Australian PM Tony Abbott Tells Scotland Yes Vote For Independence Is 'Not In World's Interest'

Tony Abbott Takes On The Scots

Australian Prime Minister has urged Scotland to stay in the UK, arguing a Yes got for independence would be "cheered" by those who are "not friends" of justice and freedom.

An independent Scotland would not be in the best interests of the international community, Tony Abbott warned Saturday, weighing into the long-running referendum campaign in an outspoken attack on independence.

After a whole host of live television debates, leaflet drops and doorstepping, Scots will finally get to answer the question, 'Should Scotland be an independent country?' on September 18.

Today, Abbott, elected the Commonwealth country's 28th prime minister last year, became the latest international leader to voice his concerns after US president Barack Obama said his administration had a "deep interest" in ensuring the United Kingdom remained united.

Abbott has warned the UK should stay united

Abbott, who spent two years at the University of Oxford, told the Times: "What the Scots do is a matter for the Scots and not for a moment do I presume to tell Scottish voters which way they should vote.

"But as a friend of Britain, as an observer from afar, it's hard to see how the world would be helped by an independent Scotland.

"I think that the people who would like to see the break-up of the United Kingdom are not the friends of justice, not the friends of freedom, and that the countries that would cheer at the prospect of the break-up with the United Kingdom are not the countries whose company one would like to keep."

The Yes campaign, led primarily by the Scottish National Party, believes the nation would be strengthened by independence but the UK government is opposed to the breakaway.

Turnout in the historic ballot is widely expected to be high - it has been suggested as many of 80% of those registered to vote will choose to do so.

A Yes Scotland spokesman said: "Independence seems to be working well for Australia.

"These comments have echoes of Lord George Robertson's "forces of darkness" speech in April which was widely ridiculed, even by No supporters, as one of the anti-independence campaign's most outlandish scare stories.

"The decision about Scotland's future is one for the people of Scotland to make - a point that even David Cameron asserts. After a Yes vote, Scotland will take her place as a normal and valued member of the international community - just as Australia did when she gained independence at the turn of the century."

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