PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Keating, Paul

Period of Service: 20/12/1991 - 11/03/1996
Release Date:
15/08/1995
Release Type:
Interview
Transcript ID:
9708
Document:
00009708.pdf 2 Page(s)
Released by:
  • Keating, Paul John
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER, THE HON P.J.KEATING MP INTERVIEW WITH RAY MARTIN, A CURRENT AFFAIR, AUSTRALIA REMEMBERS, 15 AUGUST 1995

1 -tv"
PRIME MINISTER
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER, THE HON P. J. KEATING MP
INTERVIEW WITH RAY MARTIN, A CURRENT AFFAIR, AUSTRALIA
REMEMBERS, 15 AUGUST 1995
E& OE PROOF COPY
RM: Prime Minister, thanks for your time.
PM: Good Ray.
RM: Were children, Australian children a deliberate target of this Australia
Remembers campaign?
PM: I think the whole nation was, but we had hoped that young Australians
most appreciated it too because while we now look at the diggers on
Anzac Day or today and we see people 60 or 70 years of age, there is
always the impression of thinking about them. But, it was them as
young people. It was them in their teens and their twenties. And so,
the young Australians of today are, in some respects, entitled to
picture themselves in that picture. So, if we can't make the linkage to
them, in a sense we are failing in the remembrance.
RM: Yes. Some of them said to us today when they saw the veterans
marching today that they felt like crying and some cried. Have you felt
like crying?
PM: Yes, absolutely. But, I was most touched at Kokoda, as I was saying
earlier today, that there is a little green square at Kokoda where the
mists were, the morning tropical mists and as it rose young Australians
of 18 years of age in shorts and singlets fought the best crack troops
that the Japanese Imperial Army could throw at them and there the
defence of Australia began in the hands of 18 year olds. These are
the images, I think, which do bring you to tears.
RM: The vets have said to me over the last couple of days when we have
talked to them that the image that they recall most, that they have
loved the most, has been children waving to them on the train with
balloons.

PM: Yes because it was about, you had to have this view of Australia, your
belief in Australia to fight the fight. It had to be about your family and
the children and so the sentiments for which they fought and died are
the very same things which are ringing a bell with them now. I mean,
seeing young people interested in it and thanking them for it is very
sentimental for them.
RM: Yes, but I would have thought there was a generation gap especially
with the younger people who are 10 or 12 or 14, but clearly there
hasn't. This has brought them together.
PM: Yes, I hope that the whole series of remembrances and ceremonies
has brought into sharp focus what it means and we need to make the
point because our troubles all started in this century in 1914 in
Sarajevo and here we are in 1995 in Sarajevo.
RM: It is a terrible irony isn't it?
PM: And it means that we can never be sanguine about liberty or
democracy and that we always need to guard it and value it and
understand how it has been protected.
RM: A very quick question, have the Japanese now apologised, do you
accept the Prime Minister's statement as an apology?
PM: I think it is a very comprehensive apology and the most pleasing
element to it is his sentiment that he wishes to tell the younger
generation of Japanese people about the mistake in policies of the
past and to go the international way of peace and freedom and not
misplaced nationalism. These are sentiments I have not heard from a
Japanese head of government before.
RM: Strong enough for you?
PM: Yes, some will say in Australia, well it should have come from the Diet
or somewhere else, but Mr Murayama is the Prime Minister of Japan
and he speaks for the nation of Japan. It is a very comprehensive
statement.
RM: Thanks for your time, have a good night.
PM: Thank you Ray.
ends

9708