Leading Articles

Partly Sunny with Thunder Showers 15° London Hi 23°C / Lo 12°C

Leading article: Aussie rules

We were looking forward to Kevin Rudd's term as Australia's Prime Minister, and so far we have not been disappointed. On the contrary, with his plain speaking, his firm principles as a politician and – a bit of a luxury, this – his fluent Mandarin, Mr Rudd has not only met our expectations, but inspired not a little envy as well.

He has just been in Britain, where he held bilateral talks and delivered a packed lecture at the London School of Economics. Given Australia's geographical position, his past as a diplomat in China and the coincidence of the shambolic passage of the Olympic torch through London, he was bound to be asked for his views.

This is what he said. On the torch: "We will not be having Chinese security forces or Chinese security services providing security for the torch when it is in Australia... We, Australia, are providing that security." On China and Tibet: "It's very difficult... you still have problems on human rights." On Beijing's refusal to meet the Dalai Lama: "There have been such contacts in the past – they need to be resuscitated." As for the Olympics, he said he opposed a boycott but had not yet decided whether to attend in person.

As it happened, Beijing was his next stop. Preceded by a diplomatic demarche over remarks on Tibet he made in Washington, Mr Rudd was undeterred. He gave a huge hall of students some unpalatable home truths; what is more, he did it in their own language. On human rights in China generally, in Tibet in particular, and on the need for dialogue, he was bang on message – his own. The world needs more leaders like this; we hope he has started as he means to go on.

Post a Comment

Offensive or abusive comments will be removed and your IP logged and may be used to prevent further submission. In submitting a comment to the site, you agree to be bound by the Independent Minds Terms of Service.

Columnist Comments

dominic_lawson

Dominic Lawson: Death, dignity and family dynamics

Many British Dignitas 'clients' were not suffering terminal illness at all

steve_richards

Steve Richards: A question of power and responsibility

David Cameron could become a forensic government reformer

mary_dejevsky

Mary Dejevsky: It worked in Moscow, but the Obama effect can be negative

In Israel, what was seen as a key omission raised huge suspicions


Loading...