|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Solomon Islands government defeats no-confidence motion
By Patrick OConnor
25 August 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
On August 17, the speaker of the Solomon Islands parliament,
Peter Kenilorea, ruled that an attempted no-confidence motion
brought by the opposition against the government of Prime Minister
Manasseh Sogavare was inadmissible under parliamentary standing
orders. The decision represents a significant blow to the Australian
government-driven campaign to bring down the Solomons government,
since it appears to have prevented another no-confidence vote
until the next parliamentary session in 2008.
Canberra targetted the Sogavare government for removal soon
after it came to power in May last year. The Howard government
had dispatched more than 1,000 soldiers and police to the Solomon
Islands in 2003, along with scores of bureaucrats, legal personnel,
and other officials. The Australian-led Regional Assistance Mission
to Solomon Islands (RAMSI) took over the Solomons state
apparatus, including courts, prisons, police, finance department
and public service. Sogavare came to be regarded as a threat to
the Australians indefinite occupation after he called for
a RAMSI exit strategy and attempted to re-establish
his governments control over public spending.
The Howard governments drive for regime change
in Honiara has involved an extraordinary campaign of dirty tricks,
provocations, and slander. The Solomons opposition, led
by Fred Fono, has closely aligned itself with this campaign.
Speaking in parliament on August 21, Sogavare made thinly veiled
references to Canberras role in the attempted no-confidence
motion. What is interesting, Mr Speaker, is the level of
foreign interest in the motions [of no-confidence], he declared.
For example, when the first one was defeated, certain factions
of foreigners in this country expressed open disappointment, which
is shocking. This is shocking because if such is the situation
then we have foreign elements in this country that have ulterior
motives that are potentially dangerous to the security of this
country.
There is no doubt that Fonos parliamentary manoeuvres
enjoy the backing of Canberra and are being accompanied by behind-the-scenes
efforts to encourage government MPs to cross the floor. On August
4, Fono was arrested on two conspiracy charges relating to an
alleged bribe of $SI50,000 ($A7,800) offered to government minister
Severino Nuaiasi in June. Nuaiasi refused to join the opposition
and turned the cash over to the police. Fono appeared in court
on August 6 alongside the alleged financier of the bribea
businessman known as Mataiwelliand Wilson Maie Maie, the
alleged middleman. Fono has admitted paying the money but insists
it was not a bribe, claiming it was instead an act of charity
allowing the MP to send his son to school in New Zealand. Fono
is due to appear in court later this month and will likely face
additional charges.
Further allegations against the opposition were issued in parliament
on August 20. Parliamentarian Charles Dausabea produced a letter,
dated January 19, 2007, addressed by North Malaita MP Enele Kwanairara
to former militants, encouraging them to expose parliamentarians
previously involved in militia operations. Dausabea claimed the
opposition was attempting to implicate him and Sogavare in illegal
activities relating to the communal conflict between Guadalcanal
and Malaitan militias which first erupted in 1998.
Sogavare served as prime minister for 18 months in the aftermath
of a coup carried out by the Malaitan Eagle Force (MEF) on June
5, 2000. While he has always denied foreknowledge of the coup
or any involvement in militia activity, his political enemies
have attempted to portray him as an MEF stooge.
If Dausabeas allegations are true, the opposition is
now encouraging Australian authorities to arrest Sogavare on charges
relating to this period. Dausabea told the parliament that he
had information that two RAMSI officers had recently taken statements
from imprisoned ex-militants. He said that one of these prisoners
had made allegations to him of carrying out orders from
people in higher places. Dausabea called on the opposition
to refrain from unusual techniques and unwarranted
schemes aimed at bringing down the government.
Opposition leader Fono denied any involvement, while the author
of the letter, Kwanairara, said he had done nothing wrong and
had merely wanted to expose those behind the 2000 coup.
RAMSI officials have not publicly responded to Dausabeas
allegations. Canberra, however, has already tacitly endorsed the
highly provocative moves to destabilise the Sogavare government
through the reignition of communal tensions. On February 9, Foreign
Minister Alexander Downer issued an open letter to
the people of the Solomons and accused the government of wanting
to get rid of RAMSI and to go back to the situation where
the country was basically run by the Malaitan Eagle Force and
people like that.
Despite its efforts, the opposition has so far proven unable
to win sufficient support to challenge the government. Sogavare
comfortably defeated a previous no-confidence motion last October,
and several opposition parliamentarians have since joined the
government, giving it a large parliamentary majority.
Government MPs acquitted on riot charges
Dausabeas statements in parliament came shortly after
his acquittal, together with fellow government MP Nelson Nee
and businessman and former foreign minister Alex Bartlett, on
attempted murder, arson, and riot charges relating to the two
days of rioting which destroyed much of central Honiara on April
18-19 last year.
