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New Solomon Islands PM tries to placate discontent with Australian
occupation
By Mike Head
6 May 2006
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Facing growing hostility toward the Australian-led takeover
of the Solomon Islands, the newly-elected Prime Minister, Manasseh
Sogavare, has suggested his government would assume more control,
particularly over the countrys finances. At the same time,
he pledged his support for the continued presence of hundreds
of Australian troops and police.
Sogavares comments reveal that he is walking a fine line
between imposing the political and economic dictates of the three-year-old
Australian-led Regional Assistance Mission to the Solomon Islands
(RAMSI) and the resentment fuelled by the continuing social misery
experienced by the majority of the South Pacific states
550,000 people.
Sogavare was elected prime minister by 28 to 22 votes among
his fellow MPs in a secret ballot on Wednesday. He defeated former
cabinet minister Fred Fono, who was backed by the caretaker government
of Snyder Rini. The vote came eight days after Rini resigned following
widespread anti-government rioting. Sogavare heads a fragile five-party
coalition, formed after days of intense horse-trading.
As the election took place, hundreds of Australian soldiers
in camouflage gear, armed with high-powered automatic rifles,
were deployed throughout the capital Honiara, while helicopters
patrolled overhead. Armed Australian Federal Police (AFP), including
sharpshooters on the roof and a riot squad hidden behind a wall,
were on guard at parliament house.
It was another highly visible display of Australian force,
following the dispatch of nearly 400 soldiers and police to the
Solomons last month to bolster the RAMSI contingent to more than
1,000. The reinforcements were sent in after an eruption of serious
social and political unrest on April 18, which began with demonstrations
outside parliament and ended in the looting and burning of Honiaras
Chinatown, together with commercial and luxury premises associated
with the RAMSI occupation.
The immediate trigger for the disturbances was a vote by MPs
to install a notoriously corrupt cabinet led by Rini, after the
previous Australian-backed government, in which he had been deputy
prime minister, was thrown out in a general election on April
5. After being protected by RAMSI troops for more than a week,
Rini resigned to make way for a fresh parliamentary ballot.
While Sogavares victory this week was greeted by cheers
and jubilation outside parliament, seemingly in stark contrast
to the anger that met Rinis win, the root causes of the
discontent go far deeper. They lie in the stark social inequality
produced by RAMSIs rule, and the blatant profiteering by
local business and political elites that have collaborated with
it.
Alongside a bubble economy of upmarket hotels,
supermarkets, shops, Honiaras squatter camps have grown,
full of young people employed on very low wages or unable to find
any work. In Honiara, it is estimated that each wage earner supports
25 people on average.
In an attempt to placate the resulting discontent, Sogavare
felt compelled to suggest that local officials could begin to
replace the RAMSI administrators who have occupied the top posts
in the finance ministry since mid-2003. Speaking after his election,
Sogavare said that where qualified and capable Solomon
Islanders were available they should again take over decision-making
roles in key areas. One of them is the Department of Finance,
he said.
This is a sore point because, as well as controlling the police,
prisons, courts and legal system, RAMSI has 80 civilian
advisers running government departments, including Finance.
Among them is the Australian-appointed Accountant-General Joanne
Hoffmann, who has blocked disbursements of funds for various projects.
The Economic Reform Unit monitors taxation compliance,
coordinates and drives economic reform and drafts
laws to facilitate foreign investment. Another financial
management strengthening program has 17 Australians supervising
budget strategies and debt management.
At the same time, Sogavare sent a series of clear signals to
Canberra that he would faithfully implement its agenda. RAMSI
is doing a good job, restoring law and order, delivery of essential
services, institutional strengthening, he said. These
are good things anyone in their right mind would support.
Significantly, Sogavare said he would not be pursuing Rinis
formal diplomatic protest to Australia over a leaked RAMSI email
that provided a partial glimpse of Canberras colonial-style
domination.
The email from a RAMSI finance department official, Mick Shannon,
quoted the Australian High Commissioner, Patrick Cole, describing
all three candidates for the prime ministership on April 18Rini,
Sogavare and former opposition leader Job Dudley Tausingaas
depressing choices. The email expressed concerns that
changes in the government could result in Australia having less
of a voice to guide economic and fiscal policy.
According to the email, Cole had asked Foreign Minister Laurie
Chan and his father, Sir Thomas Chan, a prominent local businessman,
why Rini had been chosen as prime minister when they had apparently
assured Cole he would not.
