Ditch passports for ditch: NZ minister

Letting New Zealanders and Australians travel across the Tasman without passports would recognise the bond forged at Gallipoli, says Peter Dunne.

New Zealand's minister in charge of passports has invoked the spirit of Anzac in urging Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott to scrap them for New Zealanders and Australians crossing the ditch.

In a pre-Anzac Day statement, Internal Affairs Minister Peter Dunne says the trans-Tasman relationship is "more akin to that of the distant cousin, rather than the close sibling we like to portray it as".

Since New Zealand rejected the invitation to join the Commonwealth of Australia at the time of federation in 1901, there have been attempts to reinvigorate the relationship, most notably the Closer Economic Relations agreement of 1983, the United Future party leader says.

"But benign neglect has been the more general characteristic," he said.

"And in such interactions as occur, the presumption is always of New Zealand being not quite on a par with New South Wales, rather than as an equal sovereign nation.

"The nadir most surely aside from the infamous underarm incident must have been the Keating government's decision via a curt late night fax in the early 1990s to terminate consideration of a single aviation market."

Mr Dunne says there are arguably no more similar peoples on earth than Australians and New Zealanders, who "genuinely like each other" despite all the rivalries.

As the Anzac spirit is invoked this weekend, he suggested marking the occasion by reinvigorating the Australia-New Zealand relationship.

"A practical starting point would be to allow our respective citizens free movement across our borders, without the need for a passport, as is increasingly the case in Europe," he said.

"The spectacular memorial gift to grace Wellington's Pukeahu park is one thing but, Mr Abbott, a move on passports would be a much more enduring recognition of the bond we say we forged at Gallipoli."


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Source: AAP


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