Australian foreign minister denies Indonesia rift
Julie Bishop heads to Bali conference denying difficulties with Jakarta over NSA spying allegations
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has denied a rift with strategic ally Indonesia over spying allegations as she left on Wednesday for the Bali Democracy Forum.
Canberra’s relationship with Jakarta is under pressure after reports last week that Australia’s overseas diplomatic posts were involved in a vast US-led surveillance network.
The problems were compounded by a report on Sunday citing a document from US whistleblower Edward Snowden showing that Australia and the United States mounted a joint surveillance operation on Indonesia during 2007 UN climate talks in Bali.
An angry Jakarta on Monday said it would co-sponsor a draft resolution at the UN General Assembly highlighting concern at US-led data snooping while threatening to review its bilateral co-operation with Australia.
Despite this, Bishop denied relations were frayed.