|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Australian government steps up threats against PNG, Solomon
Islands
By Rick Kelly
16 October 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Australian foreign minister Alexander Downer announced yesterday
that Papua New Guinea (PNG) government ministers, including Prime
Minister Michael Somare, would be banned from visiting Australia.
At the same time, he rescinded an invitation previously issued
to PNGs defence minister and indicated that the annual ministerial
forum due to be held in December could be cancelled. Downer also
threatened to cut Australian aid to the impoverished nation, warning
that the government will not just shovel aid into neighbouring
countries.
Canberras sanctions and threats come amid rising tensions
in the South Pacific and an ongoing standoff between the Howard
government and the Solomon Islands prime minister Manasseh
Sogavare. Faced with mounting popular hostility throughout the
region to its neo-colonial agenda, the Australian government has
demonstrated that it is not prepared to tolerate any opposition
and will use increasingly aggressive measures to ensure that neighbouring
governments toe the line.
Canberras unprecedented ban on PNG ministerial visits
follows the PNG governments refusal to deport the Solomon
Islands attorney-general Julian Moti, who was arrested in
PNG on September 29 as he was en route from Singapore to the Solomons.
Canberra demanded Motis extradition on child sex tourism
charges, but Prime Minister Somare sided with the Solomons
government and publicly encouraged the attorney-general to leave
PNG.
Moti subsequently departed for the Solomons on board a PNG
military plane. He was arrested by Australian police after he
landed, brought before an Australian judge and is being detained
in an Australian-run prison against the wishes of the Solomons
government. The exact circumstances of Motis flight from
PNG remain unclear. Motis lawyer has claimed that he was
forced to leave the country by PNG soldiers, while Somare has
denied any knowledge of the militarys alleged involvement.
The prime minister expressed his deep regret over
the incident last Friday, and has promised an investigation into
the affair. According to the Australian, intelligence agencies
in Canberra are conducting their own examination and officials
have indicated they are sceptical of PNGs claim that it
did not know about the pre-dawn defence force flight. Downer
has called on all those involved in the flight to be punished,
and has accused Somare of failing to maintain good governance.
Canberras displeasure with the PNG government has nothing
to with Moti and his flight to the Solomons, just as its pursuit
of Moti himself has nothing to do with his alleged sex crime.
In both cases the Solomons attorney-general has been used
as a pretext for the Howard governments pursuit of Australias
strategic interests in the South Pacific.
Canberra dispatched hundreds of soldiers, police, and other
Australian personnel to the Solomon Islands in 2003 in a military
intervention that ensured the Howard governments direct
control of the country. The Sogavare government was targeted for
removal after it failed to sufficiently subordinate itself to
the Australian-dominated Regional Assistance to the Solomon Islands
(RAMSI) authorities. The growing conflict erupted to the surface
when the government expelled Australian high commissioner Patrick
Cole from the Solomons last month for conspiring with the opposition.
Canberras drive for regime change in Honiara
saw a government and media witch-hunt against Moti over a child
sex allegation dating back to 1997, for which he had been acquitted
by a Vanuatu court. Manipulating Australias child sex tourism
laws, and ignoring its provisions against double jeopardy, the
Howard government used the case as a means of destabilising the
Sogavare government, as well as sabotaging an official inquiry
into riots that erupted in Honiara last April. Moti was centrally
involved in the investigation which threatened to expose RAMSIs
responsibility for provoking the violence, and the extent of anti-RAMSI
sentiment in the Solomons.
Somares public statements opposing Motis extradition
to Australia have been followed by Sogavares threat to expel
Australian RAMSI personnel and replace them with forces from the
UN or unnamed rival countries. It is precisely such an outcome
that the Australian government has been desperate to prevent.
Canberra has been trying to isolate Sogavare and prevent any alliance
of Pacific governments aimed at establishing alliances with other
powers against Australias regional hegemony.
Tensions could openly emerge next week, with the 16-member
Pacific Island Forum meeting in Fiji. The Howard government has
signalled that it wants the reappointment of Australian diplomat
Greg Unwin as secretary-general of the organisation. Canberra
bullied the other member-states into approving Unwin in 2003,
after reportedly promising he would only serve one term. But the
Solomons, Fiji, Vanuatu, and PNG have said they will advance their
own candidate to challenge Howards man.
