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Further opposition to Australias takeover in the Solomon
Islands
By Will Marshall
24 February 2005
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In another sign of growing tensions in the Solomon Islands,
Prime Minister Allan Kemakeza has dismissed two ministers over
their criticisms of the Australian-led intervention force and,
on February 9, survived a no-confidence vote in his government.
Sacked Finance and Treasury Minister Francis Zama has openly
criticised the Australian-led Regional Assistance Mission (RAMSI)
for violating the countrys national sovereignty. Former
Communications Minister Patterson Oti, who was ousted on February
3, was also critical of the Australian presence.
The Australian-led intervention in July 2003, which Canberra
pressured the Solomon Islands to accept, resulted in a virtual
takeover of key posts in the police, finance ministry and prisons.
As finance minister, Zama worked closely with RAMSI personnel
for the past 16 months and has first hand knowledge of the degree
to which Australian officials have taken control.
The crisis erupted following a parliamentary debate in early
February on three reports reviewing RAMSIs first year of
operations. These were the Review Report by the Intervention Taskforce
Committee, the Cabinet Committees Report on the Taskforces
Review and the Parliamentary Foreign Relations Committee Review
Report.
Zama and Oti were part of a group of six ministers who wrote
a cabinet committee report on RAMSI, recommending its police role
continue for five years, but proposing a scaling back of its involvement
in the administrative apparatus. In particular, the report called
for the withdrawal of Australian public servants from the government
finance sector by the middle of the year.
Pointing to the neo-colonial nature of the Australian takeover,
Zama told the Solomons Star on February 3: Look at
the Magistrate, High Court judges, Public Solicitor, Director
of Public Prosecution, they [Australian officials] are all there,
it is sad. Zama explained that five Australians were taking
top posts in the Finance Department, while another 12 were acting
as technical advisers. He openly denounced the role
of Australian officials, declaring: These people did not
bring anything to the department.
In the course of the parliamentary debate, other ministers
were critical. Fisheries Minister Paul Maenu called for RAMSIs
legal immunity to be removed from the Facilitation Bill. The provision
is a source of growing friction as villagers face the full force
of the law, often for minor offences, while RAMSI personnel are
immune from prosecution whatever they do. Maenu accused RAMSI
of flagrantly violating the basic rights of ordinary people.
Minister of Police, National Security and Justice Michael Maina
was also objected to RAMSIs pervasive domination. Calling
for a more unified approach in policing, he said: If we
are not careful, it will demoralise Solomon Islands police officers.
In sacking Zama, Kemakeza accused the finance minister of breaching
cabinet solidarity during the parliamentary debate. Your
recent display of adverse actions has put your political conduct
and attitude as a crown minister in question, he wrote in
the dismissal letter.
Zama, however, has pointed the finger at Canberra. Asked by
the Solomons Star about Australian involvement in his sacking,
he declared: I would not rule it out. I honestly would not
rule that out because my statements had made headlines in Australia.
The sackings left the Kemakeza government in a precarious position.
In the lead up to the no-confidence motion on February 9, a top
government source had told the Solomons Star that
the government was split and may well lose power. Behind the scenes,
the prime minister reportedly held meetings with a number of MPs
in a desperate attempt to shore up support. He appointed two opposition
parliamentarians to fill vacant cabinet posts.
In the event, the no-confidence motion failed to materialise.
Its moverformer Prime Minister Bart Ulufaaluhas
long been a Kemakeza critic. Ulufaalu made his speech denouncing
Kemakeza for involvement in illegal activities, including
a failed pyramid scheme. He condemned the government for coming
to power in 2001 at the point of a gun. He also cautiously criticised
Canberras influence declaring that Kemakeza was controlled
by outsiders.
However, after speaking for over an hour, Ulufaalu withdrew
his motion. His only explanation was that there was a lack of
time to debate the issue properly. While the press suggested that
he simply did not have the numbers, it is also possible that other
factors were involvedincluding threats and intimidation
by RAMSI officials.
The ousting of Kemakeza and the installation of a less subservient
government would create a major political headache for Canberra.
Prior to the RAMSI intervention, the Australian press branded
Kemakeza as a symbol of everything that was corrupt and wrong
in the Solomon Islands. The Australian, for instance, denounced
him as a bad-penny prime minister, wrapped tightly
in subterfuge, allegations of bribery and vote-buying and political
uncertainty.
There was no doubt an element of truth in the accusations.
Kemakeza, a former policeman with close connections to one of
the countrys island-based militiasthe Malaitan Eagle
Force (MEF)has had a chequered past. But having rubberstamped
the Australian military intervention and all of RAMSIs subsequent
actions, Kemakeza is now regarded as an important asset. If anything,
the allegations of corruption are a convenient means for keeping
him in line.
In the course of the last 18 months, RAMSI has arrested four
cabinet ministers on various charges, but Kemakeza has remained
untouched. Moves to take him to court in 2003 stalled after Australian
Prime Minister John Howard very publicly expressed his confidence
in his Solomon Islands counterpart. Others have not been as fortunate.
Former foreign minister Alex Bartlett is in custody charged
with arson and demanding money with menace. Bartlett is a leading
MEF figure, who showed a marked reluctance to disarm the militia.
It is quite possible that RAMSI officials saw him as a political
dangera rival to Kemakeza and a potential focus for the
growing opposition to the Australian presence.
The latest to be arrested is Police and National Security Minister
Michael Maina. On February 18, a little over a week after he called
for a revision of RAMSIs policing role in parliament, he
was detained and charged over an alleged overpayment of $A200,000
in 2002 into a bank account he controlled.
Whatever backroom machinations were involved, the Kemakeza
government has survived the no-confidence motion. But it is not
in a strong position. Government MPs have already expressed their
disagreement with Kemakezas decision to bring opposition
members into the cabinet. At the same time, the prime minister
is losing popular support because of his close identification
with RAMSI.
The criticisms of disgruntled ministers are just a pale reflection
of far broader anger over Australian domination of the country.
In an article published on January 18 entitled RAMSI, the
Police and the Future, Bishop Tony Brown painted the following
picture of life under RAMSIs rule:
Finally, as a general comment, I would say that there
is a major disparity between RAMSIs rhetoric tying for 10
to 15 years in the Solomon, bringing peace and prosperity, and
[the] reality of reemerging violence, increasing poverty and unemployment,
high school fees, a downward-spiraling economy, higher inflation
and lower incomes, declining medical services, ongoing corruption
in government ministries, lack of planning and implementation
of how Solomon Islanders will competently run all parts of their
own government, crumbling infrastructure, millions and millions
of RAMSI funds spent on Australians with the money going back
to Australia with minimum cash benefit for Solomon Islanders,
continued centralising of everything in Honiara, and so on.
Referring to the murder of Australian Protective Service officer
Adam Dunning in December, Brown warned that if RAMSI did not change
its relations with the general population, it would be seen more
and more as an occupying army and more anti-RAMSI incidents will
occur. The behaviour of RAMSI officials is, however, inherent
in the colonial character of their mission, which is not to better
the lot of Solomons Islanders, but to look after Australian interests.
As a result, hostility, opposition and active resistance to the
Australian presence can only further increase.
See Also:
Australian policeman murdered
in the Solomon Islands
[20 January 2005]
Solomon Islands: prison
protest over lack of rights under Australian intervention
[18 August 2004]
An exchange on the
Australian intervention in the Solomon Islands
[31 March 2004]
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