Australian Consulate-General, Noumea

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Australian Consul-General in Noumea, New Caledonia
Coat of Arms of Australia.svg
Coat of Arms of Australia
Annelise Young, official portrait as Australian Consul-General in Noumea, New Caledonia (2022).jpg
Incumbent
Annelise Young
since 6 July 2022
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
Style Her Excellency
Reports to Minister for Foreign Affairs
Nominator Prime Minister of Australia
Appointer Governor General of Australia
Inaugural holder Bertram Ballard (Official Representative)
Formation6 August 1940
Website Australian Consulate-General Noumea, New Caledonia - Wallis and Futuna

The Australian Consulate-General in Noumea, New Caledonia represents the Commonwealth of Australia in New Caledonia, a special collectivity of France, and is also accredited to the Pacific French Overseas collectivity of Wallis and Futuna (Australia's relations with French Polynesia are now handled by a separate consulate-general since 2021). The Consul-General also serves as Australia's representative to the Noumea-based Pacific Community. The Consulate-General, one of four in New Caledonia (alongside New Zealand, Indonesia and Vanuatu), has since 1976 had its offices at 19 avenue du Maréchal Foch, Nouméa.

Contents

The Australian Consulate-General in Nouméa reports directly to the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade in Canberra, Australia, just as the Australian embassies and high commissions around the world and is Australia's fourth-oldest diplomatic posting (after London, 1910; Ottawa, 1939; and Washington, February 1940), having been established on 6 August 1940, when Bertram Ballard was posted to Nouméa. The consulate celebrated its 75th anniversary on 6 August 2015. [1] [2]

Consulate history

First established on 6 August 1940 with the appointment of Bertram Ballard as Official Representative of the Commonwealth Government in Nouméa, Ballard's responsibilities included the "full power and authority on behalf of the Commonwealth Government to conduct discussions and/or to agree and conclude with the administration of New Caledonia any matters or agreements that may tend to the attainment of co-operation in 'the struggle against the Berlin-Rome Axis at the side of Great Britain' and to sign for an on behalf of the Commonwealth Government everything so agreed upon and concluded". [3] However, the time of Ballard's appointment meant that the real reason for his appointment was to report to Canberra the situation inside the French colony, including the political sympathies of the colonial administration. The administration in Nouméa at the time was decidedly pro-Vichy French, but the Australian Government continued to be hesitant in encouraging a takeover of the colony or encouraging Free French elements in the colony.

However, Ballard's report of 8 September 1940 noted that the provisional Governor, Colonel Denis, was not likely to be accommodating to a settlement in any case and that the people of the colony would "welcome and follow" a Governor appointed by De Gaulle, spurred the Australian Government, led by Minister for External Affairs, John McEwen, into action. [4] This action culminated in the sending of HMAS Adelaide to escort Free French Governor-designate Henri Sautot to Nouméa, bringing the colony to Free France on 19 September.

With the end of the war, the Official Representative's Office was upgraded to a Consulate, and the first consul appointed was Harold Stuart Barnett, appointed on 18 December 1945. From then until 20 February 1980, the agency was known as the Australian Consulate, when posting was upgraded to a Consulate-General. [5]

1987 recall incident

In January 1987, the French Government declared the serving Australian Consul-General, John Dauth, as "persona non grata", prompting his recall from the posting. The reasoning the French Government (represented by Minister for Overseas Departments and Territories, Bernard Pons) gave for Dauth's recall was that he "had provided aid to extremist members of the pro-independence FLNKS group which had links with Libya", an accusation that was firmly repudiated by Foreign Minister Bill Hayden, who called in the French representative in Canberra to register an official protest. [6] [7]

