Other News Yesterday - Installment 1(iv) Special APEC edition
In the wash-up after APEC the good
folk of the People’s Republic of PNG are counting their blessings. It seems they have a couple of new roads to
nowhere and 40 Maseratis to drive on them, a lovely new building which nobody wants
or needs, soft loans which will outlast uranium, a naval base led recovery on
Manus, a promise of power for all sometime in the next millennium and the break
out of a new Cold War in the Pacific.
Rumours China had already bought our
nearest northern neighbour had been vehemently denied by PM Teeter O’Peal. “We are selling stuff to China like
everyone else”, O’Peal told a raptor, “it doesn’t mean we have become paid up
members of the belts and roads club but anything not bolted down is for sale”. When extras from a Hong
Kong gangster movie baled up the PNG Foreign Minister for a while
because they didn’t like the colour of his tie, it seemed to belie O’Peal’s
denial but normal transmission was resumed with the intervention of ‘security’.
The warm and fuzzy feeling everyone gets from APEC leaders
making fools of themselves at the end of proceedings didn’t seem to work this
year. Perhaps the appearance of armed
men at every turn of China’s
leader had an effect.
PM Scomite was
reassured by the presence of a heavily armed warship nearby, but raptors
detected a certain frisson at every event. “We haven’t got the rent”, explained a China
spokesperson, “so we will be back with some heavy lifters”. Raptors weren’t able to report on many
meetings as extras from a Hong Kong gangster movie
expelled them at every opportunity.
“This is our country now”, a spokesperson from China media
explained, “we make the news, we report the news, we own the news”.
In breaking news the People’s Republic of Tonga has announced full membership of the China belts and
roads club. To avoid being towed to the
South China Sea and set up as a fully staffed holiday resort for PLA
celebrities, the good folk of Tonga have ceded all sovereignty and will take up
knitting woollen caps for stranded Uyghurs and Tibetans undergoing re-education
programmes involving a little red book, and lots of belts and roads to
undisclosed destinations.
Some Tongans
concerned about this strategy were told by a spokesperson there was nothing to
see except a lot of jolly yak and goat herders at alt agricultural shows, a few
festivals to celebrate clearing unnecessary clutter and some training sessions in
calisthenics while singing the national anthem. “Those who are deceived by Buddhist and Muslim
tomfoolery … shall be assisted through resettlement and education”. The Christian population of Tonga are
greatly comforted….
Meanwhile China’s roads and belts to nowhere
are gathering pace…sea bridges and bridges of the sea are springing up
everywhere, like mushrooms out of the soup.
“We are bringing an understanding of the President’s new way to all and
sundry across bridges born out of a liberation day”.
This is a great comfort to Pacific leaders
who plan to sign up for the programme.
PM Scomite has countered with his own ‘belt and road’ style Pacific initiative
in partnership with Japan, Canada and USA. “We are going to build bridges
between the Pacific Islands and Australia”, Scomite explained, “Using Australian steel, workers and banks in consort with
anyone but China."
We’re a tad concerned about undersea
footings, but where there’s a tax holiday there’s a way”. The initiative will be known as ‘Alt Debt and
Deficit Lite’. “China’s roads
may be straighter than ours”, tweeted Scomite, “but we know where all the
tracks are going and where the money’s laundered”.