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Added: Mar 10, 2010

From: ddchalmers

Duration: 2:14

CANBERRA - INDONESIAN President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono arrived in Australia on Tuesday for a three-day visit during which he will be given the rare honour of addressing the country's parliament. Mr Yudhoyono, who will also speak to business leaders in Sydney, was greeted by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and Governor-General Quentin Bryce as he flew into Canberra with his wife, Ani. On Wednesday, Mr Yudhoyono will become the first Indonesian president to address a joint sitting of the Australian parliament, underlining efforts to improve ties between the neighbouring countries. 'Because we are such close neighbours there will always be issues,' Foreign Minister Stephen Smith told Sky News. 'But the strength of the relationship these days is that we can have issues which may well be difficult, whether it's issues of capital punishment, people smuggling or the Balibo Five for example. 'But they don't disturb the strength of the relationship.' http://www.straitstimes.com/BreakingNews/SEAsia/Story/STIStory_499790.html March 9 (Bloomberg) -- Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono begins a visit to Australia today to discuss a regional trade pact and cooperation in combating people smuggling and terrorism with Prime Minister Kevin Rudd. Yudhoyono will address a joint sitting of the Australian Parliament in Canberra tomorrow, the first time an Indonesian head of state has given a speech to the assembly. U.S. President Barack Obama will address parliament when he visits Australia later this month after a trip to Indonesia. We are dedicated to shaping a new era in Australia- Indonesian relations, Yudhoyono and Rudd said in an article published in The Age daily newspaper today. Australia and Indonesia have come a long way in recent years. Indonesia, the worlds most populous Muslim nation, lying to the north of Australia, and is the largest recipient of Australian aid, estimated by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade at $452.5 million for 2009-10, and is Australias 13th-largest trading partner. About 400 Australian companies operate in Indonesia, including in the mining, construction, banking, transport and food and beverage industries. Rudd and Yudhoyono, in their article, described the relationship between Indonesia and Australia as resilient as the countries combat the global financial crisis, terrorism and climate change. The Australian government today appointed Yudhoyono as an Honorary Companion of the Order of Australia for strengthening Australia-Indonesia relations, and promoting democracy and development in Indonesia. Trade Accord Indonesia aims to complete within months the requirements of a free trade agreement between Australia, New Zealand and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, the 10-country group that includes Indonesia. The accord was signed by trade ministers in February 2009 in Hua Hin, Thailand. Rudd and Yudhoyono are expected to discuss combating people smuggling during their talks. Australia has seen an increase in refugees arriving by boat in the past year. Most reach Australian waters via Indonesia..... Indonesia has worked closely with Australia to combat the terrorist threat posed by groups linked to al-Qaeda. The threat posed to Australian tourists and business people travelling in Indonesia was highlighted by the hotel bombings in Jakarta in July 2009. The Jemaah Islamiyah group is blamed by Indonesia and Australia for bomb attacks in Bali in 2002 that killed 202 people, including 88 Australians, and in 2005 when three suicide bombers killed themselves and 20 people. A 2004 blast outside the Australian embassy in Jakarta killed at least nine people. The two countries are also working closely to combat illegal fishing in Australias northern waters..... Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said the relationship with Indonesia is one of Australias most important. Indonesia, of course, is a near neighbor, but Indonesia is now emerging not just as a regional influence but as a global influence as a member, for example, of the G20, Smith told the Australian Broadcasting Corp. today. That underlines the long- term strategic, economic and social importance of Australia working very closely with Indonesia. http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601081sid=aCsu25QeQkiA http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-03-08/yudhoyono-to-discuss-trade-accord-in-australia-visit-update1-.html The president, along with first lady Ani Yudhoyono, will take his second state visit to Australia from March 9-11. It is his first visit to Australia since his re-election to a second term as Indonesias president in 2009, and continues a tradition of Australia being one of the first countries visited by Indonesian presidents during their term, a statement from the Indonesian Embassy in Canberra said..... http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/yudhoyono-to-visit-australia-next-month/360280 *

Channel: News


Rating: 5.0' max='5' min='1' numRaters='2' rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#overall ( ratings)    Views: 1324    Comments: 11

cimed8085 Says:

Mar 11, 2010 - Wow.. he actually says his name correct... It's not Bam-Bang, people.. It's Bum-Bung...

ddchalmers Says:

Mar 11, 2010 - Sad comment.....

cimed8085 Says:

Mar 11, 2010 - Thank you! :D

eriquerique Says:

Jun 26, 2010 - Again with the Balibo five!! Is this how the Australian media choose to define Australia's relationship with Indonesia?? What about the fact that Indonesia is a close ally and dear friend to the Australians for the past decade or so? I'm sorry, I'm not saying that the Balibo case is not important, but as an Indonesian, I'm sick and tired of the Australian Media (please note that I said "Media", not "Government" or "People") ALWAYS mentioning Balibo whenever the word "Indonesia" comes up!

irishgodfatherchris Says:

Jul 1, 2010 - @eriquerique Balibo is a war crime and as such will be treated with the attention it deserves.

eriquerique Says:

Jul 1, 2010 - @irishgodfatherchris It's Australia's crime as much as it is Indonesian's. But because the Indonesians were the ones doing the "dirty work", now the whole world put the blame on the Indonesians, while Australia maintains its squeaky-clean image. But of course nobody believes the Indonesians, what with all the bad track record of this country. Anyway Germany Japan committed far worse war crimes but nobody mention those crimes ALL THE TIME every time their countries' names come up.

irishgodfatherchris Says:

Jul 2, 2010 - @eriquerique how we weren't the ones who opened fire on unarmed neutral civilians

eriquerique Says:

Jul 2, 2010 - @irishgodfatherchris There's this theory that the Australian government actually supports Indonesia's invasion of East Timor, and the Australian government was actually aware (and purportedly consented) the shootings of the Australian journalists for cover-up purposes, as it benefits both nations. It's quite a popular conspiracy theory, I'm surprised you haven't heard this before...well, I don't believe this theory 100%, but it makes sense if you consider Australia's position at that moment.

bowtomonkey Says:

Jul 10, 2010 - @eriquerique All of the gains are Indonesia's so why attribute Australia's acquiescence to compliance? Everyone knows that Australia was as slow too react as it could be. It's because they do a lot of business with Indonesia and don't want to threaten the relationship for a country that has little to offer. What's more East Timor broke away and threatened the stability of Indonesia, and the whole region. No need for conspiracy theories here...just people taking "the path of least resistance".

bowtomonkey Says:

Jul 10, 2010 - @eriquerique Hey, do you want to stop and imagine what would happen if the East Timorese were Jews? Indonesia would be paying them billions in reparations. All the atrocities would be brought up again, and again infinitum. In 75 years it still would brought up constantly just as you decided to, right now. You would have to prove Australia was compliant, which is like saying the UK was to blame for Jewish concentration camps. Indonesia still gets away with murder. No need to stop killing, hey?

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