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The Howard government, RAMSI, and the April 2006 Solomon Islands
riots
Part 1
By Patrick OConnor, SEP candidate for Marrickville in
the NSW election
21 February 2007
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The following is the first of a two-part article. Part
2 will appear tomorrow, Thursday February 22.
The ongoing campaign by the Australian government against the
Solomon Islands government of Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare
over the past several months has involved a series of extraordinary
police provocations, media slander, and other dirty tricks and
illegal manoeuvres. Its central focus has been to obstruct Sogavares
Commission of Inquiry into the causes of last Aprils riots
in Honiara, the countrys capital, and stop it from proceeding.
The Howard governments unrelenting efforts to derail the
investigation raise a series of questions regarding its own role
in the riots.
A growing body of evidence suggests that Australian forces
may have deliberately provoked the rioting and then stood down
their security personnel for two days in order to allow the looting
and violence to go unchecked. The crisis created the conditions
for the Howard government to deploy hundreds more soldiers and
police to the Solomons in the aftermath of a general election
in which its favoured candidate, Prime Minister Allen Kemakeza,
was defeated. Only in this way could Canberra ensure that its
takeover of the Solomon Islands administration, economy
and state apparatus would be secure.
The Iraq war, the Solomon Islands and RAMSI
The Kemakeza government had played a critical role in facilitating
the Howard governments intervention in the Solomons in 2003.
In July that year, Canberra launched the Regional Assistance Mission
to Solomon Islands (RAMSI). More than 2,000 soldiers and police
were deployed, backed up by naval warships and air force support.
Scores of Australian legal personnel, economists, bureaucratic
officials, and advisors were also sent in to take over the Solomons
state apparatus, including the police and prison systems, the
judiciary, economic planning and finance departments, and the
media.
The Howard government justified the intervention on the basis
that the Solomons was a failing state that was at
risk of becoming a regional centre of international terrorism
and transnational crime. It also claimed that RAMSI was a humanitarian
mission aimed at helping the Solomons people. These cynical
justifications were made under the convenient cover of Kemakezas
invitation requesting Australian intervention. Just
before the Australian forces landed, the Solomons parliament
passed the Facilitation Act, a bill that made RAMSI personnel
immune from Solomons law and exempted them from all immigration
and visa controls.
The Facilitation Act had in fact been drafted by Canberra,
and Kemakezas invitation to Australian forces came amid
Howard government threats of an ongoing Australian aid embargo
and other sanctions. The military-led intervention itself was
a neo-colonial operation that had nothing to do with concern for
the Solomons people or potential terrorist threats. The
real motivations were bound up with a major shift in Australian
foreign policy in the South Pacific, reflecting the changed international
situation caused by the eruption of US militarism.
RAMSI came just four months after the illegal US-led invasion
of Iraq, which was aimed at placing that country and its substantial
resources under US domination and providing a staging post for
further US interventions throughout the Middle East and beyond.
The Iraq war demonstrated the Bush administrations contempt
for international law and its willingness to utilise military
aggression as a means of extending its global hegemony against
its Asian and European rivals. The Howard government provided
political and military support and, in return, received US backing
for its own agenda in the South Pacific.
That agenda involves pushing back efforts by rival powers to
encroach on a region Howard has dubbed Australias special
patch. The growing economic and diplomatic influence of
China is of particular concern, because it threatens vital financial
and strategic interests of the Australian ruling elite.
The Solomon Islands operation has been merely the opening salvo
in a long-term strategy of restructuring the entire region in
the interests of Australian imperialism and locking out potentially
hostile actors. RAMSI has been hailed as a model for further interventions,
with Fiji and Papua New Guinea among the immediate targets. In
a revealing interview published last December, Howard warned the
Australian people to expect ongoing military operations for the
next 10 to 20 years. At the same time he announced a major expansion
in the size of the armed forces, and a campaign to enlist school
leavers.
Kemakeza and the April 2006 elections
The Kemakeza government came to power in December 2001 and,
from 2003, functioned as little more than a puppet regime for
Canberra, providing a helpful fig leaf for RAMSIs domination.
The government formally retained sovereign authority, allowing
the Australian political and media establishment to portray its
intervention as a cooperative mission in partnership with the
Solomons people. In reality Canberra called the shots.
Kemakeza remained obedient for good reason. Not long after
arriving, RAMSI forces arrested and jailed a number of Solomons
politiciansincluding senior ministers in the Kemakeza governmenton
charges of corruption and connections with rival Guadalcanal and
Malaita militias. It was widely known that if anyone were guilty
of such charges it was Kemakezaon both counts. Nevertheless,
he remained the primary big fish who went unchallenged
by Australias legal authorities. The mutual understanding
was obvious: Kemakeza would stay out of jail so long as he obeyed
Canberras demands.
