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Australian
government has no confidence in Howard
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CANBERRA,
February 5 (News Agencies) – Australian Prime Minister John Howard
suffered a historic defeat Wednesday, February 5, in an unprecedented
no-confidence vote by Australia's Senate over his handling of the Iraq
crisis.
The
Labor opposition, left wing Greens, Democrats and Independent senators
used their upper house majority to pass the motion by 34 votes to 31,
following an emotional, 11-hour debate over the looming conflict,
reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
It
was the first time in the 102 year history of the Australian
parliament that the upper house has censured a serving prime minister
with a vote of no confidence.
Howard's
conservative Liberal-National government was also censured in the
motion, which condemned its decision to deploy troops to the Gulf
without reference to parliament and contrary to public opinion.
Australia
and Britain have been the only countries to join the United States in
deploying troops to the Gulf in preparation for war in Iraq.
Labor
Senate leader John Faulkner moved the motion, saying no explanation
had been offered to the Australian people for sending defense
personnel to the Middle East.
"The
prime minister has made a unilateral decision and sent 2,000 of our
defense personnel off to a war undeclared in the northern hemisphere
without any cogent explanation of his actions," Faulkner said.
The
motion expressed the Senate's full support and confidence in
Australia's servicemen and women while expressing opposition to the
government's decision to forward deploy them.
It
declared opposition to a unilateral military attack on Iraq by the
United States, insisted the disarmament of Iraq proceed under UN
authority and expressed total opposition to any use of nuclear arms.
Greens
senator Bob Brown said the censure marked a historic condemnation of
the prime minister.
"The
prime minister made the decision to deploy 2,000 defense personnel
with no reference to the parliament, without the backing of the
Australian people, without a request from the United Nations.
"He
stands condemned, censured and without the confidence of the house of
review, the Senate in Australia," he said.
The
debate, in which speakers from both sides vented passionate feelings
on the issue preoccupying Australia, continued Wednesday in the House
of Representatives, in which a government majority ensures it stays in
office.
Kiwi
Diplomat Rescues Government From Embarrassment
A
New Zealand diplomat meanwhile rescued the government from
embarrassment by backing its denial of a report that it knew for
months it would be committing troops to war in Iraq, said AFP.
The
Nine Network claimed a leaked briefing note showed Foreign Minister
Alexander Downer had told New Zealand High Commissioner to Australia,
Kate Lackey, last October that Australia would not be able to withdraw
troops from any conflict in Iraq even if UN approval was not
forthcoming.
Opposition
Labor leader Simon Crean immediately leapt on the report describing it
as "damning evidence" of government dishonesty over the
issue of Australian involvement in a U.S.-led attack on Iraq.
But
Lackey supported Downer's insistence that his comments had related
only to Australia's contribution to the UN multinational naval
interception force in the Gulf for 10 years. "That was very clear
to me," Lackey said.
Howard
to visit Bush On February 10
In
another development, AFP reported that U.S. President George W. Bush
will discuss Iraq, North Korea, and the war on terrorism with
Australian Prime Minister John Howard at the White House February 10,
a Bush spokesman said Tuesday, February 4.
Howard
has backed possible military action against Iraq, and has deployed
troops to join U.S. forces massing in the Gulf and ready for action if
U.S. decided to invade Iraq even without a UN resolution.
"Prime
Minister John Howard of Australia has accepted the Presidents
invitation to meet on February 10 at the White House to consult on
Iraq, North Korea, and the war on terror," Ari Fleischer said in
a statement.