis is brewing. The nephew of Japanese Emperor Naruhito, Hisahito received a black silk-and-lacquer crown at the ceremony, which marks the beginning of his royal adult life. “Thank you very much for bestowing the crown today at the coming-of-age ceremony,” Hisahito said. “I will fulfill my duties, being aware of my responsibilities as an adult member of the imperial family.” Although the emperor has a daughter — Princess Aiko — the 23-year-old has been sidelined by the royal family’s male-only
A French couple kept Louise, a playful black panther, in an apartment in northern France, triggering panic when she was spotted roaming nearby rooftops. The pair were were handed suspended jail sentences on Thursday for illegally keeping a wild animal, despite protesting that they saw Louise as their baby. The ruling follows a September 2019 incident when the months-old feline was seen roaming a rooftop in Armentieres after slipping out of the couple’s window. Authorities captured the panther by sedating her with anesthetic darts after she entered a home. No injuries were reported during the animal’s time on the loose. The court in the