Indonesia will suffer the deepest cut
from Australia's plans to slash foreign aid by almost 20 percent in the next
fiscal year. Two weeks after recalling the ambassador from Jakarta in protest
at the executions of two Australian drug traffickers, the government announced
Tuesday it plans to cut Indonesian aid by 40 percent from 543 million
Australian dollars ($428 million) to AU$323 million. Australia wants to cut its
aid budget to AU$4.1 billion next year.
Aid to other East Asian countries
Vietnam, Philippines and Myanmar would be cut in similar proportions. But their
losses are less in dollar terms because Indonesia receives the largest share of
Australian aid. Cambodia, which has agreed to resettle refugees rejected by
Australia, is alone among East Asian countries in maintaining its funding
unchanged at AU$52.4 million next year. East Timor also took a lesser cut of
AU$4 million from AU$72 million in the current fiscal year.
Some analysts had warned that the
diplomatic rift between Australia and Indonesia over the executions could
escalate if Australia withdrew aid in retaliation. Prime Minister Tony Abbott
drew an angry response from Jakarta when in pleading for the lives of heroin
traffickers Andrew Chan, 31, and Myuran Sukumaran, 34, he pointed out how
generous Australia's response to Indonesia had been in providing $1 billion
following the devastating 2004 tsunami that killed 230,000 people in a dozen
countries.
The reference was interpreted in Jakarta
as a threat to cut aid if the Australians were executed.Treasurer Joe Hockey,
the architect of the budget, said Foreign Minister Julie Bishop had applied a
formula to determine the extent of aid cuts that countries received.Factors
included whether the recipient countries were themselves giving foreign aid,
their forecast economic growth and their proximity to Australia, he
said."There wasn't any specific targeting of any single country at all.
You can take that out of your mind, not at all," Hockey told reporters.
Several influential Australian
commentators had called for a cut to Indonesian aid in retaliation for
Jakarta's refusal to stay the executions, and Bishop had not ruled out that
option. Aaron Connelly, a research fellow at Sydney's Lowy Institute for
International Policy, said there was still a risk of further damaging the
bilateral relationship if Australia mishandled explaining the aid cut."But
right now, so long as everything goes smoothly and there are no big mistakes in
the messaging, I think the government will be able to get this cut through
without significantly damaging the relationship," he added. Connelly said
he had feared early in the dispute a repeat of 1991 when the Netherlands
attempted to attach conditions on its aid to Indonesia after the Indonesian
military massacred civilians in East Timor. Jakarta responded by refusing all
further aid from the Netherlands.
Helen Szoke, chief executive of the aid
agency Oxfam Australia, described the cuts across the board as a lose-lose
scenario that will cut vital programs helping some of the world's poorest while
also harming Australia's interests - See more at: http://www.thejakartapost.
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