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China-Australia meeting to be confirmed: Wong

Penny Wong says Australia will spend almost $1 billion to boost security ties across the Pacific.

Penny Wong says Australia will spend almost $1 billion to boost security ties across the Pacific. Photo: AAP

A meeting between the Australian and Chinese foreign ministers has not yet been confirmed but Australia remains open to engaging with the nation.

Foreign Minister Penny Wong says her schedule at the G20 summit in Indonesia is “fluid” and her first bilateral meeting will be with Fijian Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama on Friday.

“Australian ministers remain open to engage, we are willing to engage and that willingness extends to any meeting in the margins of the G20,” she told reporters after landing in Indonesia on Thursday.

Senator Wong welcomed a proposed meeting between the US and Chinese foreign ministers at the G20 ministerial meeting.

“If we want greater stability in this world, we would want the two great powers to engage closely, notwithstanding their differences,” she told reporters in Indonesia on Thursday.

Stablising the relationship between China and Australia was also in the best interest of both nations, Senator Wong said.

Meanwhile, NZ Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says Australia and New Zealand must remember the sovereignty and independence of Pacific nations when they choose to engage with other countries.

Ms Ardern is visiting Australia ahead of next week’s Pacific Islands Forum, where China’s growing influence and interest in the region is expected to be discussed.

She said while many nations have an interest in the Indo-Pacific, the relationship priorities should ultimately be set by the countries that call the region home.

Rather than Australia and New Zealand increasing strategic competition in the Pacific, Ms Ardern called on the two nations to look for ways to build and co-operate with others.

“Priorities should be set by the Pacific. They should be free from coercion. Investment should be of high quality,” Ms Ardern told the Lowy Institute on Thursday.

“Engagement needs to be consistent, (it) shouldn’t be simply because others are engaging in our region, it should be because there’s a desire to build long-standing and committed relationships.”

Ms Ardern said while the security deal struck between the Solomon Islands and China was concerning, the nation had a sovereign right to make its own decisions.

“We have long-standing and deep relationships, China has quite long-standing relationships in the Pacific too,” Ms Ardern said.

“It would be wrong to position the Pacific in such a way that they have to ‘pick sides’.

“While we each maintain our independence … we are part of a family, one that is incredibly important to us and central in our decision-making.”

The Australian government believes Pacific security arrangements are a matter for Pacific nations, Senator Wong said.

“The security of any one country in the Pacific islands is a sovereign decision,” she said.

“It is important to recognise, though, that those decisions can impact upon the region and that is why taking a regional focus, a regional approach to security is so important.”

– AAP

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