Great power rivalry
Canberras sanctions against the PNG government point
to the stakes involved. Hugh White, professor of strategic studies
at the Australian National University, described the ministerial
travel ban as a pretty radical diplomatic step, and
warned that Canberras inability to manage the bilateral
relationship with PNG and the Solomon Islands more constructively
threatens Australias rather ambitious agenda for regional
reconstruction.
The Howard government has invested hundreds of millions of
dollars in RAMSI, and promoted it as a model for intervention
in other so-called failed states. When the prime minister
announced a significant expansion of the armed forces two months
ago, he openly raised the possibility of Australian intervention
in Fiji, Vanuatu, and PNG, which he described as inherently
unstable. Any setback in the Solomons would make such operations
vastly more difficult.
While the political and media establishment unanimously defend
the humanitarianism of Australias interventions
in the Solomon Islands and the wider region, Kevin Rudd, the Labor
Partys foreign affairs spokesman, openly admitted the forces
actually motivating Canberras actions.
Because we have such large interests at stake here, not
least the presence of such a large number of Australian personnel
on the ground, its time for private and quiet and sensible
diplomacy to prevail here, he declared on Saturday. What
Im deeply concerned about, and spoken about a lot in the
past, is that if Australia ceases to be the security stabilising
force in Melanesia, and more widely across the South Pacific,
we then create a security vacuum. And Im deeply concerned
about where states within the region then turn elsewhere. What
other countries they go to, to fill that security vacuum. Thats
not in Australias long-term national security interests.
RAMSI has always been driven by Canberras need to prevent
rival powers from gaining a foothold in the Solomons. When initially
dispatching it in 2003, the Howard government declined a French
offer to contribute troops and police to RAMSI. Evidence later
emerged that the governments initial plans to intervene
may have been hastened by the knowledge that Solomons authorities
were considering inviting Indonesian troops into the country.
The Australian ruling class has always viewed the strategically
significant South Pacific as its own sphere of influence and attempted
to ensure its domination of the regions considerable natural
resources. With the support of the British Empire before World
War II and US imperialism after 1945, successive Australian governments
have manoeuvred to marginalise the influence of rival powers.
But inter-imperialist antagonisms have intensified throughout
the worldmost sharply in the Middle East and Central Asia
with the eruption of US militarismand the South Pacific
is no exception.
Taiwan in particular is being targeted for its escalating role
in the Solomons Islandsone of several Pacific states extending
diplomatic recognition to Taiwan rather than Beijing, and receiving,
in return, significant amounts of Taiwanese aid.
The Sydney Morning Heralds editorial last
Friday accused Taiwan of bribing the Solomons parliament
to keep Sogavare in power. [R]eports were coming in from
Honiara of gatherings at which Mr Sogavares group was handing
over wads of cash to MPs ahead of the no-confidence vote,
the newspaper claimed, without providing any proof or details.
Considering Mr Sogavares strong support for Taiwan,
including a speech at the United Nations supporting its case for
a UN seat, the finger of suspicion inevitably points to Taipei.
While a lot of Australians see Taiwan as a brightening torch of
democracy in Greater China, in our own neighbourhood it risks
appearing more like a rogue nation.
Gary Song-Huann Lin, a Taiwanese official in Canberra, denied
the allegations in a pointed reply published in the Herald
the following day. These kinds of prejudiced assertions
will only lead to the alienation of friendly countries like Indonesia,
the Solomon Islands, and Taiwan, he stated. Australia
will have to seek Taiwans good faith and cooperation if
the Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands is to be successful.
See Also:
Solomon Islands government survives
no-confidence vote
[12 October 2006]
Australian government demands hand-over
of Solomon Islands attorney-general
[9 October 2006]
Canberras dirty tricks ahead of
Solomon Islands no-confidence vote
[2 October 2006]
Australian government targets
Solomon Islands for regime change
[16 September 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |