On a visit to Tuvalu, foreign minister Penny Wong said on
Wednesday evening Australia has committed A$110 million ($72.27
million) in its national budget to Tuvalu.
The sum includes A$50 million ($32.85 million) to build the
first undersea cable connecting the island's residents to global
telecommunications services, and A$19 million for a land
reclamation project to fortify Tuvalu's coastline from rising
seas.
Another A$15 million will be spent on a national security
coordination centre, as well as A$10 million in direct budget
support.
The funding is a significant boost on the A$17 million ($11.17
million) Australia provided to Tuvalu in 2023-24.
China's ambitions for a greater security presence in the Pacific
became an election issue in Tuvalu in January, as two leadership
contenders said Tuvalu should consider switching ties from
Taiwan to Beijing for more funds, and revise a new security pact
with Australia.
Neighbor Nauru cut ties with Taiwan a fortnight before Tuvalu's
vote, after China built a port and promised more aid.
Tuvalu's new prime minister Feleti Teo pledged to stick with
Taiwan, and to ratify the Falepili Union signed with Australia
in November. The treaty allows Tuvalu citizens to migrate to
Australia for work or study, while recognizing Tuvalu continues
to exist despite the rising sea levels.
"Australia has provided a security guarantee to support Tuvalu
in a humanitarian disaster, a pandemic or the event of attack,"
Wong said in a speech on Wednesday evening.
"It is also the first time in history that two nations have
agreed in a legally binding instrument that statehood endures in
the face of sea level rise," she added.
The treaty allows Australia to vet Tuvalu's deals with third
countries in a broad range of security areas from ports to
telecommunications.
On Thursday, Wong and Teo are expected to say that the security
cooperation does not limit Tuvalu's ability to enter into
diplomatic agreements with other nations, according to an
advance copy of a joint statement viewed by Reuters.
"We recognize that the people of Tuvalu deserve the choice to
live, study and work elsewhere, as climate change impacts
intensify at home," the text of the statement reads.
($1 = 1.5221 Australian dollars)
(Reporting by Kirsty Needham; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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