WA Premier not a Sheridan believer. The West Australian Premier Colin Barnett is clearly not a Greg Sheridan disciple. In China this week on a trade mission Mr Barnett has very conspicuously shied away from making any public protest about the imprisonment of Rio Tinto executive Stern Hu. On the day when the foreign editor of the national daily writes of how galling is “the needless and sterile pro-appeasement attitude taken by those quasi-academic commentators who dominate debate about China”, Premier Barnett has said raising the case of Mr Hu with his Chinese hosts was not appropriate. It is difficult to think of anything more pro-appeasement than that. I look forward to the serve he gets tomorrow!
Mr Barnett says Australia needs to continue encouraging Chinese investment in Australian projects and is banking his reputation on getting the multi-billion-dollar Oakajee Port and Rail project in the Mid West up as one of them.
“I was encouraged with meetings with Oakajee Port and Rail that understandings have been reached with Chinese organisations about the design of the port and construction of railway,” he said this morning. “This is starting to bring China in, not only as an owner of an iron ore deposit but also very much as a participant in the whole development.”
In the mean time the Communist Government continues to assert that it has all the evidence it needs to prove that the Rio Tinto iron ore negotiator has broken Chinese law. Chinese foreign minister He Yafei told reporters yesterday that China has “sufficient evidence” that shows Rio Tinto executives stole state secrets.Mr He met with his Australian counterpart Stephen Smith in Egypt last week where the two discussed the case.
“I stressed that we have sufficient evidence showing that the individuals involved obtained China’s state secrets using illegal means,” Mr He told reporters.
“The case has entered into the judicial process and I requested the Australian side to respect China’s judicial sovereignty,” he said.
Not that appears to have been any immediate detrimental impact on the negotiations between Rio Tinto and other producers when it comes to the prices to be paid for Australian iron ore. The China Daily reported this morning that according to “industry experts”, the spot price of iron ore will climb in the second half of the year if the Japanese and South Korean economies recover, and this possibility may force China to accept the 33-percent discount in full-year ore rates now being offered by global miners.
The real reason now apparent. The real reason why Queensland had an early election is now apparent. The report into the Queensland police service by the Crime and Misconduct Commission would surely have been enough to turn Labor’s narrow victory into defeat coming so quickly after the criminal conviction of a senior minister for his own fund raising activities. The time has surely come for fixed term parliaments to put a stop to governments manipulating the elctoral timetable to their own advantage.
End the developer donations. As frank an admission this morning as you will ever read about the link between “paid favours in politics” and development approvals. Tucked away in The Australian was a first rate piece by Michael Owen quoting a prominent South Australian identity with almost 30 years’ experience in property development, warning of the influence of lobbyists within the Rann government, saying it is “the price you pay for getting developments through”, while lamenting the national trend of “paid favours in politics”.
The time has surely come to dramatically reduce the amount spent on election campaigns in this country and hence the need for this grubby fund raising business.
Crikey is committed to hosting lively discussions. Help us keep the conversation useful, interesting and welcoming. We aim to publish comments quickly in the interest of promoting robust conversation, but we’re a small team and we deploy filters to protect against legal risk. Occasionally your comment may be held up while we review, but we’re working as fast as we can to keep the conversation rolling.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please subscribe to leave a comment.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please login to leave a comment.