Re-elected Australia PM Albanese to visit Indonesia first in ‘signal’ to region

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Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese reacts as he speaks at a Labor party election night event, after local media projected the Labor Party's victory, on the day of the Australian federal election, in Sydney, Australia, May 3, 2025. REUTERS/Hollie Adams/File Photo

Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Australia has "no more important relationship than Indonesia".

PHOTO: REUTERS

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SYDNEY - Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on May 7 he will travel to Indonesia next week as a “signal” of the importance Canberra places in the region in his first overseas visit since his May 3 election victory.

“We have no more important relationship than Indonesia just to our north,” Mr Albanese said in a television interview with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 

Mr Albanese said he will travel to Indonesia on May 14, the day after his government is sworn into office.

Mr Albanese was re-elected

and his centre-left Labor party increased its majority in parliament in the poll.

Indonesia will grow to become the fourth-largest economy in the world, and Australia has an important defence and security relationship with Jakarta, he said.

The visit will be “a signal to our region of the importance we place on this region”, he added.

During the election campaign, Indonesia dismissed reports that Russia had requested to base military aircraft in Papua, about 1,200km north of the Australian city of Darwin, where a US Marine Corps rotational force is based for six months of the year. REUTERS

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