Hayden had noted that "Mr Dauth has done no more than the Australian Government expects of any government official representing its interests overseas" and it was reported that his recall had been motivated by a recent breakdown in Australia–France relations, particularly over the future of New Caledonia. On 5 January France had suspended ministerial contacts with Australia because of their support for efforts at the United Nations to have New Caledonia put back on the United Nations list of non-self-governing territories (it had been removed from the list in 1947) and added to the Decolonisation List, which were successful in a resolution of the UN General Assembly of 2 December 1986. [8] [9] France's actions to expel Dauth and its reasoning for doing so were also criticised by the governments of Fiji, Papua New Guinea and Vanuatu's Prime Minister, Walter Lini, who noted that "the French Government's reaction after its defeat on the United Nations vote ... could be said to be undiplomatic, childish, naive and reactionary". [10] [11]

French Polynesia

From 1990 to 2021, there existed an Honorary Consulate in Papeete, French Polynesia, held from 2002 to 2021 by Marc Siu, who reported to the consulate-general in Nouméa. [12] In May 2021, Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne announced the establishment of an Australian Consulate-General in French Polynesia, upgrading the Australian representation there as part of an expansion of the country's diplomatic presence in the Pacific region that included appointing official representation to every member of the Pacific Islands Forum. [13] Claire Scott was appointed on the same day as the new consul-general. [14]

Office-holders

Official RepresentativeStart of termEnd of termNotes
Bertram Ballard 6 August 194028 March 1944 [15] [16]
Noël Deschamps 28 March 1944December 1945 [17]
ConsulStart of termEnd of termNotes
Harold Stuart Barnett18 December 194525 March 1950 [18] [19]
Lawrence John Lawrey (Acting)25 March 19501 November 1950 [20] [21]
Harold David Anderson 1 November 1950March 1953 [20]
H. E. Holland (Vice Consul)March 195330 November 1953 [5] [22]
John Stanley Cumpston30 November 1953January 1958 [23]
Pierre Hutton January 195821 May 1958 [24]
Rodney B. Hodgson21 May 19585 October 1960 [25]
Keith Douglas Scott5 October 19604 January 1963 [26]
Ivor Gordon Bowden4 January 196324 June 1965 [20]
Ian E. Nicolson24 June 196529 December 196 [20]
Anthony Wilson29 December 196729 July 1968 [20]
David Wilson29 July 196816 November 1970 [20]
Alan Edwards16 November 197013 October 1972 [27] [28]
Robin Casson13 October 197220 December 1975 [20]
Bill Fisher20 December 197510 February 1978 [20]
Mike Ovington 10 February 197820 February 1980 [20] [29]
Consul-GeneralStart of termEnd of termNotes
Malcolm Leader 20 February 198018 March 1983 [20]
Stuart Hume18 March 198318 May 1986 [20]
John Dauth 18 May 198611 January 1987 [30] [31] [8]
Malcolm Leader (Acting)11 January 19875 July 1987 [32]
David O'Leary5 July 198711 February 1990 [33] [34]
Richard A. Rowe11 February 19903 September 1992 [20]
Leslie Rowe3 September 199214 August 1995 [35]
Graeme Wilson14 August 19956 October 1998 [36]
Sally Mansfield6 October 19986 October 2001 [37]
Denise Fisher6 October 20013 December 2004 [38]
Jane Urquhart3 December 20046 December 2007 [39]
Anita Butler6 December 20075 December 2011 [40]
Heidi Bootle5 December 201125 July 2015 [41]
Paul Wilson25 July 201520 August 2019 [42]
Alison Carrington20 August 20199 November 2021 [43]
Steven Barraclough (Acting)9 November 20216 July 2022 [20]
Annelise Young6 July 2022present [44] [45]

Consuls-general in Papeete, French Polynesia

NameStart of termEnd of termNotes
Mario Borg (Honorary Consul)9 April 199020 February 1992 [46]
Bryan Banston (Honorary Consul)20 February 199230 November 1994 [47]
Malcolm Andrews (Honorary Consul)30 November 19941997 [48]
Nicholas McGlynn (Honorary Consul)19971999 [49]
Lennart Johansson (Honorary Consul)19992002 [50] [51]
Marc Siu (Honorary Consul)20024 May 2021 [52]
Claire Scott4 May 2021present [14] [53] [54] [55] [56] [57]

See also

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References

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