“Our assistance will help our regional partners become more economically resilient,develop critical infrastructure and provide their own security so they have less need to call on others.”
Wong has travelled to 12 Pacific nations since Labor formed office in May in a bid to show Australia’s neighbours that it is invested in the region and is not ceding influence to China.
Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare alarmed Australian officials earlier this year by signing a security pact with China.Credit:Alex Ellinghausen
A new Pacific Engagement Visa will allow up to 3000 nationals of Pacific Island countries and East Timor to permanently migrate to Australia,deepening Australia’s human links with the region.
Labor went to the election promising an extra $525 million over four years in development assistance for the Pacific but has increased that to $900 million in recognition of the region’s growing strategic importance.
An extra $500 million over 10 years will be provided from the existing overseas development program to support infrastructure investment in the Pacific and East Timor,including through loans and grants.
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Funding will be provided to support the construction of airport infrastructure in East Timor and for the rehabilitation of major bridges and roads in Fiji.
Pat Conroy,the Minister for International Development and the Pacific,said:“The Albanese government is bringing new energy and resources to the Pacific to help build a stronger and more united Pacific family,and a more secure region.”
Conroy said the budget would reveal the biggest increase in overseas development assistance over four years since 2011.
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This will include a $470-million increase in aid funding for South-East Asia,as well as the creation of a new South-East Asia office within the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
In a speech in Singapore earlier this year,Wong said Australia’s links to the world were “shaped by the contours of South-East Asia’s mainland”.
“We believe that Australia must find its security in Asia,not from Asia,” she said. “And that means,above all,in Southeast Asia.”
Tony Stuart,the chief executive of UNICEF Australia,welcomed the “significant increase” to Australia’s development assistance.
“More aid means more children can grow up in a world that is safe,secure and prosperous,” he said.
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