Justice Minister Judith Collins' dinner meeting with a senior Chinese border control official would have been highly beneficial for milk exporter Oravida - even if business matters were not discussed, says the former chief executive of a large New Zealand dairy export firm.
Collins is under fire after being forced to admit this week that she attended the dinner in Beijing at which her friend Stone Shi, Oravida's founder, and Julia Xu, the milk company's managing director, were also in attendance.
The Minister was on a taxpayer-funded visit to China and her husband, David Wong Tung, sits on Oravida's board.
Paul O'Brien, the former boss of Auckland-based EasiYo, which exports around $12 million worth of yoghurt in powder form to China annually, said getting all dairy products into the Chinese market had become much more difficult after Fonterra's botulism false alarm last year and introducing a border control official to a Government Minister would "absolutely" make the process easier and help "smooth the way" for Oravida.
"It enhances your own credibility, because if you can get an MP along you are held in high esteem," O'Brien said. "I would absolutely milk it wherever I could."