Kemakezas government was the first to survive a full
term in office since the Solomons gained independence from Britain
in 1978. The lack of any parliamentary tradition, combined with
huge economic and social pressures and shifting political loyalties
created deep-going instability. But once RAMSI was on the ground,
its personnel worked closely with Australian High Commission staff
to stabilise the regimeencouraging opposition parliamentarians
to join Kemakezas coalition and pressuring them not to sponsor
motions of no confidence.
Despite the appearance of political stability, however, opposition
to RAMSI rapidly developed among ordinary Solomon Islanders. Canberras
promises of humanitarian assistance failed to materialise, and
while tens of millions of dollars were poured into building the
Solomons police and prison systems, nothing was done to
provide decent health and education services for ordinary people.
Poverty and unemployment remained rife, particularly among young
people living in Honiaras squatter settlements. Resentments
also developed over the relatively lucrative salaries and living
conditions enjoyed by RAMSI personnel, which pushed up rents and
other living costs and deepened social inequality.
It was in this context that Canberra anticipated with trepidation
the April 2006 elections, the seventh since the countrys
independence and the first under RAMSI rule.
In April 2005 the Australian Strategic Policy Institute had
issued a report authored by Elsina Wainwright, How is RAMSI
faring?, which expressed concern over RAMSIs prospects.
The operation remains fragile [and is] vulnerable to shifting
political alignments, the report stated. A realignment
of political forces in Honiara could see parliaments support
for RAMSI evaporate.
Wainwrights warnings carried considerable weight, not
least because her June 2003 report on the Solomons, Our
Failing Neighbour, became the blueprint for the RAMSI intervention.
The Kemakeza government was routed when the general election
was finally held on April 5 last year. Nine of Kemakezas
twenty ministers lost their seats, as did the majority of government
backbenchers. The vote expressed Solomon Islanders hostility
towards the administrations corruption and impotence, and
deep dissatisfaction with RAMSIs broken promises, along
with the governments failure to resolve any of the their
social and economic problems.
Did RAMSI provoke the April riots?
No single party or faction came close to winning a parliamentary
majority, making necessary the negotiation of a coalition government.
On April 18, 2006 a parliamentary vote saw Snyder Rini, Kemakezas
deputy prime minister, installed as prime minister. All eleven
Kemakeza ministers who had been re-elected joined the new government.
Solomon Islanders reacted to the announced outcome with outrage,
generally believing it to have been rigged through corruption
and bribery. An angry crowd converged on the parliament to demand
Rinis resignation. Protestors faced off against a contingent
of RAMSI and Solomons police for three hours. Peter Kenilorea,
the parliamentary speaker, pleaded with RAMSI to let him negotiate
with the crowd, but instead the Australian police fired rounds
of tear gas. Their actions sparked retaliatory violence and widespread
looting, which continued into the following day. RAMSI vehicles
and property were targeted and about 50 RAMSI and emergency services
personnel were injured. One-quarter of Honiaras commercial
centre, including Chinatown, was destroyed by fire, and numerous
shops were ransacked by impoverished and desperate residents.
The University of Queenslands Dr. Clive Moorea
Solomon Islands expert who supports RAMSIwitnessed
video footage of the April 18 demonstration outside parliament.
Early on the crowd was rowdy but unthreatening, until the
riot gear was handed out (only to RAMSI officers) and the tear
gas began to fly, he explained. Had senior political
figures and senior police been allowed to talk the crowd down,
Solomon Islanders feel sure the riots would not have occurred.
The Howard government, working with the New Zealand Clark government,
responded to the riots by dispatching more than 350 Australian
and New Zealand soldiers and an additional 120 police. These forces
began arriving on the evening of the 19thby which time the
rioting had ceased. Rini attempted to cling onto power, but resigned
before an opposition-sponsored parliamentary vote of no confidence
was held. On May 4, Sogavare was elected prime minister and formed
a multi-party coalition government.
There has been no investigation into the events on April 18
and 19, and a series of questions remains unanswered.
Why were none of the standard security measures for elections
in place? Who ordered tear gas to be fired into the crowd outside
parliament? How was it possible for an unarmed crowd of protestors
and looters to destroy much of Honiara over two days, with armed
RAMSI police apparently unable to prevent the violence? Why did
the Australian soldiers who were already stationed in Honiara
do nothing in response to the unrest? Why was Police Commissioner
Shane Castles not seen in public on April 18? Was he even in the
capital and on duty that day?
Castles, a former Australian Federal Police (AFP) officer,
was appointed Solomons police chief in April 2005. The previous
commissioner, British national William Morrell, had wished to
serve another term, but Canberra declined to fund his salary.
Australian aid money was instead used to install Castles,
who had been the AFPs General Manager of International Operations.
The appointment was widely regarded in the Solomons as a move
by the Howard government to further extend its control over the
country.
In an interview with the Solomon Star published on May
19 last year, Castles insisted that at no time did we have
intelligence to indicate or suggest the level of violence experienced
in Honiara on 18 and 19 April, 2006. Asked if he had anticipated
public hostility towards Rini after the parliamentary vote, the
police commissioner replied, No, and certainly not to the
level of unexpected and unprecedented violence... There were in
excess of 30 officers at parliament for the PMs election.
The resources allocated were commensurate with the assessed low
to moderate level of threat for this event.
Castless account lacks all credibility. Everyone in Honiara
knew that unrest was likely following the parliamentary vote.
After the general election, parliamentarians divided into three
different factions, each of which engaged in various manoeuvres
aimed at garnering sufficient support to form government. Tensions
escalated amid allegations that Taiwanese diplomats and ethnic
Chinese businessmen were buying parliamentarians votes in
order to install their preferred candidates in power. In this
context, Castless assessment that the parliamentary vote
represented a low to moderate level of threat beggars
belief.
There was clearly prior knowledge of what was about to
occur, Clive Moore wrote in a paper presented at an academic
workshop in May this year. For instance, local police went
door to door along the central Mendana Avenue shops fully two
hours before the riot at the parliament, telling the Chinese shopkeepers
to close their doors because they had prior intelligence of the
coming attack.
Local police were certainly expecting trouble,
he added in another essay. They were puzzled that no prior
strategic plan had been issued to deal with the possible trouble,
and decided not to wait for instructions... The size of the April
2006 riots was hard to predict, but violence was always a possible
outcome of the parliamentary decision and all Solomon Islanders
knew it.
Moore also pointed out that the violence witnessed in the April
riots was not, as Castles claimed, unprecedented.
Social tensions in Honiara have periodically erupted into riotingin
1989, 1993, 1996, and 1998and ethnic Chinese businessmen
have been consistently targeted.
Mike Wheatley, assistant police commissioner in the Solomons
between 1995 and 2000, revealed that it has long been standard
operating procedure for police to secure the parliament building
and position officers on Honiaras main thoroughfares. Access
to Chinatown is limited to two bridges over a river, allowing
it to be defended even with only limited police resources.
Wheatley described as unbelievable RAMSIs
failure to mount any of the usual preparations. How can
such a thing happen on RAMSIs watchwith the regions
superpower, Australia, in charge? he asked last May. Wheres
the stench of burning reputations to match the stench of burning
Chinese stores? There was plenty of reporting by the media, some
obfuscation by the usual suspects but no detailed commentary.
Instead, there were claims by senior people that it was all a
big surprise (according to [Australian Federal Police
chief] Mike Keelty) or an intelligence failure (according
to [the Australians foreign affairs columnist] Greg
Sheridan) or that the Regional Assistance Mission to the Solomon
Islands (RAMSI) were overwhelmed by the numbers that they
faced (according to Keelty again, and to [New Zealand Foreign
Minister] Phil Goff).
Wheatley explained why none of these accounts was plausible.
It is standard procedure for the disciplinary forces of
Solomon Islands to be on alert during any national election, stepping
up as parliament is convened for the election of PM, he
explained If forces had been pre-deployed as per usual Solomon
Islands procedures and operational experience, then there would
not have been any surprises on RAMSI Tuesday [April
18]... Their [i.e., the RAMSI forces] failure on RAMSI
Tuesday was not the result of a lack of intelligence. At
a tactical level, the debacle was caused by a failure in leadership.
At the strategic level, it was an awe-inspiring mission failure
with implications for the much-vaunted regional intervention model
called RAMSI.
Wheatley also questioned why Australian soldiers in Honiara
were never mobilised, even as the Howard government sent hundreds
more troops into the country. Where was the infantry, the
final arbiter when things get out of hand in the streets? Not
seen or heard... Perhaps the real figure of 100 soldiers is wrong.
Perhaps there was only a platoon of, say 30, men. Whatever their
real strength, why werent they immediately deployed to the
meat grinder in Chinatown?
Taken together, what is known about the events of April 18-19,
2006 leaves little doubt that Australian forces were deliberately
stood down in order to allow for an extended eruption of violence.
Certainly the least plausible explanation is that offered by Castles
and other Australian officials.
To be continued
See Also:
Australian PM outlines indefinite
military agenda in South Pacific
[18 January 2007]
Solomon Islands' government
dismisses Australian police chief
[4 January 2007]
Oppose Australia's
colonial-style intervention in the Solomons
[3 July 2003]
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