PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
03/08/1998
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
10959
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
3 August 1998 TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS AT PARLIAMENTARY LUNCHEON IN HONOUR OF THE PRIME MINISTER OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA THE HON BILL SKATE CMG MP

E&OE................................................................................................

To Mr Bill Skate, the Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea, distinguished

guests ladies and gentlemen. There are a number of reasons why today

luncheon is a very special occasion. It brings together two nations

that have deep ties of history and people-to-people links. It is also

the first occasion on which Bill Skate as Prime Minister has visited

Canberra and we very very warmly welcome you Sir, not only in your

own right but also as the Prime Minister of a Nation for whom Australia

and Australians has a very deep affection. It is impossible to adequately

catalogue the links that do exist between our two nations and chatting

over the dinner table we reminded ourselves of just how intricate

are those links. I discovered, for example, the Minister for Resources

in the Government, Senator Warwick Parer, spent the first six years

of his life in Rabaul. I was reminded by a former Prime Minister,

Bob Hawke, that he spent some time of his life as a trade union official

giving advice on wages and industrial relations policy in Papua New

Guinea. And I recall the contribution to the building of that nation

by many of my former colleagues in the Coalition.

Of course the ties that bind us together are nowhere more powerful

than in an area of common love between Australians and the people

of Papua New Guinea and that is in the area of sport. And of all the

sporting links between the two nations, none is more powerful than

in the game of rugby league. And I'm delighted to acknowledge

the presence here today of a number of people who symbolise that link.

I'm delighted to acknowledge, of course, the presence of an Australian

who's probably better known in Papua New Guinea than any other

Australian and that is Mal Meninga, one of Australia's greatest

rugby league players and a great Kangaroo captain and now the coach

of the Canberra Raiders.

I'm also delighted to welcome John Ribot, the Executive Director

of the Melbourne Storm Rugby League Club. And as you will know, Mr

Skate, John captained the Australian President's XIII to Papua

New Guinea in 1985 and has maintained his links ever since. And, of

course, your own Marcus Bai, who's been such an outstanding success

as a player with Melbourne Storm, is also here and he, himself, is

building his own hero status amongst rugby league followers. And you'll

forgive me, ladies and gentlemen, whilst I'm on the subject of

football, of the rugby variety, but I take the opportunity, sparing

Graham Fortune's blushes, of acknowledging the tremendous achievement

of the Australian Wallabies at Lancaster Park last Saturday in winning

the Bledisloe Cup.

Of course, ladies and gentlemen, we gather here today in the shadow

of that enormous tragedy that overtook the villages around the Sissano

Lagoon. We record and reflect with immense sadness on the horrific

loss of life. And can I say to you, Prime Minister, that all Australians

felt for the families affected by that tragedy; the wives made widows,

the children made orphans and those left disabled. And we all felt

a special pang of sympathy and affection for you and for your country

as you coped valiantly with such a terrible disaster. And our desire

to reach out to you was a reflex action, an instinctive response to

family friends.

About 140 Australian Defence Force personnel were on the ground for

two weeks. There were medical staff and they helped deal with horrible

cases of gangrene coupled with scores of broken limbs and the prospect

of terrible disease. There were also communication specialists, logistics

staff, engineers and RAAF air crews whose support was essential. And

quite a number of them are here today as very welcome and honoured

guests of the Australian Government and I know, in a general sense,

of also the Government of Papua New Guinea.

Can I say, as Prime Minister, how immensely proud I was and I know

that all Australians were for what those men and women did in those

days immediately following that disaster. We can only begin to try

and understand the mental strain and trauma and the painful and distressing

circumstances under which they worked. But to see amidst that devastation

and death and sorrow and sadness, to see those wonderful images of

Australian defence personnel working in the name of humanity and decency

to relieve suffering touched me and touched all Australians in a way

that I hope those of you who are here and your colleagues who shared

that experience will understand and accept as a very, very sincere

and grateful expression of how we felt.

There is something particularly touching about the image of a person

wearing that wonderful slouch hat, ministering to people who are sick

and disabled and in a situation of distress. And all Australians are

immensely proud of you and we are immensely grateful to you for the

way in which you demonstrated that Australia is a true friend of those

in need and how deeply compassionate and how willing is the Australian

spirit when it is called upon in those circumstances.

