會員
News Express(English Edition)

Indonesia signs security pact

Indonesia and Australia signed a security ​treaty on Friday that commits them to consult each other if either country is threatened, President Prabowo Subianto said after a meeting with ⁠Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in Jakarta. The pact, the full ‌details of which ⁠have not yet been disclosed, was first announced in November when Prabowo visited Australia. "This agreement ‍signals that Australia and Indonesia's relationship is stronger than it has ever been," Albanese said on Friday in Jakarta. "The treaty ⁠is a significant extension of our existing security and defence cooperation. It demonstrates the strength of our partnership and depth of our trust and cooperation." Prabowo ‌said the deal reflects the relationship between the two countries. "To Indonesia, this reflects our full commitment to the ⁠good neighbour principles and our free and active foreign policy," he said. "Indonesia and Australia are destined to live side

by side, and we chose to build that relationship on ⁠the foundations of trust and good intentions." Indonesia has a non-aligned foreign policy, pledging friendship with any country without joining any formal ‍military bloc. The treaty signed on Friday was modelled after a 1995 security agreement between the two countries, Australia's Foreign Minister Penny Wong ‌has said.