The first official Australian presence in Zimbabwe dates back to December 1954, when an Office of the Australian Trade Commission was established in Salisbury, the capital of the British Colony of Southern Rhodesia and the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, as a response to increasing Australian business interest and activity in the region.[2][3][4][5] The Assistant Trade Commissioner in South Africa, Gordon Knight, was appointed the first Trade Commissioner to the Federation in Salisbury.[6][7] The Trade Commission office remained until its closure in December 1965, following Rhodesia's Unilateral Declaration of Independence on 11 November 1965.
Following the conclusion of the Lancaster House Agreement that would allow for the independence of Zimbabwe in December 1979, an Australian Liaison Office (headed by career diplomat Charles Mott as the Special Representative[8]) was established in Salisbury on 23 December 1979, to "assist the Ceasefire Monitoring Contingent and election observers with political support and advice, and to serve as a direct point of contact between the Australian Government and the British Authorities in Salisbury."[2] With the formal independence of Zimbabwe and the election of a new government under Prime Minister Robert Mugabe, the Australian Liaison Office was formally upgraded to the status of High Commission from 18 April 1980.[2][9] The first Australian high commissioner to Zimbabwe, Jeremy Hearder, presented his letters of commission to the President of Zimbabwe, Canaan Banana, on 15 May 1980.[10] On 13 August 1981, Hearder was appointed as the non-resident high commissioner to Botswana, taking the post over from the Australian Embassy in South Africa.[11] Hearder also received non-resident accreditation as Australia's first ambassador to Mozambique from 7 June 1982.[12]
Relations between the two countries began to sour when the government in Zimbabwe began its controversial land reform programme, occupying farms owned by members of Zimbabwe's white minority, sometimes by force. Following evidence of violence and intimidation in the 2002 Presidential election, Australian Prime Minister John Howard, alongside South African president, Thabo Mbeki, and the Nigerian president, Olusegun Obasanjo, led efforts which resulted in Zimbabwe's suspension from the Commonwealth of Nations in 2002–2003.[13] With the voluntary departure of Zimbabwe from Commonwealth of Nations on 7 December 2003, the High Commission became an Embassy.
Zambia high commission
The Australian High Commission to Zambia in Lusaka, was opened on 1 August 1980 with the appointment of Michael Potts as the first acting high commissioner. However, from 18 May 1972 until 24 February 1983 the high commissioner resident in Dar-Es-Salaam, Tanzania, remained accredited to the country.[14] When the first resident high commissioner in Zambia, Ian James, was appointed in February 1983, responsibility for relations with Malawi, which had been held by the high commissioner to Tanzania since its independence in 1964,[15] was transferred to the new high commission in Lusaka, and he presented credentials as the first high commissioner to Malawi on 1 July 1983.[16][17] On 30 May 1988, the high commissioner Edwin Ride presented his credentials as non-resident ambassador to the President of Angola, José Eduardo dos Santos, marking the establishment of diplomatic relations between Angola and Australia.[18] When the high commission was closed for budgetary reasons on 14 June 1991, responsibility for relations with Zambia, alongside non-resident accreditation for Malawi and Angola, was transferred to the High Commission in Harare.[19]
^"Reshuffle of Trade Posts". The Age. No. 31, 085. Victoria, Australia. 18 December 1954. p. 3. Retrieved 17 October 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
^"G. P. H. Knight". Overseas Trading. 7 (4): 10. 30 December 1954. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
^ ab"Rhodesia". Australian Foreign Affairs Record. 51 (1): 670–671. December 1979. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
^"Independence of Malawi". Current Notes on International Affairs. 35 (7). Department of External Affairs: 52. July 1964. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
^ ab"Australian Representation Overseas". Australian Foreign Affairs Record. 54 (7). National Library of Australia (Trove): Department of Foreign Affairs: 376. July 1983. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
^"Australia and Africa". Australian Foreign Affairs Record. 53 (11). Department of Foreign Affairs: 663. November 1982. Retrieved 31 October 2022. Our mission in Lusaka has been operating under an Acting High Commissioner, but is soon to be upgraded to a full High Commission. It will then take over responsibility for Malawi. It currently has visiting and reporting responsibilities for Angola and we anticipate it will be responsible for Namibia once that country achieves independence. Our post in Harare has accreditation to Botswana and Mozambique.
^Hayden, Bill (26 February 1984). "Diplomatic appointment: Zimbabwe"(Media Release). ParlInfo: Minister for Foreign Affairs, Australian Government. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
^Hayden, Bill (15 November 1987). "Diplomatic appointment - Zimbabwe"(Media Release). ParlInfo: Minister for Foreign Affairs, Australian Government. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
^Evans, Gareth (4 April 1990). "Diplomatic appointment - Zimbabwe"(Media Release). ParlInfo: Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade, Australian Government. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
^Evans, Gareth (1 February 1994). "Diplomatic appointment: Southern Africa"(Media Release). ParlInfo: Minister for Foreign Affairs, Australian Government. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
^Wong, Penny (20 December 2022). "Ambassador to Zimbabwe". Minister for Foreign Affairs, Australian Government. Archived from the original(Media Release) on 20 December 2022. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
^"High Commissioner to Zambia". Australian Foreign Affairs Record. 57 (10): 968. October 1986. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
^"Australian Representation Overseas". Australian Foreign Affairs Record. 58 (1). Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade: 36. January 1987. Retrieved 9 November 2022 – via National Library of Australia (Trove).
^"High Commissioner to Zambia". Australian Foreign Affairs Record. 59 (9): 391. September 1988. Retrieved 17 October 2022.