Those images will remain with Australians for a long time. And for

myself, that tragedy served to remind how history, geography and circumstance

continues to bind our two nations together. It must have brought back

to many Australians, as it did to me, images of our shared past. Not

so vivid, perhaps, none so vivid rather, perhaps, as the tales, those

affection tales, of the so-called ‘fuzzy-wuzzy angels' who

helped Australian soldiers more than 50 years ago. The feats of tens

of thousands of those intrepid carriers are immortalised by the stories

of the help they gave to wounded Australian diggers, mainly on stretchers,

over the tortuous Kokoda track. Some of you may have read or heard

the original 1942 poem by Bert Beros, and I quote just a small part

of it:

"Many a mother in Australia when the busy day is done sends

a prayer to the Almighty for the keeping of her son, asking that

an angel guide him and bring him safely back.

Now we see those prayers are answered on the Owen Stanley track.

May the mothers of Australia when they offer up a prayer mention

those impromptu angels with their fuzzy wuzzy hair".

And however sentimental the rhyme and however in the eyes of some

but not, I think, in the eyes of most, dated the language may seem,

the poem helped to tell then how Australians were drawn through gratitude

and admiration to your people and it remains a heartfelt appreciation

enduring even unto today. And in a small way many Australians will

see the demonstration of compassion and help given so effectively

by the men and women of the Australian Defence Force as a small repayment

of the immense debt of gratitude that the wartime Australian diggers

owed to the people of your lovely country.

Mr Prime Minister, you may rest assured that the Government I lead

and the people of Australia consider Papua New Guinea a close friend

and we'll continue to support your efforts to rebuild after that

horrible disaster. And in addition to what has already been provided

we will provide whatever additional resources are needed beyond those

already available to ensure the reconstruction of the two or three

new schools needed, the upgrading of roads, the alterations to make

facilities accessible to the disabled, help with agriculture and fisheries

to rebuild the area's economy, assistance to church and non-government

organisations for rebuilding in new areas, ongoing support for those

suffering orthopedic injuries and amputations, support for geological

survey work and advance to local level administration on planning.

Mr Prime Minister, let me say how pleased the Australian Government

is with the role that you and your Government has played in relation

to the very difficult challenge of Bougainville. We have seen the

emergence of consultation, negotiation and the first possibilities

of a lasting peace and political settlement. We in Australia are not

nave about what lies ahead and ultimately, of course, success will

depend upon the attitude of the Bouganvillians themselves. But we

have made progress and you deserve a great deal of the credit for

that.

And can I also take the opportunity of recording the appreciation

that I feel and the Government feels towards the part played by the

Australian Foreign Minister, Alexander Downer, in the progress that

has been made in achieving some kind of lasting settlement in Bougainville.

And after so many years of conflict we all look forward to the prospect

of peace and I know from our discussions that you are deeply committed

to peace on Bougainville. And I also know from our discussions this

morning that Australia and Papua New Guinea and our other friends

in the Pacific region will work together very closely to achieve that

goal.

In our discussions this morning we shared our thoughts regarding the

impact of the economic downturn in the Asia-Pacific region on our

two countries. That impact is not going to pass quickly and there

is quite a deal of water to flow under that particular bridge before

we are going to see an upturn in the economies of that region. We

both agreed about the importance of continuing to pursue, notwithstanding

the difficulties, those necessary reforms that will make our two economies

more effective and more competitive, not only in the Asia-Pacific

region but also in the broader world. And we here in Australia, of

course, will be embarking upon a very major reform of our taxation

system. And I know from our discussions this morning, given your own

intentions in that particular area, that you will closely examine

the field evidence that emerges from the Australian experience.

Mr Prime Minister, it has been a personal pleasure for me to be your

host today. We met last year on several occasions. I respect and admire

the challenging way in which you are going about your task as Prime

Minister of your country. Australia and Papua New Guinea share a lot

of history, we are friends, we respect each other, we will periodically

differ. Our relationship is now the mature relationship of two sovereign

independent nations. The relationship was once otherwise but we have

grown, I think, easily and effectively and comfortably into the new

relationship.

On behalf of the people of Australia, I bid you a very warm welcome.

On behalf of the people of Australia I send to you and your fellow

country men and women, our good wishes, our determination to maintain

the close ties that have characterised our relationship and the gratitude

for the shared experiences and the mutual assistance which has gone

in earlier years. I would now like t o invite the Deputy Leader of

the Opposition, Mr Gareth Evans, to support my remarks. Thank you.

[ends]

10959