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   Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities
                      Exchange Act of 1934

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[ ]       Preliminary Proxy Statement
[ ]       Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as
          permitted by Rule 14A-6 (e)(2))
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[X]       Soliciting Materials Pursuant to ss.240.14a-11c or
          SS.240.14a-12



               Aberdeen Australia Equity Fund Inc
        (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

                        Phillip Goldstein
   (Name of Person(s)Filing Proxy Statement if other then the
                           Registrant)


Opportunity Partners L.P.
 60 Heritage Drive, Pleasantville, NY 10570
(914) 747-5262 // Fax: (914) 747-5258

March 31, 2003

URGENT: IAF SHAREHOLDERS NEED TO ACT NOW!

Dear Fellow Shareholder:

You and I appear to be the victims of an agreement that looks a
lot like greenmail.

The board of directors of Aberdeen Australia Equity Fund ("IAF"
or our "Fund") and its largest shareholder, Bankgesellschaft
Berlin AG (the "Bank") recently negotiated a deal whereby our
Fund will buy the Bank's shares but almost nobody else's.  In
return, the Bank agreed to vote its shares (1) for leveraging
IAF's assets, (2) for issuing preferred stock that can make open-
ending virtually impossible, (3) for an increased management fee
and (4) against a shareholder proposal to open-end our Fund.  The
Bank's investment professionals ordinarily would never vote this
way. Why now?  The answer is that its vote is a quid pro quo for
a discriminatory tender offer that will allow the Bank (but
hardly any other shareholders) to sell virtually all its shares
back to our Fund.  In other words, the Bank has agreed to barter
its votes for a chance to exit IAF at the expense of other
shareholders.  Both the Bank and IAF's management know that non-
tendering shareholders will suffer as a result of the Bank's
vote.  Aberdeen will benefit by continuing to collect advisory
fees indefinitely and the Bank will be gone.  Only the non-
tendering shareholders, i.e., almost every shareholder other than
the Bank will bear the full brunt of their treachery!.

How did this situation come about and what can we do about it?
Please read on.

Bankgesellschaft Berlin AG is a German bank that was on the verge
of financial collapse just a few years ago due to defaults on its
risky real estate loans.  It was bailed out by a capital
injection of $1.62 billion from its largest shareholder, the city-
state of Berlin.  On the other hand, the Bank's investments in
closed-end funds, which it purchased at a discount to net asset
value ("NAV") and sold at or close to NAV, usually as a result of
pressure from the Bank or another shareholder activist, were
bright spots in an otherwise bleak financial picture.

With several successes under its belt, on October 22, 2002, the
Bank purchased over five million shares of IAF in a private
transaction representing more than 30% of the outstanding shares
at a discount to NAV in excess of 20%.  Its goal, according to
its SEC filing, was "to maximiz[e] the return on its investment
[by among other things] urging the board of the Fund to initiate
the process of open-ending the Fund."  Open-ending would
eliminate the discount for all shareholders.  Armed with its huge
position in our Fund, it would have been fairly easy for the Bank
to achieve an open-ending.

Two months later, the Bank made its move.  In a filing with the
SEC, it disclosed its intent to (1) elect four nominees to the
board of directors, (2) propose terminating the investment
management agreements between our Fund and two Aberdeen
affiliates, and (3) eliminate "Aberdeen" from our Fund's name and
rename it "The Australia Equity Fund."  What was the response
from Aberdeen and the directors that owed their positions to
Aberdeen?  Read on.

While the Bank was struggling to avoid insolvency, Aberdeen Asset
Management, our Fund's investment advisor, was having its own
problems.  In the United Kingdom where it enjoyed a major
presence, it was being attacked by shareholders, politicians, the
press and the Financial Services Authority, Britain's SEC as the
chief villain in a scandal involving so-called split capital
trusts, closed-end funds with several classes of shares and/or
debt.  Since early 2000, as stock markets around the world began
to fall, common shareholders in the highly leveraged split
capital trusts watched helplessly as their investments melted
away to virtually nothing.  Investors lost their life savings and
Aberdeen was being blamed for it.  (Incredibly, Aberdeen is now
proposing that we vote to leverage IAF without fully disclosing
how investors in its split capital trusts have suffered from
leverage.)

With the prospect of a hefty fine from the FSA and an avalanche
of lawsuits from shareholders that were wiped out in its split
capital trusts, Aberdeen's own business was deteriorating.  Its
stock price followed suit, falling more than 90% from its peak in
2000.  Aberdeen knew that if IAF were to open-end, its fees would
quickly decline due to shareholder redemptions.  Desperate to
derail the Bank's plan to open-end IAF, Aberdeen and our Fund's
lawyers concocted an unethical scheme to frustrate any attempt by
shareholders to democratically effect change.  Specifically, the
board of directors adopted a number of measures designed to keep
our Fund closed-end with Aberdeen in charge.  Knowing they would
almost certainly lose in a fair election, the measures the board
adopted are as draconian as anything this side of Baghdad.  They
include:

    Establishing "qualifications" for nominees for director that
    have nothing to do with the duties of a director and that
    virtually no shareholders can meet.  (The board made sure to
    exempt its own members from these "qualifications.")

