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Australia, Vanuatu sign delayed security deal that is seen as curbing China

By Thomson Reuters Jun 28, 2026 | 10:49 PM

By Alasdair Pal

SYDNEY, June 29 (Reuters) – Australia and Vanuatu on Monday signed a development and security pact that had been delayed for months ​over Vanuatu’s concerns that it could stifle ‌investment from other countries.

Australia, which is in a battle for influence in the Pacific with China, will be consulted on any third-party investment in Vanuatu’s critical infrastructure and remain ‌the ​country’s preferred security and policing partner.

Canberra ⁠has previously unveiled funding ⁠of A$500 million ($344.50 million) over 10 years for the pact, known as the Nakamal Agreement.

“It encapsulates Vanuatu’s sovereign decision not to permit its territory ​to be used for any foreign military base or infrastructure and that Vanuatu’s critical infrastructure remains ⁠free from militarisation,” Australian Prime ⁠Minister Anthony Albanese said at a ​news conference with his Vanuatu counterpart, Jotham Napat.

The agreement was ​to be signed in September, but was ‌delayed after Napat said his coalition partner had raised concerns that it could restrict Vanuatu’s ability to secure infrastructure funding from other countries.

China is Vanuatu’s largest ⁠external creditor, having provided loans through Chinese banks that financed Chinese contractors to build major infrastructure projects, including the ⁠presidential office ‌complex, parliament building and road network.

Vanuatu ⁠is currently pursuing its own economic deal ​with ‌China that Napat said on Monday ​was awaiting ⁠approval from Beijing.

“We will share the agreement, there is nothing to hide,” he said, responding to a question about whether the deal would contain security elements.

($1 = 1.4514 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Alasdair Pal in Sydney; Editing ​by Thomas Derpinghaus)