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Canberra maintains aggressive stance toward Solomon Islands
government
By Rick Kelly
22 November 2006
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The tense standoff between the Australian and Solomon Islands
governments is continuing. After his efforts to defuse tensions
were rebuffed by Canberra, Solomons Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare
made a new threat to curtail the Australian-led the Regional Assistance
Mission to the Solomon Islands (RAMSI).
On November 14, Sogavare accused Australian personnel of involvement
in prostitution with local women and pledged to rescind RAMSIs
legal immunity. He also issued a statement the day before, instructing
Solomon Islanders to watch out for Australian agents in
the country; to watch out for dirty manipulative words to oust
the current government.
Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer immediately dismissed
the allegations, and suggested that Sogavare would prove unable
to alter RAMSIs legal status. For this to occur, the Solomons
parliament would have to revise or scrap the 2003 Facilitation
Act, which gave foreign forces sweeping powers, including immunity
from prosecution under local law.
The legislation, which preceded Australias military deployment,
was initially passed amid intense pressure and threats from the
Howard government. About 700 RAMSI personnel, including more than
200 soldiers and 250-300 police, now control the Solomon Islands
state apparatus, including the police, prisons, legal system,
government media, finance department and banking system.
Sogavares latest accusations come amid growing hostility
from ordinary Solomon Islanders toward the Australian forces.
The Howard government launched the military intervention in 2003
under a humanitarian banner, and even labelled the mission Helping
a friend.
Three years later, however, it has done nothing to alleviate
the wretched social conditions faced by the majority of the population.
A recent survey found that of the 50,000 people living in the
capital, Honiara, 17,000 live in impoverished illegal squatters
camps on government land. Numerous Solomon Islands media reports
have described the intense anti-RAMSI sentiment among unemployed
youth living in the squatter settlements.
The hostility has been fuelled by the vastly superior pay and
conditions afforded to Australian and other foreign personnel
in the country. RAMSI personnel live in isolated and relatively
lavish surrounds, reminiscent of those enjoyed by the countrys
former British colonial officials, and contribute nothing toward
the economy except artificially inflated property prices and a
boom in luxury items.
The heavy-handed operations of Australian police have also
antagonised the population. RAMSI personnel were targeted during
riots that erupted in Honiara in April over attempts to thwart
the outcome of national elections. Amid corruption allegations,
the parliament chose Snyder Rini as prime minister despite the
electoral routing of the previous pro-RAMSI government, in which
he had been deputy prime minister. The violence broke out after
Australian police fired tear gas into a demonstration outside
parliament.
Anger has continued to mount. In a revealing incident on November
11, a crowd in Honiara attacked two Australian police who had
attempted to arrest a local man on assault charges. The group
bombarded the police with rocks, and were only deterred when the
Australians fired warning shots. I am very concerned that
if people continue to put the police into life threatening situations
it will only be a matter of time before someone is seriously injured
or even killed, police commissioner Shane Castles declared.
Sogavare, who came to power within days of the April riots,
is highly conscious of the social powder keg he is sitting upon.
Once in office, Sogavare attempted to placate the Howard government
while simultaneously working to channel anti-RAMSI sentiment behind
his government. He called for an exit strategy for
the occupying forces, and initiated a Commission of Inquiry into
the causes of the April riots, including RAMSIs role in
instigating the unrest. The commission was also to examine political
factors behind the detention of two parliamentarians, Nelson Nee
and Charles Dausabea, on incitement charges.
The inquiry threatened to shed light on anti-RAMSI sentiment
in Solomonsan issue that the Australian media has deliberately
suppressedand further upset the stability of Canberras
operations in the region. The Howard government responded by moving
to sabotage the inquiry and destabilise the Solomons government.
The conflict escalated after Sogavare retaliated against Canberras
dirty tricks by expelling Australian High Commissioner Patrick
Cole in September.
The Howard government then launched a witchhunt against the
Solomons attorney general, Julian Moti, on a 1997 rape charge
in Vanuatu for which he had already faced court and been acquitted.
Moti was arrested in the Solomons on October 10 by Australian
police on trumped-up immigration charges, and will soon face trial
before an Australian judge. RAMSI police also arrested Peter Shanel,
the countrys immigration minister, on charges relating to
the Moti case, and in yet another provocation, raided Prime Minister
Sogavares office on October 20.
Despite these measures, the Sogavare government has made overtures
toward Canberra in recent weeks. It offered to hand over Moti
to authorities in Australia on condition that he be granted bail,
and announced that the Commission of Inquiry would no longer investigate
the arrest of Nee and Dausabea. These measures again demonstrated
the venal character of the Sogavare government and its incapacity
to mount any principled challenge to Australias neo-colonial
operations.
Sogavares problem is that Canberra is unwilling to negotiate
a compromise, and demands complete compliance. With little room
to manoeuvre, the Solomons prime minister has refused to
withdraw the Commission of Inquiry. He continues to insist that
the pending Pacific Islands Forum review of RAMSIs activities
be based on his governments six point plan,
which includes a RAMSI exit strategy and a reduced Australian
influence over the nominally regional mission.
The Howard government calculates that any concession in the
Solomon Islands would undermine its authority throughout the region.
In PNG and Fiji the crisis has already emboldened elements of
the ruling elite who are looking to China and other powers for
aid, investment and political assistance to offset Australias
domination. Canberras increasingly aggressive actions are
in turn driven by the fear of ceding geo-strategic influence to
rival regional powers in what Howard has designated our
patch.
The New Zealand Labour government has distanced itself somewhat
from Canberras approach. The consent environment for
the [RAMSI] regional mission is not what it was, New Zealand
Prime Minister Helen Clark admitted on November 13 in a speech
delivered in Germany. I believe [RAMSI] can be secured if
the mission has a broader Pacific flavour about it, and if clear
benchmarks towards an exit strategy can be set.
Clark senses in the mounting regional hostility to Canberra
an opportunity to advance New Zealands independent interests.
While the New Zealand government has been an active accomplice
of Canberras neo-colonial interventions in the region, it
has long sought to gain regional advantage by portraying itself
as a sensitive ally of the Pacific states.
We cannot act effectively without the agreement of our
partners in the region, Clark explained. A hallmark
of New Zealands diplomacy in the south Pacific is our commitment
to seeking a strong consent environment for what we do.
The Howard government has not backed down, however. I
think inevitably there are going to be moments of tension with
some of the political elites, Downer declared on November
15. When we embarked on this change of policy in 2003 we
did it very much with our eyes open. We knew that it would be
resisted by some people, particularly by some of what you might
call the political elite, in some of the countries of the region....
We are a very big country by the standards of the south Pacific
and I suppose you put up with a modicum of criticism.
The Howard governments stance has led to calls within
Australian ruling circles for an open discussion of the implications
of the re-emergence of regional colonial rule. If the job
[in the Solomons] is to be done properly, Australia is unmistakably
launching a new form of colonialism, the nature of which is not
yet fully understood or developed but which is none the less real,
Michael OConnor writes in the latest edition of Quadrant.
If we are to understand this realityand support the
commitment it deservesit may be first necessary to abandon
the shibboleth that colonialism is irredeemably bad.
See Also:
Canberra presses its agenda
at Pacific Islands Forum
[24 October 2006]
Australian police raid office
of Solomon Islands PM
[21 October 2006]
Solomon Islands PM condemns
Australian re-colonisation
[14 October 2006]
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