MFAT Spends $9 Million on Four Day Conference
New Zealand taxpayers forked out $9 million to pay for a recent four-day UN conference in Samoa that included hiring the
luxury P Pacific Jewel cruise liner. New Zealand covered the accommodation and operating costs ofSeptember’s Small Island Developing States conference. Details of the conference and the spending are available on the NBR’s website (paywalled).
Taxpayers’ Union Executive Director Jordan Williams says:
“Never before have New Zealand taxpayers’ chartered such a luxury cruise-liner. The ship is marketed as 'the world's
largest adventure park at sea’ and includes a zip-line across the top deck, an outdoor circus performance arena and
numerous movie theatres. Conference attendees had nine bars, pubs and nightclubs to choose from and seven restaurants
and cafes to dine in."
“It seems inconceivable that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade would think it a good use of taxpayers’ money to
fund the chartering of a luxury cruise liner for a conference in another country. It appears that MFAT brought in the
liner so conference attendees could avoid the mainland."
“$9 million is nearly half New Zealand’s annual aid budget to Samoa and amounts to $4,500 per attendee. The amount does
not include the cost of attendees’ flights or travel (and presumably cocktails) which makes the $9 million amount all
the more remarkable.”
“If the $9 million had been used for genuine economic development or investment, no one would complain. Instead
taxpayers forked out for a conference which achieved’ a document that ‘reaffirmed’, ‘acknowledged’, ‘recognised' and
‘recommitted’ to various bureaucratic platitudes.”
Little of the money is likely to have gone into the local Samoan economy. The British-American owned company, P Cruises, appears to have been the main beneficiary. "We should be funding measures that actually develop economies, not
chartering liners to talk about it,” says Mr Williams
“Murray McCully and MFAT put out press releases promoting the value of the talk-fest. They failed to mention the fact
that Kiwi taxpayers were footing a bill of more than $2 million per day. It is a shameful misuse of public money and
officials are no doubt praying that the Christmas rush allows them to avoid public vilification.”
Pictures of the Pacific Jewel area on the Taxpayers' Union website.
ends