    Adopting a bylaw requiring a director to be elected by a
    majority of all outstanding shares.  Accordingly, an
    incumbent director could conceivably keep his position even
    if a challenger receives 90% of the votes cast.

    Adopting a bylaw that provides that a shareholder owning
    more than 10% of the outstanding shares (like the Bank)
    cannot vote its shares for directors.

    Adopting bylaws that make any director who is not an
    incumbent a "second class" director by depriving him of the
    power to undo certain measures implemented by the
    incumbents.

Are these things legal?  The answer is almost certainly "No"
because they are a breach of fiduciary duty since their primary
purpose is to impede or frustrate the ability of shareholders to
vote for change.  If a shareholder sued, the court would almost
certainly invalidate them.  Ah, but there's the rub.  People get
away with lots of things that are illegal until somebody hauls
them into court.  In this instance, the Bank would have had to
hire a lawyer to challenge the board's outrageously anti-
democratic actions.  But, given the situation it was in, the
Bank's management did not fancy commencing litigation.
Meanwhile, stories appeared in the local German newspapers,
likely planted by Aberdeen, painting the Bank as a "raider."  The
Bank's upper management, already dealing with the fallout from
its near-collapse, must have been pained by these new
developments.  They could take the high road and litigate on
behalf of all shareholders or they could choose the path of least
resistance and try to cut a deal with Aberdeen.  Faced with a
choice of fight or flight, they chose, as we now know, flight.

With the Bank weakened and gun shy, Aberdeen pressed its
advantage.  It asked to meet with the Bank's people to propose a
deal that would allow the Bank to sell its shares for a quick
profit while insuring that Aberdeen would remain in control of
our Fund.  The Bank agreed to meet and in an undisclosed backroom
deal, Aberdeen and the Bank agreed that our Fund would conduct an
in kind tender offer for 40% of the outstanding shares at 90% of
NAV.  The reason the tender offer was in kind and not for cash
was to insure that the Bank would be able to dispose of
substantially all its shares.  It knew that almost no small
shareholders would tender for shares in 25 or 30 Australian
companies whereas in a cash tender offer, far more small
shareholders would tender.  If that happened, the offer would
likely be oversubscribed, in which case the Bank would be left
with a sizeable position in our Fund after the tender offer.

In return, the Bank agreed to vote its shares for all of
management's self-serving anti-shareholder proposals.  The Bank
was willing to do that only because it thought it would not have
to bear the burden that its agreement to vote would impose on the
non-tendering shareholders, i.e., higher management fees and more
leverage.  To add insult to injury, the Bank, having forsaken its
goal of maximizing the return on its investment as a result of
Aberdeen's unscrupulous tactics, made public a letter in which it
"applauded" the in kind tender offer for being "in the best
interests of the Fund's stockholders."  The truth is the Bank
would never vote for Aberdeen's proposals in the absence of a
sweetheart deal to allow it to exit our Fund.

               How IAF Shareholders Can Fight Back

With the annual meeting approaching, we have been fed lies and
deception regarding matters upon which we are to vote.  What can
shareholders do?  Obviously, we should vote against management's
proposals.  But, you surely don't need me to tell you that.  The
problem is that even if shareholders overwhelmingly vote against
the proposals, they may pass anyway because the Bank's stake is
so large.

Fortunately, there is something else that we can do.  In order
for the Bank to participate in the proposed tender offer, it
needs to get what is called an exemptive order from the SEC.
Normally, the SEC might not scrutinize a request for such an
exemptive order too carefully.  However, if shareholders protest
to the SEC, it may refuse to give the Bank an exemptive order.
Without it, the Bank will not be able to tender its shares and it
will be stuck in a leveraged fund with high fees just like the
small investors it was all too willing to see screwed.  Then, the
Bank may feel compelled to do the right thing, i.e., to take
action that will benefit all shareholders.

Therefore, I urge you to write a brief letter to the SEC asking
that it not issue an exemptive order to the Bank because the
proposed in kind tender offer is discriminatory and because the
settlement between the Bank and Aberdeen is harmful to other
shareholders.  You should  also request that the SEC hold a
hearing before an order is issued.  If the SEC does its job,
i.e., protect small investors, there is a good chance that we can
prevent the Bank and Aberdeen from enjoying the fruits of their
secret anti-shareholder deal.

If you have any questions, please call me or email me at
oplp@optonline.net.

Very truly yours,

Phillip Goldstein
President
Kimball & Winthrop, Inc.
General Partner