If
I was Australian, I would be cringing at the embarassment of this
little upstart confronting Putin. In the meantime NZ has its own
embarassment of a PM making sick jokes about a pedophile murderer
absconding to South America in plain sight.
Abbott confronts Putin and
demands MH17 apology
Apology and compensation called for during tense 15-minute meeting at Apec summit
12
November, 2014
Tony
Abbott has confronted Vladimir Putin over Russia's role in the
downing of flight MH17, calling for an apology and compensation.
The
Australian prime minister had a tense 15-minute meeting with the
Russian strongman on the sidelines of the Apec leaders summit in
Beijing on Tuesday.
Mr
Abbott told Mr Putin - a former KGB agent and with a blackbelt in
judo - that Russia must respect the UN Security Council resolution
that underpins the investigation into the atrocity that killed 298
people.
Thirty-eight
Australians were among the dead.
Mr
Abbott told Mr Putin that Australia was in possession of information
that clearly pointed to Russian involvement in the rebel attack that
downed the plane in Ukraine.
If
true it "would be a very serious matter", he said.
The
prime minister pointed out that when the US inadvertently shot down a
civilian aircraft, it had duly apologised and made appropriate
restitution.
He
"commended the precedent" to Mr Putin, the prime minister's
office said in a summary of the meeting.
Mr
Abbott was referring to Iran Air flight 655, which the US
accidentally shot out of the sky in 1988, killing all 290 people on
board.
The
US expressed deep regret over the tragedy but never formally
apologised.
It's
not really known what Mr Putin - recently named most powerful man in
the world by Forbes magazine - said in response to Mr Abbott's
comments.
But
the prime minister's office says both men "agreed that all
relevant information should be provided to the independent
investigation".
Tony Abbott and Vladimir Putin had a tense 15-minute meeting on the sidelines of the Apec summit. Photo / AP
The
meeting at the picturesque Yanqi Lake just outside Beijing followed a
brief exchange on Monday night, in which Mr Abbott also raised the
attack.
Mr
Abbott famously promised to "shirtfront" the Russian
president over Moscow's involvement but subsequently toned down his
language.
He
later pledged the pair would have a "robust" conversation -
and it appears they did.
Mr
Abbott was keen to get the meeting out of the way in Beijing so as
not to distract from the economic agenda of the G20 in Brisbane this
weekend.
The
prime minister also attended a Remembrance Day ceremony on Tuesday
and had meetings with the leaders of Mexico and South Korea.
At
the summit, he spoke about his G20 plans and free trade agenda.
Mr
Abbott leaves Beijing on Wednesday bound for regional security talks
in Myanmar, formerly known as Burma. He returns to Australia on
Friday.
US
President Barack Obama also had about 15 minutes with Mr Putin on
Tuesday. The pair discussed Ukraine, Iran and Syria, according to the
White House.
Putin was a little more gracious towards this little upstart than was warranted
Russian
President Vladimir Putin in conversation with Australian PM Tony
Abbott said he hopes all information about the crash of the Malaysia
Airlines flight MH17 in eastern Ukraine will be made public, Kremlin
spokesman Dmitry Peskov told RIA Novosti.
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