In the lead up to Wednesdays parliamentary ballot, Rini,
as caretaker prime minister, wrote to Australian Prime Minister
John Howard requesting Coles withdrawal for interfering
in Solomons politics. Howard contemptuously dismissed the
request, declaring that he had full confidence in Cole. As for
Rini, his complaint to Howard was another measure of the nervousness
in the entire political elite about the turn in public sentiment
against RAMSI.
One of Sogavares decisions has the potential to provoke
an immediate confrontation with Canberra. Yesterday he appointed
to his cabinet two jailed MPs, Charles Dausabea, as National Security
and Police Minister, and Nelson Nee, as Culture and Tourism
Minister. RAMSI had arrested them 11 days earlier on charges of
inciting the April 18 riots.
RAMSI officials have insisted that the two men are dangerous
criminals who must remain behind bars. Howard last night issued
a blunt warning of financial retaliation, saying the appointments
had serious consequences for reputation and standing of
the Solomon Islands both regionally and in the wider international
community.
Sogavares record
Sogavare has a history of demagogically criticising Australia
and posing as a champion of ordinary people, for electoral purposes,
while functioning as a central player in the local political and
business establishment.
Formerly a finance department chief, he served as prime minister
in 2000-01 after a virtual coup led by the Malaitan Eagle Force,
a militia based on people from the countrys second most
populous island, Malaita. Together with Sir Allan Kemakeza, his
deputy prime minister and Rini, his finance minister, he cultivated
links with Taiwan, in return for aid and, reportedly, political
slush funds. After initially trying to block a general election,
he was defeated at the polls by a coalition led by Kemakeza and
Rini, who took office with Canberras blessing.
When this government resisted aspects of the economic restructuring
demanded by Canberra and the international financial institutions,
the Howard government cut off nearly all foreign funds to the
country, ultimately forcing Kemakeza to invite the
RAMSI intervention in July 2003. During this period, Sogavare
accused Australia of adopting a bullying and hypocritical
attitude. In 2003, he complained that the terms of the RAMSI intervention
infringed national sovereignty.
Last July, in a move to tap into the emerging disaffection,
Sogavare formed the Solomon Islands Social Credit Party, or SoCred.
At its launch, he accused Kemakeza, then the prime minister, of
being a puppet of Australia. SoCred proposes a scheme of cheap
central bank loans to finance development projects and business
ventures. It also advocates the tripling of public sector wages,
which are a tiny fraction of the salaries of RAMSI officials.
For all his posturing, Sogavare joined Rinis proposed
cabinet last month, and only switched to the opposition camp when
the depth of the hostility toward the government became clear.
After Wednesdays election, he said he would exercise responsible
economic management and discuss any intended fiscal policy changes
with donor nations, the World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund.
Sogavare also pledged to work closely with RAMSI to come down
on corruption like a tonne of bricks. Fighting corruption
has become code language for selectively cracking down on political
bribery as a means of enforcing economic restructuring
measures and tightening Australian control over the economy.
Over the past three years, RAMSI has used corruption charges
as a means of ousting from government anyone who has expressed
even mild reservations about its operations. Seven cabinet ministers
have been jailed, while Kemakeza and Rini and their benefactors,
dubbed the big fishes by local residents, have been
shielded from prosecution.
Combatting corruption has also become a means of
countering the influence of Taiwan and China and their wealthy
local supporters, who have been offering aid grants and payments
to politicians in return for diplomatic recognition and business
concessions. Sogavare has canvassed shifting diplomatic links
from Taipei to Beijing, which would be more in line with Canberras
foreign policy.
Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer and the Australian
diplomat who heads RAMSI, James Batley, welcomed Sogavares
promises to cooperate with RAMSI. Downer said he looked forward
to working with Sogavare, but immediately spelled out Canberras
determination to continue the RAMSI force regardless. We
have made no decision to reduce the numbers, he said, warning
that troops could remain for a long time.
If Sogavare fails to deliver Australias requirements,
he will soon face moves to oust him. As the Sydney Morning
Herald noted yesterday, The Howard government has repeatedly
said better financial controls are a non-negotiable prerequisite
for the more than $200 million a year Canberra is spending on
[RAMSI].
Such threats underscore the colonial character of the Australian
intervention. But the events of the past few weeksfrom the
unrest in Honiara to the manoeuvres of Sogavarehave also
revealed the increasingly explosive opposition that the RAMSI
occupation is generating.
See Also:
Solomon Islands PM quits amid
mounting opposition to Australian occupation
[26 April 2006]
Australian troops dispatched
to Solomon Islands to suppress local population
[21 April 2006]
Oppose Australia's
colonial-style intervention in the Solomons
[3 July 2003]
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