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Stop this China obsession, India is more your cup of chai

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DO

DO

On the Australia-China versus the Australia-India equation

them any respect, or influences/reforms China’s continuing bad behaviour?

BY DARSHAK MEHTA

$44 million to appease China? Or to reward China for political interference in our democracy?

It was with a mixture of interest and horror that I deduced the above from a front page story in The Sydney Morning Herald on the 30 March, titled New ambassador and $44m plan to mend fences with Beijing.

meet the Dalai Lama - a man of peace - so scared are they of Chinese hectoring, and yet China stands up in the United Nations Security Council and shamelessly frustrates or vetoes all attempts to have Masood

Azhar of Pakistan, declared a terrorist. Australia prefers to merely stand by quietly and count its dollars. Do Australian governments seriously

On the other hand, one of China’s neighbours - India - with whom Australia shares a highly amicable relationship, democratic values, a commonality of law and language and whose fast(est) growing diaspora it hosts, gets little reward for good behaviour.

The Australia-India Council is perennially under-resourced. The bilateral relationship is nurtured largely with lip service such as ‘Curry, Cricket and Commonwealth’ or some such trite or inane words, usually on Try finding $44 million dollars extra to throw at a ‘good problem’ like India and see where it gets us, Minister Payne.

This writer discussed the above with one of the Australian-Indian community’s outstanding thought leaders, Neville Roach AO. He opined that “putting Darwin port under Chinese management was one of our most breath-taking examples of n T I B E T. n Spying and cyber-attacks. n Reclamation and illegal appropriation of islands in the South China Sea, weaponising them and denying international right to free passage. There are tens more, but I am sure our esteemed Foreign Minister and intelligence services know much more than you and I. However, Australian Governments of both persuasions act like Jesus Christ and “forgive them their trespasses” simply for one reason and one reason only – the commercial imperative: the mighty dollar (or, yuan).

We are aware of most of China’s international transgressions such as: n Arbitrarily locking up Australian citizens (usually of Chinese descent) on confected charges and without a fair trial. n Border disputes with most of their neighbours.

Our trade relationship trumps our distaste at their various sins of commission and we prefer to turn an unprincipled, blind eye to China’s most egregious actions, including interfering in our democracy. Most Australian Ministers refuse to even

Roach has long been unhappy about Australia’s slavish relationship with the US, which he feels has dominated our foreign policy and led us into the disastrous wars in Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq. He has also long been critical of the seriously neglected relationship with India by both the Australian Government and Australian businessespecially the big end of town - and can't see a change of heart any time soon, by either.

“Mind you, India is not the only country of significant importance to Australia that we neglect and take for granted. Our relationship with Japan and Indonesia is of benign neglect, too,” says Roach.

“Australia needs to adopt a policy of non-alignment - the only policy that makes sense for a country that wants to deal independently with all nations in its own self-interest. We could learn a lot from Canada and New Zealand,” he concludes.

With a change of Federal Governmentimminent, it is to be hoped that the extremely capable, putative Foreign Minister Senator Penny Wong, will radically reset the relationship with India.

It is high time that the lip service we get from both major political parties of Australia re India is matched with foresight, hard dollars and real action.

Even good guys get tired of watching bad behaviour being continually rewarded.

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