Albanese angry at being overheard in privatae discussion

August 30, 2024

Friday 30 August 2024
Mathew Knott
The Age

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has accused a New Zealand  journalist of behaving unethically for recording his conversation with a  senior Biden administration official about a landmark policing pact on the  sidelines of a major Pacific forum in Tonga.
 
 As Albanese returned to Australia yesterday after spending a day on a private  retreat with Pacific leaders on a Tongan island, the opposition accused him  of behaving in an "unedifying" way by blaming the young reporter  for the hot micstyle incident. In his candid chat with US President Joe  Biden's Indo-Pacific guru, Kurt Campbell, Albanese expressed his delight at  locking in support for the Pacific Policing Initiative from members of the  Pacific Islands Forum, joking about the US paying half of the $400 million  Australia will spend on the pact.
 
 The policing project was widely seen as a blow to China's efforts to woo  countries in the Pacific to work with its law enforcement as it competes with  the US for influence in the strategically significant region.
 
 In remarks that could raise eyebrows in Beijing and some Pacific capitals,  Campbell, the US deputy secretary of state, appeared to suggest that the  Biden administration was planning a related initiative but backed away after  discussions with Australia's ambassador to the United States, Kevin Rudd.
 
 "Well, we had a cracker today getting the Pacific Policing Initiative  through - it's so important, it'll make such a difference," Albanese  told Campbell in Tonga on Wednesday in an exchange filmed and uploaded to  social media by Radio New Zealand reporter Lydia Lewis.
 
 "It's great that you did that," Campbell replied.
 
 "I talked to Kevin [Rudd] about it and we were going to do something and  he asked us not to, so we did not. We've given you the lane, so take the lane."
 
 Albanese responded: "We can go halvies on the cost if you like."
 
 Realising what was taking place, Pacific Minister Pat Conroy chastised Lewis  for filming the encounter, which took place during a break in official  proceedings at the leaders' plenary.
 
 Mark Stevens, the chief news officer of Radio New Zealand, defended Lewis,  saying: "Having spoken to our reporter, there is nothing to suggest they  acted unethically or outside our rigorous editorial policies."
 
 Beijing regularly portrays Australia as little more than a proxy for US  interests in the region, accusing it of behaving as America's "deputy  sheriff" and seeking to drag Pacific nations into a Cold War-style  superpower conflict.
 
 Pressed about the matter yesterday, Albanese told reporters to "chill  out" and disputed that Campbell had said the US had pulled out of a  similar initiative to let Australia take the lead.
 
 "It was a private conversation, a jovial conversation and a friendly  one," Albanese said, describing Campbell as a "mate of mine".
 
 "The video is what it is: it's up to whoever did that to think about  their own ethics when it comes to journalism."
 
 Growing frustrated with the line of questioning, Albanese continued: "If  people try to read something into it, you must be pretty bored ...
 
 journalists tend to identify themselves, I hope you do."
 
 Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson said it was "pretty  unedifying for the prime minister to blame a journalist for his own  indiscretions".
 
 "Why is he picking on some young New Zealand journalist, singling her  out for just doing her job?" he said.
 
 "He's engaging in a newsworthy conversation in a public arena. He can  expect to be filmed, and it's up to him to provide the decorum that is  required in that environment."
 
 In a piece for Radio New Zealand, Lewis said she caught the exchange while  filming "cutaways" background footage used for broadcast news  stories.
 
 Responding to the incident on social media, Greens defence spokesman David  Shoebridge said: "Why are Labor and the Coalition so committed to being  US toadies, so afraid to have an independent foreign or defence policy for  Australia? Our neighbours see this and rightly treat us with suspicion."
 
 Lowy Institute analyst Mihai Sora said Campbell's comments were surprising,  and "show he had misunderstood the importance of Pacific leadership on  matters of regional security".
 
 "The Pacific is not the United States' lane to give," he said.

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