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by Staff Writers Sydney (AFP) Sept 12, 2015
President Anote Tong, whose low-lying Pacific nation of Kiribati is threatened by rising seas, Saturday criticised an Australian minister's quip about "water lapping at your door", saying it showed "moral irresponsibility". Immigration Minister Peter Dutton made the remark on Friday while chatting with Prime Minister Tony Abbott, who had just returned from the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) in Papua New Guinea's capital Port Moresby. As the event they were at appeared to be running late, Dutton made mention of "Cape York time", a reference to a remote indigenous area in Australia's far northeast. When Abbott replied that there were similar issues in Port Moresby, Dutton said in comments captured by a media microphone: "Time doesn't mean anything when you're about to be, you know, have water lapping at your door." Combatting climate change was a key issue at the PIF, with leaders ultimately agreeing to disagree after Australia and New Zealand blocked a bid by small island states to limit average global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels rather than 2 degrees. Kiribati's Tong, who has long campaigned about the impact of climate change in the Pacific, said he had reacted with "sadness" rather than anger to Dutton's remark. "I find that extremely sad, extremely disappointing. that we are making jokes about a very serious issue," he told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. "It shows a sense of moral irresponsibility quite unbecoming of leadership in any capacity." After the days of tension about climate change in Port Moresby, Marshall Islands Foreign Minister Tony de Brum also expressed his dismay about the comments. "Seems insensitivity knows no bounds in the big polluting island down s(ou)th," he tweeted. "Next time waves are battering my home & grandkids are scared, I'll ask Peter Dutton to come over, and we'll see if he is still laughing." Abbott defended Dutton, pointing out that his minister had spent the week drawing up plans to resettle 12,000 refugees from the Middle East. "If there's one thing that should be remembered about Peter Dutton's week, it's that this is the week that he masterminded the plan to bring 12,000 needy people to this country," Abbott said in Canberra. But criticism also came from other quarters, with indigenous leader Gerhardt Pearson from Cape York saying Dutton's comments were an echo of past times. "We are constantly burdened with the view espoused by the likes of Dutton: it's one of soft bigotry and low expectations, and it continues to dominate policy responses," he said in a statement.
Pacific leaders agree to disagree on climate change Problems with negotiations behind closed doors at the Pacific Islands Forum in Port Moresby were evident with the official communique, due Thursday evening, not released until mid-morning Friday. The 16-nation group consists mainly of small island nations, most of which are susceptible to rising sea levels. They wanted to send a clear message to climate talks in Paris in December that the average global warming should be limited to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels. However, the UN mandate is for no more than a 2.0-degree rise, and the stumbling block at the conference was the refusal of the two regional powers Australia and New Zealand to commit to the lower number. The carefully worded communique noted the Pacific Island states were among "the most vulnerable and least able to adapt and to respond" to the consequences of climate change. The Pacific Islands Forum leaders "declare that an increase of 1.5 degrees Celsius would severely exacerbate the particular challenges facing the most vulnerable smaller island states of the Pacific and urge all effort be made to stay within the global temperature goal". At a press conference ahead of the communique release, Kiribati President Anote Tong said it was an agreement to disagree. "It's not the best outcome that we would have liked," he said of Australia and New Zealand's refusal to back a figure lower than the UN mandate. "I think we must respect that. Whether we accept that or not is a different question," Tong said. Many of the island states are barely two metres above sea level, which leaders said added weight to their lower target. They faced serious problems "on the frontline" of global warming and were in a very different position to Australia and New Zealand, Tong said. The forum mostly comprises poor island states and Fiji Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama in May called for an end to Australia and New Zealand's "undue influence" on Oceania's largest regional grouping. Ahead of the meeting the leaders of the group's six smallest members said the upcoming climate talks in Paris were the last chance for the world to reach an agreement that could save their vulnerable island nations. Tuvalu Prime Minister Enele Sopoaga said he would continue to push for 1.5 degrees to be a legally binding target. "That's the position of the Forum island countries. It is 1.5 degrees and not 2.0 degrees. We will take it to Paris and battle it out there." Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said Australia would go to Paris with "very ambitious targets" and he believed they could get emissions down. New Zealand leader John Key said his country and Australia stood by the 2.0 degree target but accepted that low-lying states were particularly vulnerable and they would "seek an even more ambitious target in Paris".
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