WORLD / EUROPE
Canberra seeks to smooth over relations with Paris
Australia says it can ‘trust’ UK
Published: Oct 14, 2021 04:33 PM
Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks during a press conference on March 05, 2021 in Sydney, Australia. Sex Discrimination Minister Kate Jenkins has been appointed to lead a review into workplace culture at Parliament House. Photo: VCG

Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks during a press conference on March 05, 2021 in Sydney, Australia. Sex Discrimination Minister Kate Jenkins has been appointed to lead a review into workplace culture at Parliament House. Photo: VCG

Australia's Trade Minister Dan Tehan said on Wednesday his government trusts Britain to uphold their new trade pact despite London now wanting to renegotiate part of its Brexit treaty with the EU.

He also emphasized that Canberra wants to smooth things over with Paris after the AUKUS row that saw France react furiously when its contract to supply submarines to Australia was torn up in favor of American-designed nuclear ones. And Tehan - also Australia's minister for tourism - reaffirmed his country's plans to finally reopen international borders to Australians and their families abroad "before Christmas" as COVID-19 vaccinations accelerate.

Tehan spoke to AFP in an interview in Brussels, the penultimate leg of an international tour comprising official visits to Indonesia, India and the United Arab Emirates, then ministerial meetings at the OECD in France with G20 counterparts in Italy. On Thursday, he is due in London to scrutinize and sign a 600-page Australian-British bilateral free trade agreement announced in June before he returns home.

Asked if he believed London would stand by that trade accord given its remonstrations over the Northern Ireland part of its 2019 treaty with the EU formalizing Brexit, Tehan stressed Australian-British historical ties.

"Well, of course we can trust the UK on its treaties and we will continue on negotiating in good faith with them," he said.

"Obviously what the UK and the EU are going through, that's very much a matter for them and I'll leave the commentary on that for others. But when it comes to Australia and the UK, we're dear friends, old friends."

Tehan's stop in Brussels was originally meant to include talks with European Commission officials on a free trade pact Australia wants with the European Union.

But the 12th round of those negotiations was postponed until November, after France denounced what it saw as a "stab in the back" over AUKUS and the canceled sub deal.

France has been cold-shouldering Canberra since that row.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has so far been unable to speak with French President Emmanuel Macron on the matter, and Tehan was likewise snubbed by his French trade counterpart when he was in Paris. Tehan said it was "positive" that France's ambassador to Australia was back after being recalled, along with France's top envoy to the US, in September.

Currently, around 52 percent of Australia's residents have had two jabs, but the most populous states of New South Wales and Victoria have higher figures.