NZ
Foreign Minister Murray McCully has apologised to the Prime Minister
for this diplomatic immunity debacle. His apologies should not stop
there. He owes another to the state of Malaysia for suggesting it was
entirely to blame for the immunity granted to a junior military officer
at its High Commission in Wellington who was facing charges of burglary
and assault with intent to rape.
When Malaysia's Foreign Minister responded that New Zealand had been a
party to the decision, Mr McCully released an exchange of letters that
seemed to give the lie to that claim. A more cautious minister would
have suspected there was more to it when his counterpart had such a
different understanding of events. Mr McCully ought to have checked with
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade before New Zealand said
anything more.
Too late, he discovered that the ministry had
been saying one thing in a letter to the High Commission and another
thing in discussions with the Malaysians.
Mr McCully then had
to admit his ministry may have given them "mixed messages" about whether
it wanted Muhammed Rizalman Bin Ismail to be prosecuted in New Zealand.
When the minister has made amends to Malaysia, he could offer apologies to those his ministry has wronged in this country.
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