-
Canadian poison seller pleads guilty to aiding suicides
-
PSG more 'hungry' for Champions League after first taste of glory
-
'I'm afraid for my life': Romanians in shock after drone crash
-
PSG still 'hungry' for Champions League glory: Dembele
-
Iran says no trust in US 'words', waiting for Washington to act
-
Swiatek advances at French Open as Djokovic faces Fonseca
-
Photo and video journalists in Gaza to receive 'Golden Pen' award
-
Trees taking drastic measures to survive climate-driven heat
-
Andreeva sweeps into last 16 at French Open
-
McCullum urges England to 'box smart' like New Zealand
-
EU wants 'robust' defence against China trade imbalance
-
France rugby star Drean to have heart surgery
-
Narvaez drops out of Giro d'Italia, points jersey bid over
-
Anti-Israel tennis ball protest disrupts Ireland-Qatar football tie
-
Swiatek qualifies for French Open last 16
-
Vance says progress made as US-Iran deal awaits Trump green light
-
France defender Konate set to leave Liverpool: reports
-
German ex-minister faces perjury charges over failed car toll plan
-
Kanye West cleared to play in Netherlands
-
Loyalty could be fatal to Argentina's World Cup title defence, says Bertoni
-
Stocks rise, oil eases on hopes of US-Iran truce deal
-
Polka-dots and hypnotic riffs fuel viral duo Angine de Poitrine
-
French GDP slips 0.1% in first quarter, raising spectre of recession
-
WHO chief in capital of Ebola-hit DR Congo
-
Azmoun: Iran's absent talisman unafraid of controversy
-
PNG leader says no foreign bases as Australia's defence presence grows
-
Russian drone hits Romania apartment block, drawing NATO, EU outrage
-
Migrants try to flee to Bangladesh fearing India crackdown
-
Digital G7 discusses online child protection
-
'If Ebola comes, we'll be wiped out': DR Congo conflict-displaced
-
'Biggest circus in town' the World Cup set for betting frenzy
-
Rayasi's Bordeaux-Begles expecting 'tough' Top 14 run-in
-
Arsenal aiming to dethrone dynasty-chasing PSG
-
Argentina eye World Cup double ahead of Group J opener
-
Norway's natural-born goalscorer Haaland finally gets global stage
-
Deschamps bidding to end glorious France reign on a high at World Cup
-
France headline tough World Cup Group I as Mbappe faces Haaland
-
Djokovic meets Fonseca in French Open generation game
-
Can Messi deliver again for Argentina at his final World Cup?
-
Football eyes NFL throne says 1994 World Cup architect
-
Blue Origin rocket explodes on launch pad
-
China leaders skip Asia defence summit headlined by US
-
War trauma pushes more Ukrainians to become artists
-
Aliens and fine art for 'weird kid' who became top MMA fighter
-
Japan bans photos at beach volleyball after 'malicious' pictures
-
Japan population sees record five-year drop: census
-
'Robots need clothes': humanoids hit catwalk in Seoul
-
Light, flight, and rights: 250 years of US history in 30 objects
-
Wembanyama and aggressive Spurs force game seven against Thunder
-
New gold rush threatens indigenous havens in Brazil's Amazon
PNG leader says no foreign bases as Australia's defence presence grows
Papua New Guinea Prime Minister James Marape told AFP the South Pacific island nation won't allow foreign military bases, even as Australia steps up its presence at a naval port seen as central to blocking China in any regional conflict.
PNG's remote Lombrum navy base sits 2,000 kilometres (1,240 miles) south of the US territory of Guam, on the other side of a stretch of sea analysts said is the fastest direct route out of the South China Sea to the South Pacific.
Australia's military redeveloped the base for PNG at a cost of AU$500 million (US$358 million) last year, gazumping a 2018 Chinese offer to rebuild the port as Beijing expanded military training with the former Australian territory.
Tender documents show that Australia's Department of Defence is now seeking long-term "living services" for an "Australian compound" within the Lombrum base from August.
That would mean increased visits by Australian forces and vessels, but Marape said Lombrum was not a foreign base -- a sensitive issue for a country building trade ties with China and security cooperation with Washington and Canberra.
"Our policy is very clear. These are sovereign Papua New Guinea defence facilities," Marape told AFP in a statement on Wednesday.
"We work with trusted partners under treaty arrangements and defence cooperation agreements, but ownership and sovereignty remain with Papua New Guinea."
Lombrum's Australian compound was built to accomodate workers during base construction, Marape said, adding that it is also used by "visiting personnel if required".
"It does not in any way constitute a foreign military base," he said.
An Australian defence spokeswoman said the redeveloped Lombrum base "will create further opportunities for joint training, exercises and ship visits between the Australian Defence Force and the PNGDF".
"This would naturally involve Australian presence at the base from time to time," she said.
PNG bases in the capital Port Moresby and in Lae and Wewak on the north coast will also be used "temporarily" by the US military in July for joint training exercises under a 2023 defence agreement, a US Army spokeswoman said.
Australia signed a mutual defence treaty with its northern neighbour last year, ratified by the PNG parliament in April.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's government will spend AU$600 million to expand defence infrastructure across the Pacific Islands, including AU$114 million to build "dual-use" infrastructure in PNG to support integration of the two defence forces, Australia's national budget papers show.
- 'Deny the other side' -
The Lombrum base on Manus island was established by the US military during World War II as its springboard to Asia -- a response to Japan's "fortress in the South Pacific" at nearby Rabaul in PNG, said Peter Dean, professor of strategic studies at the Australian National University.
Eight decades later, China and US allies are vying for Pacific Island ports.
"The geography has not changed," said Dean, who was the co-author of a 2023 review of Australia's defence force that led to a new focus on denying China access to its northern approaches in any potential regional conflict.
He described PNG as "key" terrain to block China's navy.
The Chinese navy frequently sails to the South Pacific and held a live-fire exercise in the sea between Australia and New Zealand last year.
Besides its redevelopment of the navy base, Canberra will also fund another five port upgrades. Marape signed a funding deal with France and the European Union last week to redevelop Rabaul as a major trade port.
And on Tuesday, the Quad nations Australia, the United States, India and Japan said they would fund a commercial port for another South Pacific country, Fiji, which earlier sought funds from China.
Vanuatu's Prime Minister Jotham Napat told his parliament this month that the Pacific island country would also sign a treaty with Australia that denies access by an outside military to its territory.
China's key Pacific security pact is with PNG's neighbour, Solomon Islands. Newly elected Prime Minister Matthew Wale will visit Australia for security talks next week.
Dean said Canberra's treaty with PNG "gains Australia access, the ability to co-develop those facilities, to help train the Papua New Guinea defence force, and it denies the Chinese the ability to do the same thing".
"The most important thing you can do is gain access and trust now, and deny it to the other side," he said.
O.M.Souza--AMWN