The United States has Air Force One, a plane that can refuel in midair and act as a presidential command center. New Zealand has "Betty," an aging Boeing 757 that officials on Monday acknowledged was so prone to breakdowns they'd sent an empty backup to ensure Prime Minister Chris Hipkins didn't get stranded in China, where he's leading a trade delegation. Officials were quick to point out they had sent the plane's twin only as far as Manila, about 80% of the distance from Wellington to Beijing. Back in New Zealand, acting PM Carmel Sepuloni was left to explain, reports the AP. "If we didn't have a backup plan and something did happen ... then not only would they be stranded in China, but the cost that that would incur ... would outweigh having a backup aircraft waiting somewhere just in case," she said.
The twin Royal New Zealand Air Force planes that transport the prime minister are about 30 years old and are due to be replaced by 2030. Over the years, they've regularly broken down. In 2016, then-Prime Minister John Key was on his way to India with a delegation when they got stuck in Australia, until a backup plane was sent from New Zealand. Key was forced to cancel the Mumbai leg of his trip, a situation he described as "suboptimal." Sepuloni said she didn't think the plane, which is sometimes affectionately called Betty, posed a physical danger to Hipkins and the 80 people traveling with him. "My understanding is there hasn't been any event midair, or whilst in transit, that should cause any concern," she said.
Political rivals were quick to jump on the situation. "This government declared a climate emergency and says we need to deal seriously with China," said David Seymour, leader of the opposition ACT party. "This one gesture has made a joke of both the government's climate emergency and its will to be taken seriously by a country that has an expanding blue-water navy in our backyard." Sepuloni acknowledged the situation wasn't OK. "We recognize, yes, our kit needs to be updated," Sepuloni said. "And so there's a plan in place for doing that. We're just not at the point where that's happening right now."
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