Bartlett was acquitted of all charges on August 1. While three
charges were dropped against Dausabea, he still faces one alternative
charge of inciting riot outside the Solomons parliament.
Nee was found not guilty of four charges but the judge ruled
a prima facie case had been established on one intimidation charge.
High Court Judge Justice David Cameron ruled that none of the
three witness statements issued against Bartlett was corroborative
and so could not support a conviction. One of the witnesses admitted
to the court that he had previously lied while giving evidence
and that he had been prepared to change his statement for money.
Following his acquittal, Bartlett condemned the Australian
Federal Police (AFP) officers who had led the investigation against
him and accused them of using Solomon Islands conmen
to frame him. These conmen were willing to tell lies,
he declared. AFP is supposed to uphold justice, law and
order but they have acted unjustly, falsely accused people and
put them behind bars.
Bartletts allegations add further weight to earlier claims
that Australian officials had offered key witnesses financial
inducements. Last May the Solomon Star reported that it
had seen a memorandum of understanding signed by two witnesses
and the former police commissioner, Shane Castles. (Castles, an
AFP officer, was subsequently sacked and barred from the country
by the Sogavare government.) The document established that Australian
police offered to pay the school fees of the witnesses children,
along with other costs, supposedly as compensation for the time
spent by the witnesses in assisting the investigation.
The High Court acquittals raise further serious questions about
the nature of RAMSIs prosecution of the three men and about
Canberras role in the April riots.
Why, for example, was the RAMSI prosecution case so weakapparently
resting on nothing more than the conflicting statements of unreliable
or dishonest witnessesdespite a year-long investigation
involving the use of considerable resources? What motivated the
arrests of Dausabea, Nee, and Bartlett in the first place?
Was the entire case politically driven?
AFP officers arrested Dausabea, Nee, and Bartlett within
days of the riots. Australian judges repeatedly refused bail and
held the two parliamentarians in prison for eight months while
they awaited trial. This had the effect of narrowing the Sogavare
governments parliamentary majority, as well as sidelining
prominent critics of the Australian occupation of the Solomon
Islands.
Dausabea and Nee had been elected for the seats of East
and Central Honiara respectively in the national election that
immediately preceded the April riots. Both men had appealed to
mounting anti-RAMSI sentiment among the thousands of young unemployed
people living in squalid squatter settlements in the capital.
Last June, Sogavare wrote a cabinet memo warning of the possibility
of collusion between Australian-appointed prosecutors
and judges. According to reliable sources, the arrest and
charges laid against the two MPs may have been politically motivated
and influenced by the long standing desire of the system to arrest
and convict them, especially the MP for East Honiara, Sogavare
wrote.
Bartlett was similarly on record as being a RAMSI opponent.
Australian prosecutors in Honiara had previously attempted to
convict him on corruption charges relating to alleged crimes committed
in 2000.
The arrest of Dausabea, Nee, and Bartlett provided RAMSI
with convenient scapegoats for the April riots, diverting attention
from its own role in the unrest. Considerable evidence exists
suggesting that RAMSI personnel not only provoked the violence
by firing tear gas at a crowd demonstrating outside parliament,
but stood down their forces and did nothing to prevent the ensuing
destruction. (See The
Howard government, RAMSI, and the April 2006 Solomon Islands
riots.)
After his acquittal, Bartlett accused RAMSI of responsibility.
They are the perpetrators of the riot in the Solomon Islands,
he declared. Our people and the world need to read all the
evidence and the media presentations which points mainly to the
unprofessional, illegal and negligible conduct of the AFP [outside]
parliament [on April 18, 2006].
Bartlett was referring to the interim findings of the Commission
of Inquiry into the causes of the riots, which were released last
month. The Howard government made every effort to sabotage the
official investigation, fearful it would uncover evidence of RAMSIs
responsibility for the riots. Attorney-General Julian Moti became
the target of an extraordinary vilification campaign because of
his central role in establishing the inquiry.
The interim findings failed to address the evidence that RAMSI
personnel foresaw the riots and deliberately permitted them to
proceed. Commission of Inquiry chairman Brian Brunton did, however,
issue a number of sharp criticisms of the AFPs gross negligence.
Hearings in Honiara are continuing and the commissions final
report is due later this year.
See Also:
Solomon Islands government rebuts Canberras
child sex allegations against attorney-general
[14 August 2007]
Solomons Islands government
defies Canberra, reappointing Julian Moti as attorney-general
[11 July 2007]
Solomon Islands government
dismisses Australian police chief
[4 January 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |