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http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/political-news/i-couldnt-believe-it-bob-carr-recalls-margaret-thatchers-unabashedly-racist-comment-about-australia-20130410-2hksz.html
'I couldn't believe it': Bob Carr recalls Margaret Thatcher's 'unabashedly 
racist' comment about Australia
  Date  April 10, 2013 - 3:22PM 
  a.. 

Bob Carr recalls Thatcher's racist slur
Foreign Affairs Minister Bob Carr says he was astonished when former British PM 
Margaret Thatcher made a racist comment to him about Australia.


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Foreign Minister Bob Carr says former British leader Baroness Margaret Thatcher 
made an ''unabashedly racist'' comment, recalling what she said to him about 
Asian immigration after she left office.

  She said, 'I like Sydney but you can't allow the migrants' - and in context 
she meant Asian migration - 'to take over, otherwise you will end up like Fiji 
where the Indian migrants have taken over'. 

Senator Carr said the ''Iron Lady'', who died in London on Monday, had told him 
Australia could end up like Fiji ''where the Indian migrants have taken over''.

 
"Astonished": Bob Carr Photo: AFP

But his recollections have drawn fire from Deputy Opposition Leader Julie 
Bishop, who said Senator Carr owed Lady Thatcher's family an apology.

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Senator Carr, who has a Malaysian-born wife, said he respected Lady Thatcher 
for the boldness of her political leadership, but "100 other things I would 
pick arguments with her''.

'I recall one conversation I had with her in her retirement where she said 
something that was unabashedly racist,'' he told ABC television late on Tuesday 
from China.

 
Out of touch: Baroness Margaret Thatcher. Photo: AP

''She warned Australia - talking to me with Helena [his wife] standing not far 
away - against Asian immigration, saying that if we allowed too much of it we'd 
see the natives of the land, the European settlers, overtaken by migrants,'' he 
added.

Senator Carr said: ''I couldn't believe it.''

''It reminded me that despite, yes, her greatness on those big questions, the 
role of the state, the evil nature of the communist totalitarianism, there was 
an old-fashioned quality to her that was entirely out of touch and probably 
explained why her party removed her in the early '90s.''

Senator Carr, a former premier of New South Wales, said Lady Thatcher used the 
Pacific island nation of Fiji to illustrate her point.

''I remember one thing she said as part of that conversation. She said, 'you 
will end up like Fiji'.

''She said, 'I like Sydney but you can't allow the migrants' - and in context 
she meant Asian migration - 'to take over, otherwise you will end up like Fiji 
where the Indian migrants have taken over'.

''I was so astonished I don't think I could think of an appropriate reply.''

Ms Bishop, who is the opposition spokeswoman on foreign affairs, said Senator 
Carr's comments were "graceless".

‘‘His decision to make these claims after her death is a crude attempt to slur 
the reputation of one of the 20th century’s most outstanding leaders,’’ Ms 
Bishop said in a statement on Wednesday.

However, a spokesman for Senator Carr said on Wednesday that the Foreign 
Minister's comments should be looked at in the context of his other comments 
about Lady Thatcher's career.

During the interview, Senator Carr said he respected the former prime minister 
for the "boldness of her political leadership".

Senior Tasmanian Liberal Senator Eric Abetz also hit out at Tasmanian Labor 
government minister David O'Bryne for comments he made on Twitter, in which he 
called Lady Thatcher a "war criminal".

Senator Abetz said the state MP's "vile" comments danced on the grave of the 
former British prime minister.

Mr O'Bryne defended his actions, and said he was entitled to debate his 
personal views on forums like Twitter.

"No death should be celebrated," he said in a statement. "I've recognised and 
respected that Margaret Thatcher's death is a sad occasion for her family.

"I've also expressed my fierce opposition to Mrs Thatcher's repugnant policies. 
Is that kind of free speech not allowed after someone has passed away?"

Lady Thatcher, Britain's first female prime minister and longest-serving 
premier of the 20th century, was a divisive figure, with critics saying she 
destroyed millions of lives with her free-market economic policies.

Her supporters have called her the greatest British leader since Winston 
Churchill and tributes have flowed from world leaders, who hailed her role in 
bringing down communism.

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Julia Gillard praised Lady Thatcher, who was 87, 
saying she had ''changed history for women'' by opening the door to females 
taking high-powered leadership roles.

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II will lead mourners at Lady Thatcher's funeral next 
week, the first time the monarch will have attended the ceremony of one of her 
former prime ministers since Churchill died in 1965.

AFP, with Andrew Darby and Judith Ireland



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