Australia-RI to co-host regional counterterrorism summit in 2004
Australia-RI to co-host regional counterterrorism summit in 2004
Australian Prime Minister John Howard (left) meets in his office
with Indonesian Minister of Foreign Affairs Hassan Wirayuda.
During the meeting on Thursday, the two discussed plans to co-
host an Asia-Pacific regional summit early next year to help
better coordinate the fight against terrorism.
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer also met with his
counterpart Hassan to discuss the proposal in details.
"We agreed that Australia and Indonesia would co-host a
regional ministerial conference on counter terrorism early next
year and we've been able to work through some of the broad
details of who would be invited ... and the nature of that
conference," Downer said after meeting Hassan in Canberra.
Earlier, before the meeting, Downer said a location had not
yet been decided, adding "it could be in Indonesia. Actually, it
would probably be better to have it in Indonesia."
Canberra and Jakarta have significantly boosted cooperation in
the fight against terrorism since the Oct. 12 bombings on the
Indonesian island of Bali that killed 202 people, including 88
Australians.
The deadly car bombing outside Jakarta's JW Marriott Hotel
earlier this month added impetus to calls for a regional forum to
discuss ways of rooting out terrorism in Southeast Asia.
A report in The Sydney Morning Herald newspaper on Wednesday
quoted Prime Minister Howard saying that Australian police and
intelligence officials working in Indonesia since the Oct. 12
Bali attacks had helped avert some terror strikes.
"I think we were able to help the Indonesians in relation to
some incidents -- potential incidents," Howard reportedly said.
He did not elaborate, but on Thursday Australia's ambassador
to Indonesia, John Ritchie also said Indonesian national police
had stopped potential terrorist attacks with help from Australian
police.
Without going into detail, Ritchie said Indonesian police had
"averted quite a lot of incidents of terrorist activity.
Australia has been assisting very actively."
Ahead of his meeting with Wirayuda, Downer said both Australia
and Indonesia were keen to hammer out details about the terror
conference.
"Both of us are quite supportive of this idea, so we need to
start working through how we do it," Downer said.
He added that the common threat of terrorism had helped forge
stronger ties between Canberra and Jakarta.
"The events of Oct. 12 -- the Bali bombing -- have brought
Australia and Indonesia very close together and the degree of
cooperation on counter terrorism has been simply extraordinary,"
he said. -- AFP