|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Solomon Islands foreign minister condemns Australian
occupation at UN General Assembly
By Patrick OConnor, Socialist Equality Party candidate
for Grayndler
11 October 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The protracted conflict between the Solomon Islands and Australian
governments escalated earlier this month when the Pacific countrys
foreign minister Patteson Oti denounced Australias occupation
before the UN General Assembly. Otis strident speech marked
a significant ramping up of the increasingly hostile exchanges
between the two countries.
Tensions have been building for more than a year, as the Australian
government of Prime Minister John Howard has attempted to destabilise
and overthrow the Solomons administration led by Prime Minister
Manasseh Sogavare.
Otis characterisation of Australias presence in
the Solomons as an occupation force is entirely accurate. In 2003,
more than 2,000 soldiers and police were deployed under the banner
of the Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands (RAMSI).
Scores of Australian bureaucrats, legal officials, and other personnel
effectively took control of the countrys state apparatus,
including its police, prisons, judicial system, public service,
and finance department.
The neo-colonial operation is of indefinite duration and the
Howard government has made clear that it will brook no interference
from the Solomon Islands government. Responding to Otis
speech, Australian foreign minister Alexander Downer accused the
Sogavare government of trying to destroy RAMSI. The media has
effectively buried the story, while the Labor Party and the Greens
have kept their mouths tightly shut.
This silenceafter a senior representative of a neighbouring
government has issued an extraordinary denunciation of Australias
intervention into the region before a major forum of world leadersprovides
a revealing demonstration of the support extended to the Howard
governments Solomons operation by the entire political and
media establishment.
The drive to forcibly assert Canberras direct control,
in violation of international law and the democratic right of
ordinary Pacific Islanders to determine their own future, will
be one of the great unmentionables in the upcoming election campaign.
Irrespective of which party wins office, the filthy manoeuvres
and dirty tricks that have characterised the Howard governments
operations in the region will continue unabated.
On October 1, Oti addressed the UN General Assembly, declaring
that our sovereign right to determine the terms on which
the government of Solomon Islands will permit our continued occupation
by the visiting contingent cannot be undermined by any member
of the United Nations. He continued, however dressed
and rationalised, intervention and occupation allow assisting
nations to spend and earn substantial revenue for their supporting
businesses and industries. Mine is too nationalistic a government
to become captive to the fortunes which justify our perpetual
retention under siege.
Sogavare and his supporters represent a layer of the Solomonselite
which, while having no principled opposition to the Howard governments
intervention, is seeking to manoeuvre between rival powers and
pressure Canberra to recast RAMSIs mission on a new basis
more favourable to its interests. After coming to power in May
last year, the Sogavare government attempted to reduce RAMSIs
control over the countrys finance department and end its
effective veto over public spending. The prime minister has repeatedly
insisted that he is not seeking to expel RAMSI and that he wants
an accommodation with the Howard government.
Otis speech before the UN included an appeal for the
international body to act as a counterweight to Canberra. Greater
UN involvement, however, would alter nothing. In East Timor, to
take just one example, the international body has rubber-stamped
the Australian-dominated intervention force and said nothing as
Canberra conspired to oust the Fretilin government of Mari Alkatiri.
The Solomons government nevertheless hopes to win support
from other powers to pressure the Howard government. So far, Canberra
has refused to compromise. Sogavare and his senior ministers have
been targeted, along with attorney-general Julian Moti, who is
still being pursued on a trumped up extradition request relating
to statutory rape allegations that were thrown out of a Vanuatu
court in 1999. On August 4 the Sogavare government formally rejected
the extradition request, describing the attempted prosecution
as nothing more than a political witchhunt.
The Howard governments effort to politically destroy
Moti has been especially driven by its determination to derail
a Commission of Inquiry into the causes of the April 2006 riots,
which destroyed much of the Solomons capital, Honiara. Substantial
evidence indicates that RAMSI police and troops were deliberately
stood down to facilitate the destruction triggered by widely anticipated
post-election unrest.
Foreign Minister Oti referred to Canberras efforts to
halt the inquiry in his UN address, noting that the investigation
finally became functional this year after the failure of
externally-orchestrated manoeuvres to derail it. He insisted
that my government is determined to delve deeper into the
historic causes of the friction between our peoples.
Solomons parliament prepares RAMSI review
The Solomons operation forms the lynchpin of Canberras
strategic ambitions in the South Pacific. Great power rivalries
are intensifying as Beijings economic and diplomatic influence
increases. The Howard governments expenditure of more than
one billion dollars on RAMSI since 2003 is regarded as a critical
long-term investment, with the operation hailed as a model for
potential takeovers of other Pacific states. A setback would have
far reaching consequences.
The Howard government is particularly concerned by the Solomons
parliament August 26 decision to review the 2003 Facilitation
of International Assistance Act. It drafted this legislation and
forced its ratification ahead of the initial intervention. The
Facilitation Act grants Australian personnel sweeping powers,
including complete immunity from local law and exemption from
all immigration and visa controls. It also exempts foreign corporations
connected to RAMSI from many business registration and tax obligations.
Attorney-general Moti drew up a memorandum detailing the dubious
character of the Facilitation Act in relation to both international
law and the Solomon Islands constitution. Moti noted that the
so-called regional assistance mission, RAMSI, is not even mentioned
in the Act. This leaves unclear the precise nature of its
legal personality. The Act similarly includes no reference
to the Pacific Islands Forum or any other regional or international
organisation, making a mockery of the Howard governments
efforts to cloak its takeover as a multilateral and regional operation.
Moti also raised a number of questions regarding Section 24
of the Facilitation Act, which prevents the Solomons parliament
from passing subsequent legislation amending or repealing,
or otherwise altering the effect or operation of, this Act or
subsidiary legislation made under this Act. This proviso,
which contradicts long established constitutional and parliamentary
norms, was meant to ensure that the parliament remained a toothless
facade for the Australian occupying authorities.
RAMSI chief Tim George last month called a press conference
in Honiara to denounce the pending review. Without attempting
any specific rebuttal of Motis legal analysis of the Facilitation
Act, George described the attorney-generals memorandum as
a very flawed and muddled document which reveals
a negative mindset towards RAMSI.
Georges outburst underscores Canberras entrenched
opposition to any modification of the terms of the operation.
The insistence that Australian police, soldiers, and bureaucrats
remain unaccountable and above the law exposes the fraudulent
character of the Howard governments claims that RAMSI is
a humanitarian operation. RAMSI wants legal immunity
to allow it to operate without restraint in defence of Australian
corporate interests. It will certainly ferociously repress any
oppositional movement that develops within the local population.
The Solomons remains among the most impoverished countries
in the world. Virtually no Australian aid money has been spent
on health and education, while the presence of hundreds of highly
paid RAMSI personnel has inflated rental rates and other costs
of living. Amid growing resentment and frustration, particularly
among unemployed youth living in Honiaras squatter settlements,
a social time bomb is ticking.
The Howard government continues to insist that RAMSI enjoys
the support of the vast majority, and has effectively claimed
the right to disregard the Solomons parliament and government
on the basis of a popular mandate. A RAMSI-sponsored
survey released last month purported to show that 90 percent of
the population supported RAMSIs presence and a majority
thought that communal violence would re-emerge if foreign forces
were forced out. Predictably, Downer and George seized upon the
conveniently-timed release of the survey findings and claimed
vindication.
Serious questions have been raised, however, about the survey.
Finance Minister Gordon Darcy Lilo has ordered a criminal investigation
into the alleged secret payment of $SI100,000 ($A16,000) to statisticians
in the finance and treasury ministry, who used publicly owned
resources and information for the RAMSI survey. These officials
are paid salaries to work for government, Lilo declared.
They are supposed to safeguard our national intelligence
information and not sell it for their private gain.... This is
probably just the tip of the iceberg. Who knows what else is going
on in this country without our knowledge or approval?
Authorised by N. Beams, 40 Raymond Street,
Bankstown, NSW
See Also:
Solomon Islands government
defeats no-confidence motion
[25 August 2007]
Solomon Islands government
rebuts Canberras child sex allegations against attorney-general
[14 August 2007]
The Howard government, RAMSI,
and the April 2006 Solomon Islands riots
[21 February 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |