Posted on 09 Jul 2009
"One of the reasons why we want access to him, is to satisfy ourselves as to his welfare, to satisfy ourselves as to his well-being and to get some indication from him as to how we can be of assistance," Smith told Australian state television.
Chinese authorities detained Hu, Rio Tinto's top iron ore salesman in
Three Chinese members of Hu's Shanghai-based team were also detained and were named in Australian newspapers on Thursday as Rio Tinto sales employees Wang Yong, Ke Ge and Jeff Liu.
Smith described the spying accusations as "very surprising" and said the government was seeking urgent access to Hu, an Australian, and wanted to know more ahead of a Saturday deadline for consular access to Hu by Australian diplomats in
Fears the issue could damage trade ties saw the Australian dollar slump against the yen in offshore trade in its biggest one-day drop in 2- months, hit partly by worries the detention could damage relations.
Those fears were compounded by a Reuters report on Wednesday that a Chinese buyer had suddenly canceled a coal shipment while it was sailing for
"The market was already jittery over the whole
"Really the underlying story didn't justify such a move, but it shows how tense the market is."
Details about the detentions emerged just as a
But the Chinese agreement was for six months instead of a year, the China Business News said on Wednesday.
It was unclear if there was any tie between the two events, but the detention follows a period of tense relations between the two trading partners, with iron ore negotiations running past the June 30 deadline and Rio Tinto ditching a planned $19.5 billion investment by state-owned Chinese metals firm Chinalco last month.
Smith said he saw "no basis" for speculation of business feud payback behind the detentions, but an influential Australian conservative opposition lawmaker who opposed the Chinalco bid with a television campaign said he had no doubt of a link.
"Chinalco's failure to buy 18 percent ownership of Rio would appear to have inspired Mr Hu's arrest and that of three other Rio workers," National Party upper house Senate Leader Barnaby Joyce said.
Rio said the