Appendix A - Port Moresby Declaration
Port Moresby Declaration
- The Government of Australia is committed to beginning a
new era of cooperation with the island nations of the Pacific.
- Australia respects the independence of the island nations,
and the diversity and complexity of development challenges across our
shared region.
- Economic growth across the Pacific island nations, while
improving in some, generally lags behind other developing regions.
Progress towards the United Nations' Millennium Development Goals has been
mixed.
- The Pacific has significant natural resources - minerals,
timber and marine resources. Managing them wisely and sustainably is a
challenge for the region.
- Australia and the Pacific island nations face a common
challenge in climate change. Many of our Pacific neighbours, especially
low lying atolls, are particularly vulnerable to the effects of climate
change, including devastation from more frequent and severe extreme
weather events.
- The Government of Australia is committed to working in
close cooperation with the Pacific island nations to meet our common
challenges and to raise the standard of living for people throughout the
region.
- The Government of Australia proposes to pursue Pacific
Partnerships for Development with our Pacific island neighbours. These
Pacific Partnerships for Development will provide a new framework for
Australia and the Pacific island nations to commit jointly to achieving
shared goals.
- Under the Pacific Partnerships for Development, the
Government of Australia will be prepared to provide increased development
assistance over time in a spirit of mutual responsibility embracing
commitments by the Pacific island nations to improve governance, to
increase investment in economic infrastructure, and to achieve better
outcomes in health and education.
- The Pacific Partnerships for Development will be a
mechanism to provide better development outcomes for the Pacific Island
nations. These Partnerships will embrace:
n improving economic
infrastructure and enhancing local employment possibilities through
infrastructure and broad-based growth;
n enhancing private
sector development, including better access to microfinance;
n achieving quality,
universal basic education;
n improving health
outcomes through better access to basic health services; and
n enhancing governance,
including the role of civil society, and the role of non-government
organisations in basic service delivery.
- Working jointly to help the Pacific island nations meet
their Millennium Development Goals will also be a focus of the
Partnerships.
- Australia will increase its practical cooperation with the
Pacific island nations to meet the challenge of climate change and
sustainable management of resources.
- Australia will make a direct contribution to education and
training opportunities for citizens from the Pacific island nations -
including through the enhancement of regional education institutions and a
significant program of scholarships to study at Australian education
institutions.
- Australia is also committed to linking the economies of
the Pacific island nations to Australia and New Zealand and to the world,
including through pursuing a region-wide free trade agreement and
enhancing other private sector development opportunities. This will help
to secure a sustainable and more prosperous future for the region.
- As we announced in Canberra on 27 February [2008], the
Governments of Australia and New Zealand will work more closely together
and with our partners to coordinate our development assistance to the
Pacific. Together, Australia and New Zealand provide around $1 billion of
development assistance to the region. By working together we can improve
the impact of our development assistance and provide better results for
the people of the Pacific islands.
- Australia will also work to increase its cooperation with
other donor countries and organisations, and international financial
institutions such as the World Bank, including through more coordinated
delivery of development assistance programs across the region and joint
programs where feasible.
- Australia is committed to close and strong relationships
with our Pacific neighbours and with regional organisations, particularly
the Pacific Islands Forum. We are also committed to fostering stronger
linkages between Australian, national and regional institutions.
- Australia’s relationships in the region already have
considerable depth - across people-to-people links, economics and trade,
and government cooperation. But Australia wants a new era of cooperation
to begin. The Government of Australia is committed to working with the
Pacific island nations on the basis of partnership, mutual respect and
mutual responsibility.
- Australia proposes that, progressively over the course of
the coming years, we negotiate Pacific Partnerships for Development with
those of our Pacific neighbours that share this vision.
- Australia believes that, with long-term commitment and by
working towards agreed goals, we will be able to build strong, stable
nations in a more prosperous region.
- Australia believes that the Millennium Development Goals
agreed by the international community at the United Nations Millennium
Conference in 2000, provide an appropriate framework for developing
nations world-wide, including in our region. At the mid-point, progress
towards the Millennium Development Goals has been mixed. Australia wants
to reach a common resolve with the island nations of the Pacific to strive
towards greater success against the Millennium Development Goals by 2015.[1]