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Paul Madden

British Ambassador to Japan

Part of UK in Australia

9th February 2015

Farewell to Australia

This is my final blog from Australia. My 205th. I hope someone’s been reading them.

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It has been one of the greatest privileges and pleasures of my life to represent Britain in Australia as the Pom HC. There is no country to which we feel closer. It has been a fantastic time to be here. Over the past four years Australia has played a particularly prominent role in world affairs, hosting the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting in 2011, the G20 in 2014, and spending two years on the UN Security Council. Its economy has been the envy of the western world, making it very attractive to British business – our exports are up 60% over the last six years. And it’s been a time when governments on both sides have a made a real commitment to rejuvenate the relationship.

Over the last few weeks I’ve been blogging about my farewell visits to the major cities, and the memories they evoked of things we have done all around Australia. I hope the blogs haven’t been too self-indulgent. But I think they give a good feel for the breadth of the relationship between the two countries, and the diversity of activities that British diplomatic missions abroad carry out.

When I first came here I reported to London that Australia was a very big country and a very long way away. Not particularly original I know, but both factors impact on almost every aspect of our work. I don’t think I have ever travelled so much in my life before. But it’s essential to get out to the major economic and population centres, and to the resource-producing regions of Australia, spread around this vast, continent-sized country into which you could fit the whole of Western Europe.

Although it is true that Australia is a long way from Britain, both in travel-time and in time-zones, in every other respect we could not be closer. At the last census more than half of Australians reported British ancestry, and we are still the third largest source of annual migrants today. Of course Australia has a proud and distinctive identity, with its unique landscapes and marsupials, its indigenous peoples who’ve been around for 40,000 years, and its lively modern demographic mix. But Britain and Australia still feel incredibly familiar to each other. When we look at the many challenges in the world today, it’s good to have such staunch friends and allies to face them together with.

Of course we’re happy to be going back to Britain after eight years away. London is one of the greatest cities in the world, and the UK is where our children and families are. But Sarah and I are very sad to be leaving Australia, a country we have come to love, and a place where we have made many friends. Australians, like their country, are warm and sunny. Australia, we will not be strangers to your shores in the years ahead.

1 comment on “Farewell to Australia

  1. So nice to meet you and sorry you are departing.
    I particularly enjoyed the evening some time ago in Sydney when we all toasted our mutual friend Miriam Margolyes at China Doll, Wooloomooloo and also at her home at Yarawa Hill, Robertson.

    All the best

    Robin Amadio
    Wentworth Courier

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About Paul Madden

Paul Madden has been the British Ambassador to Japan from January 2017. He was Additional Director for Asia Pacific at the FCO in 2015.He was British High Commissioner to Australia…

Paul Madden has been the British Ambassador to Japan from January 2017.

He was Additional Director for Asia Pacific at the FCO in 2015.He was British High Commissioner to Australia until February 2015. Prior to this he was British High Commissioner in Singapore from 2007-2011.

A career diplomat, he was previously Managing Director at UK Trade and Investment (2004-2006), responsible for co-ordinating and
implementing international trade development strategies to support
companies across a wide range of business sectors.

As Assistant Director of Information at the Foreign and Commonwealth
Office (2003-2004) he was responsible for public diplomacy policy,
including managing the FCO funding of the BBC World Service, the British
Council and the Chevening Scholarships programme. He led the team
responsible for the award-winning UK pavilion at the Aichi Expo in Japan
2005.

He was Deputy High Commissioner in Singapore from 2000-2003 and has
also served in Washington (1996-2000) and Tokyo (1988-92). Between
1992-96 he worked on EU enlargement and Environmental issues at the FCO
in London.

Before joining FCO he worked at the Department of Trade and Industry
(1980-87) on a range of industrial sectors and trade policy, including
two years as a minister’s Private Secretary.

He has an MA in Economic Geography from Cambridge University, an MBA
from Durham University, studied Japanese at London University’s School
of Oriental and African Studies, and is a Fellow of the Royal
Geographical Society. His first book, Raffles: Lessons in Business
Leadership, was published in 2003.

Married to Sarah, with three children, he was born in 1959, in Devon.