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Australian government demands hand-over of Solomon Islands
attorney-general
By Rick Kelly
9 October 2006
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The Howard government is engaged in an increasingly aggressive
attempt to unseat the Solomon Islands government and Prime
Minister Manasseh Sogavare, amid an ongoing standoff over the
fate of Julian Moti, the Solomons attorney-general arrested
in Papua New Guinea on September 29. The governments of both the
Solomons and PNG are defying Australias demand that Moti
be extradited on charges relating to a 1997 child sex allegation.
Tensions remain high in the Solomon Islands, following opposition
leader Fred Fonos announcement last Friday that a motion
of no-confidence aimed at bringing down the government would be
postponed for a week. Fono, who claimed to have sufficient support
in parliament for the motion, withdrew the nomination because
of alleged rumours, speculation, and intimidation, indicating
that if this government was to fall there would be another riot.
Sogavare has dismissed the oppositions claims, and insists
that his government is secure.
The immediate spark for the political crisis was Sogavares
expulsion of Australian High Commissioner Patrick Cole last month
for meddling in the Solomons internal affairs. The expulsion
led to a war of words between Canberra and Honiara, with Sogavare
condemning the Australian government for bullying and political
interference.
After coming to power in May, Sogavare attempted to assure
Canberra of his willingness to impose its dictates, while at the
same time making limited appeals to growing anti-Australian sentiment
in the Solomons. As Howard has pushed for full compliance, however,
his balancing act has proved increasingly difficult to maintain.
Moti has been targeted both as a means of undermining the Sogavare
government, and to avoid any scrutiny of the Australian-dominated
Regional Assistance to the Solomon Islands (RAMSI). Australian
forces were dispatched to the Solomons in 2003 after the Howard
government declared the Solomons a failed state and
a potential haven for terrorists. RAMSI took over the countrys
key economic, judicial, and security institutions.
RAMSI was never a humanitarian intervention and
was instead aimed at securing Australias domination of the
South Pacific. Opposition to RAMSI among ordinary Solomon Islanders
mounted as it became evident that Australia is doing nothing to
alleviate the countrys endemic poverty and unemployment.
Following elections in April, riots erupted in the capital,
Honiara, leading to the widespread destruction of hotels and businesses,
particularly in Chinatown. The disturbances followed a RAMSI military
and police operation aimed at propping up Sogavares predecessor,
Snyder Rini. Amid corruption allegations, the parliament had chosen
Rini as prime minister despite the electoral routing of the previous
pro-RAMSI government, in which he had been deputy prime minister.
Concerned to suppress any examination of RAMSIs responsibility
for the riots, Canberra was alarmed when Sogavare announced an
official Commission of Inquiry in July. The inquiry was to investigate
the cause of the riots and examine the case of the two parliamentarians,
Nelson Nee and Charles Dausabea, whom Canberra made scapegoats
for the disturbances. The men, who are reportedly opponents of
RAMSI, have been held without trial since their arrest in late
April. Australian judges have repeatedly denied bail.
Canberra has made every effort to derail the official inquiry.
Former Australian Federal Court judge Marcus Einfeld became the
subject of a media witch-hunt ostensibly over an unpaid speeding
fine after he was appointed head of the Commission of Inquiry.
The sensationalised reports, which emerged just days after Einfeld
accepted the position in mid-July, disappeared just as suddenly
following his resignation on September 17.
The Sydney Morning Herald reported on Saturday that
Australian forces considered arresting Sogavare last month, after
the publication of a leaked cabinet submission in which the prime
minister questioned Nee and Dausabeas detention and
raised the possibility of collusion between Australian-appointed
prosecutors and judges.
So seriously did the Australians regard the submission
that, according to well-placed sources, Australian personnelworking
with Solomons police as advisersconsidered scope for a raid
to obtain further documents, the newspaper reported. There
was even an examination of whether Sogavare had breached any criminal
laws for which he could be arrested. But, regardless of the legal
assessment, it was considered that arresting the Prime Minister
posed too much risk of renewed rioting or possible assassinations.
The scapegoating of Moti
Moti was similarly targeted by Canberra for political reasons.
He was closely involved in Sogavares decision to establish
the Commission of Inquiry, and recommended that Einfeld head the
investigation. According to one report, Motis private law
firm in Honiara also represents Nee and Dausabea.
The Howard governments insistence that its pursuit of
Moti is strictly a police matter and has nothing to do with its
dispute with the Solomons is absurd. Whatever the facts of the
case, Canberra has seized upon it to smear the Sogavare government
and prepare the grounds for its removal.
Moti was prosecuted in Vanuatu for allegedly raping a 13-year-old
girl, but the case was thrown out by two different courts. One
magistrate ordered Motis legal costs be paid and described
the prosecution as unjustified and oppressive. Motis
allegation that the girls father had originally demanded
a payment of $35,000 to drop the charges led to blackmail charges
that were eventually dropped, and a civil case later brought by
the girls guardian was settled out of court.
An article in the Sydney Morning Herald on Saturday
described the contents of six statements made by the alleged victim
to Vanuatu authorities in 1997: All are in English, though
it appears she only spoke French. None was in her own writing.
None was sworn. The underlying story does not change from statement
to statement, but details are contradictory. Others appear fanciful.
She said he had three testicles, but a Port Vila GP, Dr Frank
Spooner, would later examine Moti and concluded he had two.
Vanuatu authorities considered the case closed and reacted
with surprise to Canberras extradition attempt. We
felt the case against him was cleared, finished, Pau Navoko
Lui, the countrys police commissioner, told the Sydney
Morning Herald. Australian authorities never notified Luis
office that they were reinvestigating Moti.
The extradition demand, which relies upon Motis Australian
citizenship, involves a misuse of Australias sex tourism
laws. Under this legislation, individuals can be prosecuted for
sex offences committed overseas. The laws were designed to facilitate
the prosecution of offenders who evaded arrest overseas, not to
create a kind of international double jeopardy.
Justice Minister Chris Ellison has insisted that the Australian
Federal Police (AFP) investigated the case at the beginning of
2005, but has not explained why Canberra regards Motis prosecution
in Vanuatu as deficient. Ellison has also not said why the AFP
did not interview the alleged rape victim until June this year.
Such an interview would be the starting point of any serious re-examination
of the case.
International law expert Don Rothwell, of the Australian National
University, has questioned the timing of the investigation. I
dont think there has been a satisfactory explanation by
the Australian government, he told SBS television. He asked
why a warrant hadnt previously been issued given that
these charges against Mr Moti are fairly long standing ... and
given the fact that Mr Moti apparently travels in and out of Australia
fairly regularly.
The timing of the case is only explicable in its political
context. The alleged sex crime was nothing more than a convenient
pretext for Canberras vendetta.
Despite the utterly cynical character of the Howard governments
manoeuvres against Moti and the Solomons government, no one in
the entire political and media establishment has issued a note
of criticism. Opposition leader Kim Beazley declared that there
was no political motivation behind the governments pursuit
of Moti, while todays editorial in the nominally liberal
Sydney Morning Herald demanded he face trial in Australia.
This unanimous support indicates what is at stake in the Solomons
for the Australian ruling elite. Howard recently announced a major
expansion of the military and specifically listed the PNG, Vanuatu
and Fiji as potential targets for Australian intervention. In
this context, a successful challenge to Australias grip
over the Solomons would prove disastrous.
See Also:
Canberras dirty tricks ahead of
Solomon Islands no-confidence vote
[2 October 2006]
Solomon Islands PM publicly
denounces Australian government
[21 September 2006]
Australian government targets
Solomon Islands for regime change
[16 September 2006]
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