|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Political tensions continue in Vanuatu after Sope government's
removal
By Frank Gaglioti
23 April 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email
The political situation remains tense in the small South Pacific
state of Vanuatu following the ousting of Barak Sope's government
in a no-confidence motion at a special parliamentary sitting on
April 13. Facing defeat in the vote, which was ordered by the
Acting Chief Justice, Sope's supporters walked out of the chamber,
leaving the opposition parties to vote themselves into office.
The events brought to a head three weeks of political manoeuvring
in the former joint British-French colony of New Hebrides, whose
187,000 people are spread across 83 volcanic islands some 2,000
kilometres north east of Australia. The main protagonists have
been Sope, a nationalist politician who has sought to evade an
Asian Development Bank economic restructuring program imposed
in 1997, and the new prime minister, Edward Natapei, who has pledged
to adhere to the bank's Comprehensive Reform Program (CRP).
Sope attempted to block the parliamentary session by calling
a state of emergency, but failed to win the backing of the police
chief. He also swore in two Green MPs as cabinet ministers at
the last minute in an unsuccessful bid to cling to office. As
the vote to remove the government was taken, members of the 300-strong
paramilitary Vanuatu Mobile Force dispersed hundreds of Sope's
supporters outside the building.
Sope's Melanesian Progressive Party has declared its intention
to reverse the outcome by winning back some of the MPs who defected
from his government and calling a new no-confidence motion to
remove the new administration.
Holding only a two-seat majority in parliament, the new coalition
appears unlikely to be any more stable than its predecessors over
the past decadeduring which nine governments have fallen.
Natapei's commitment to the CRP will mean further cuts in living
standards for Vanuatu's workers and rural subsistence farmers,
most of whom live in poverty.
Under the CRP, previous governments have already introduced
a 12.5 percent value-added tax, made a 10 percent cut in the public
service and reduced the number of government ministries from 13
to 9. The Asian Development Bank is currently demanding further
cuts to public spending, tariff reductions, financial restructuring
and removal of restrictions on foreign investment.
While in opposition Natapei, who heads the Vanua'aku Pati,
sought Western support by advocating a return to the CRP and by
opposing Sope's dealings with two Asian-born businessmen, to whom
Sope had turned as part of his efforts to find alternative sources
of funding and investment. On taking office, Natapei immediately
announced an inquiry into Sope's business transactions.
The political turmoil in Vanuatu's capital Port Vila began
when eight members of Sope's coalition government defected to
the opposition on March 27. The defectors were members of the
Union of Moderate Parties (UMP), led by Foreign Minister, and
former prime minister, Serge Vohor. Having acquired 27 votes in
parliament against the government's 23, the opposition gave notice
of a no-confidence vote to be held on April 3. Sope, however,
went to the President, Father John Bani, and advised him to dissolve
parliament and call fresh electionsa request that Bani refused.
When parliament resumed on April 3, the Speaker, Paul Ren Taria
Sope supporterruled that he could not proceed with the no-confidence
vote because Sope had filed a defamation action against the 27
MPs who had signed the motion for his ouster. Their resolution
declared that Sope was a criminal who was associated
with Asian crooks and that his government was involved
in illicit money laundering.
On April 6 the opposition, led by Natapei, countered with a
Supreme Court writ ordering Tari to reconvene the parliament and
allow the no-confidence motion. When Tari recalled parliament
on April 10, however, he immediately closed proceedings without
allowing any resolutions, triggering the second opposition Supreme
Court writ on April 12. Finally, threatened with being jailed
for contempt of court, Tari allowed the vote on April 13.
Sope's evolution
Sope has been a pivotal figure in Vanuatu politics since the
British and French authorities granted independence in 1980. Over
that period he has evolved from a nationalist politician with
an anti-colonial stance to a businessman involved in various schemes
to stave off the collapse of Vanuatu's economy.
An early leading figure in the Vanua'aku Pati (VP), he espoused
Pacific nationalism as a student in Fiji and in the 1980s backed
Libyan involvement in the Pacific region as a counterweight to
the influence of the main regional powers, Australia and New Zealand.
Sope supported secessionist movements in East Timor, West Papua
and neighbouring New Caledonia, which is still a French colony.
In 1987-88, he sought to oust prime minister Father Walter Lini
as VP leader. Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea offered
military support to Lini. Accused of planning an uprising, Sope
was jailed for four months before being released on appeal.
In recent times, Sope has again employed anti-Western rhetoric,
appealing to Melanesian nationalism. Last year, he called Australian
Prime Minister John Howard a bully for imposing sanctions
on Fiji, implying support for the anti-Indian communalism of George
Speight and his backers.
Sope became Prime Minister in late 1999, having tabled a no-confidence
motion in the unpopular VP-led government of Donald Kalpokas,
which had sought to implement the CRP. Criticising Kalpokas for
being too heavily influenced by foreign advisers, Sope vowed to
revise the 12.5 percent consumption tax and modify the CRP.
Sope's government consisted of a fragile five-party coalition.
While officially remaining committed to the CRP, he informed parliament
that his government was ready to stop borrowing from the Asian
Development Bank. He sacked a number of government bureaucrats
who were hired by the previous government as key proponents of
the CRP and replaced them with his own personnel.
His economic policies and associations with two Asian businessmen
came under sustained attack from the opposition and media proprietors.
Sope appointed Dihn Van Than to head Air Vanuatu and Anarendra
Nath Gosh as a roving ambassador. Sope issued Gosh
with government bonds and bank guarantees worth $US10 million,
as part of a get-rich-quick scheme whereby Gosh would sell Vanuatu
gold and silver coins. Natapei has declared that he will strip
Than of his Vanuatu passport and remove Gosh's diplomatic status.
Sope had a running battle with Marc Neil-Jones, the editor
of the Vanuatu Trading Post, the country's only non-government
news source. The newspaper ran a campaign against Sope's business
connections and accused him of supporting money laundering by
international criminal syndicates. Sope deported Neil-Jones to
Australia in January, but was forced to allow his return after
a Supreme Court challenge to the deportation.
Adding to the pressure on Sope was a July 31 deadline set by
the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)
for a list of offending countries, including Vanuatu and several
of its Pacific neighboursNauru, Niue, Palau and the Cook
Islandsto cease money laundering activities or face financial
sanctions. Natapei cited this deadline as one reason for moving
against Sope. Some US banks have already placed restrictions on
Vanuatu making transactions in US dollars.
Vanuatu has adopted banking secrecy laws to provide a tax-free
banking haven for transnational corporations and these measures
have allegedly provided money laundering facilities for Russian
and South American criminal gangs.
Vanuatu will not disclose the identity of depositors in its
55 banks but major companies such as Unelco, TVL, Boral Gas, Mobil,
Shell and financial institutions such as banks, trust companies
and accounting firms are known to avoid tax payments in their
home countries by using Vanuatu's banking facilities.
Similar operations have become a major source of revenue for
many small countries. Nearby Nauru, with a population of just
10,000, has 400 banks. The International Monetary Fund has estimated
that between $US5 trillion and $US 7 trillion26 percent
of the world's financial assetsare held in such tax havens.
Vanuatu's dependence on this financial activity has increased
as other sources of revenue and investmentagricultural exports
and tourismhave declined since 1995. The economic slide
worsened after the Asian financial crisis in 1997-98, followed
by currency devaluations in Fiji, the Solomon Islands and Papua
New Guinea, which undermined Vanuatu's exports, which are primarily
copra, beef, kava and cocoa.
In 1998 the Vanuatu National Provident Fund collapsed. Riots
broke out in Port Vila as it became clear that many people had
lost all their savings. The Vohor government was forced to organise
a refund of all depositors' fundsa crippling payout totalling
14 percent of the country's GDP. Investors withdrew funds from
the country, precipitating a 2 percent fall in the country's GDP
during 1998.
Australian pressure
While the Australian government has not officially commented
on Sope's ouster, it has made no secret of its opposition to his
undermining of the CRP. On its web site, the Australian Department
of Foreign Affairs and Trade criticises Vanuatu's economic performance,
insists that the CRP must be strictly followed and asserts that
Vanuatu's tendency to seek budgetary assistance from individual
foreign benefactors suggests certain weaknesses in government
processes.
In 1997, a South Pacific Forum briefing document for Australian
Prime Minister Howard described Sope as an old radical
who was on the make in his business ventures. It stated
that transparency and accountability run counter to Sope's
instincts and interests. Marked for Australian eyes
only, the document was leaked to the media.
With the departure of the British and French, Australian governments
have sought to include Vanuatu within Canberra's economic and
strategic sphere of influence in the south-west Pacific. Australia
has become the largest aid donor to Vanuatu, but the aida
pitiful $A18 million a yearis conditional upon full compliance
with the CRP.
The Asian Development Bank has also withheld loans because
of delays in implementing the CRP, leaving Vanuatu governments
with little room to manoeuvre. According to the Australian Foreign
Affairs web site, Vanuatu's official reserves stood at just $A66.7
million last Juneenough to cover less than six months' imports.
Australian and international ruling circles are continuing
in the tradition of the colonial authorities who left Vanuatu
as one of the poorest states in the world in 1980. During the
nineteenth century, British and French settlers exploited the
sandalwood on the islands and established a trade in blackbirdingthe
abduction of islanders for forced labour in Australia and Fiji.
In 1887, the British and French authorities agreed to share
control over the islands and in 1906 established the joint condominium
of New Hebrides. Both powers maintained their own administrations
and education systems, however, leaving Vanuatu with three official
languagesFrench, English and Balsama, a form of pidgin Englishas
well as over 100 vernacular languages.
In the 1970s, differences between the British and French governments
over de-colonisation led to the establishment of local political
parties based on their alignments to Britain or France. Walter
Lini, an Anglican minister, founded the anglophone Vanua'aku Pati
and became the first prime minister, opposed by the francophone
UMP.
The French authorities also encouraged Melanesian organisations
on various islands. The most prominent of these, the Nagriamel
movement led by Jimmy Stevens, declared an independent state on
the island of Espiritu Santo in 1980. Papua New Guinea troops,
backed by Australian logistical support, put down the insurrection.
Lini remained in office until 1991 when he was ousted from
the VP leadership and formed the National United Party, initiating
a decade of unstable and shifting alliances. Politics in Vanuatu
remains the preserve of a small elite, largely based on local
allegiances and patronage. Regional loyalties, however, have been
undermined as rural villagers migrate to Port Vila and the regional
centre of Luganville on Espiritu Santo in search of work. One
in seven people now lives in Port Vila although there is little
industry in the town.
The business and political activities of the elite stand in
increasing contrast to the grinding poverty faced by most people.
Vanuatu's adult literacy rate of 34 percent is the lowest of any
Pacific nationand only one in five children attend school
beyond primary education. The average income of a rural familythe
majority of the populationis $US780 per annum.
Reporting last year on problems with implementing the CRP,
the Asian Development Bank warned of weaknesses in law enforcement
and insisted that public expectations will need to be managed
carefully to avoid a popular backlash against the CRP. Natapei's
pledge to revive the CRP is certain to lead to continuing opposition
and political fracturing.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |