World

Solomon Islands’ PM calls China security deal backlash ‘insulting’

Proposals in leaked draft agreement will allow Chinese security, naval deployments to the Pacific island nation

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 29 Mar 2022 2:00PM

Solomon Islands’ PM calls China security deal backlash ‘insulting’
Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare (left) says the security pact with China is yet to be signed but confirms that his government and counterparts in Beijing have reached an agreement on the shape of the deal. – AFP pic, March 29, 2022

HONIARA – The Solomon Islands’ prime minister today rebuked Australian fears that a draft security pact between his country and China that leaked online last week would “destabilise” the South Pacific.

In an impassioned speech, Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare said he found it “very insulting to be branded as unfit to manage our sovereign affairs or have other motives in pursuing our national interest”.

The proposals in the leaked draft agreement would allow Chinese security and naval deployments to the Pacific island nation, a development that sent shockwaves through Canberra last week.

Sogavare said the pact is yet to be signed but confirmed that his government and counterparts in Beijing had reached an agreement on the shape of the deal, although he offered no details.

While existing security arrangements with Australia would “remain intact”, Sogavare said that “to achieve our security needs, it is clear that we need to diversify the country’s relationship with other countries – and what is wrong with that?”

The prospect of a Chinese naval base in the South Pacific has long been a concern for Australia and the United States because it would allow Beijing to project power deep into the region.

“We would be concerned by any actions that would destabilise the security of our region,” Australia’s Foreign Affairs Department said in a statement last week.

But Sogavare labelled concern from “many leaders” about China’s presence threatening regional security in the Pacific as “unfortunate perceptions”.

The Solomon Islands were rocked by unrest last November when protesters tried to storm the Parliament and then went on a deadly three-day rampage, torching much of Chinatown in the capital of Honiara.

More than 200 peacekeepers from Australia, Fiji, Papua New Guinea and New Zealand were deployed to restore calm and Sogavare managed to avoid being deposed.

The riots were sparked by a range of tensions, including opposition to Sogavare's rule, inter-island rivalries and high unemployment, but anti-China sentiment also played a key role.

Leaders on the most populous island of Malaita fiercely opposed Sogavare’s decision to shift diplomatic ties from Taiwan to Beijing in 2019, a switch that became a lightning rod for broader frustration about Chinese investment in the Pacific island nation. – AFP, March 29, 2022

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