Winston Peters 'rather brassed off about' missing Trump dinner after streets blocked

Winston Peters said the jammed New York streets were "an awful place" to be. Photo: RNZ
Winston Peters said the jammed New York streets were "an awful place" to be. Photo: RNZ

By Anneke Smith of RNZ 

Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters has once again been prevented from getting to a presidential reception on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly.

Peters was invited to Donald Trump's event on Tuesday night (local time) but couldn't get to the door after some New York streets were completely shut down.

"I'm rather brassed off about it. I'm sorry about that - but that's the way life goes. I might be able to make up for it before I go," he said.

The minister could be forgiven for having a sense of deja vu, given road blockades stopped him from getting to last year's reception too.

The streets around the UN headquarters are bustling and heavily policed during the week, with regular shutdowns as world leaders move around in motorcades.

French President Emmanuel Macron was filmed giving Trump a call from behind a barricade on Wednesday after his vehicle was stopped to make way for the US presidential motorcade.

Peters said the jammed streets were "an awful place" to be and if he'd known he would get stuck a second time, he would have made different arrangements.

"There was a possibility [of speaking to Trump] and in this business, being in this country, way out in the southwest Pacific called New Zealand, you take every chance you possibly get. You don't blow anything."

Peters has held several bilateral meetings in New York and heard Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speak at the fifth annual Crimea Platform Summit.

He reiterated New Zealand's position that the UN Charter prohibits the use of force to change internationally-recognised borders and any attempt to annex occupied territories is illegal.

"The reason New Zealand continues to play its part, despite our distance from the battlefields of eastern Ukraine, is that we recognise that a violation of sovereignty anywhere is a violation everywhere, and that respecting Ukraine's sovereignty remains critical to the future of international peace and security," he told the summit.

Speaking afterwards, Peters said Zelenskyy had expressed Ukraine's gratitude for the support it had received from other countries.

Peters said while the UN was never going to stop the conflict, it was a good sounding board for countries to air their positions, and there was no doubt in this conflict as to who was in the wrong.

Asked if there was any scope for New Zealand to offer more support to Ukraine, Peters said he could see the government doing more at a practical level.

Deploying troops on the ground, however, was an entirely different matter that would require serious consultation, he said.

Peters also sat down with Canadian counterpart Anita Anand in just one of a series of bilateral meetings he's having on the sidelines of leaders' week.

The minister said the pair had similarities, with Anand born in Nova Scotia and one side of Peters' family hailing from there, and he wanted to see both countries working much closer together.

"We made a commitment that we're going to step up our arrangements and our association and our collective work together.

"Honestly, if you look at the Five Eyes countries, the country that we've least dealt with is Canada and I can tell you from experience it's because of far too many political appointments rather than career experts in the job, and we're setting out to correct that."

The Five Eyes nations are Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the US.

Peters didn't have specifics in terms of increased cooperation, but says New Zealand would increase its consultation with Canada and scope out further projects the nations could work on together.

"Countries like Canada and New Zealand need to do more together. We are very, very similar in so many ways."

Peters will deliver his speech in the general debate on Saturday morning (NZ time) where he will set out New Zealand's position on the question of Palestinian statehood.