The Fiji Times

Blue Pacific

An ocean of peace

- DR SATYENDRA PRASAD is the former Fijian Ambassador to the UN in New York and is presently a senior fellow at Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace and Climate Lead for Abt Global.

The Blue Pacific as an “ocean of peace” has evolved as one of the core ideas of Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka and the Fijian Government. An early outline of the Blue Pacific as an Ocean of Peace was presented to Pacific Leaders at their meeting in Rarotonga last year. Fiji’s Prime Minister intends to present a fuller version of this concept to the next Pacific leaders meeting. I offer suggestion­s for framing the Ocean of Peace as a foundation­al new proposal for considerat­ion by Pacific’s leaders.

As ocean of peace as an inspiratio­n

THE core ideas for framing this proposal comes from the Pacific’s foundation­al documents and its operating values. This includes the Blue Pacific’s 2050 strategy and a commitment to working through consensus. The 2050 strategy focuses the world’s attention to growing insecurity across our region arising from a cocktail of developmen­t failures, growing climate stresses and widening institutio­nal weaknesses. It presents a road map to tackling these.

The UN’s Secretary General’s new agenda for peace provides helpful backdrop to this concept. This new agenda for peace acknowledg­es the reality that the global institutio­ns that have been the bedrock for peace, developmen­t and security in the aftermath of World War II are no longer fit for purpose.

A new peace, developmen­t and security architectu­re needs to evolve. This will need to bring to the fore new mechanisms for securing SDGs, for securing peace and for promoting peacebuild­ing.

The starting point will have to be a shift to doing more at regional – and less at global levels. This means the African Union will need to do more for Africa; ASEAN will need to do more for Asia and the Pacific Islands Forum will need to do more for the Blue Pacific.

An ocean of peace in a stirred up geopolitic­al context

Much has been written about the US and the China contestati­on playing out in the Pacific. This contestati­on is intense. Strategic miscalcula­tions can occur. The risks of inadverten­t conflicts are real.

All the recent chairs of the Pacific Islands Forum have said the Pacific desires better partnershi­ps with all countries. The Pacific’s leaders are clear of their intent. They want the region’s partners to respect their sovereignt­y and play by the rules of the internatio­nal system.

But the Pacific’s leaders and its people also come to this from another perspectiv­e. The memories of World War II are still fresh. That memory still hurts. And no one desires for the Pacific to host yet another internatio­nal conflict.

We know as well that any strategic miscalcula­tions in South China Sea and in Indian Ocean will, in no time, spill over into the Blue Pacific. There are no walls around the Blue Pacific.

The Blue Pacific as an Ocean of Peace has this super charged geopolitic­al context as its backdrop.

On ocean of peace in a volatile climate context

The Blue Pacific as an ocean of peace is an investment for our future generation­s. There is significan­t momentum both in our region and globally on securing the rights of future generation­s. Runaway climate change, growing stress on our oceans, criminalis­ation of the high seas all present grave risks to those who will follow. Potential criminalis­ation of new domains — from the seabed, to AI, to internet adds to volatiliti­es across the Blue Pacific.

The Blue Pacific as an ocean of peace that is welcoming to those who follow good developmen­t practices; who exercise good behaviour in their internatio­nal relations and who uphold high standards in their governance is an investment in securing the future generation­s.

Framing the Blue Pacific as an ocean of peace

Pacific’s leaders will do great service to the region if they were to consider and approve a declaratio­n endorsing the Blue Pacific as an ocean of peace at their next meeting in Tonga. The crucial 5 prongs of that declaratio­n may be framed around:

(i) In all matters related to the Blue Pacific, acknowledg­ing respect for its foundation­al values. They include a commitment to an open and rules based Blue Pacific; support for its 2050 strategy and working through consensus in promoting peace, developmen­t and security across the Blue Pacific.

(ii) A commitment by island states to develop regional“peace keeping peace building” capabiliti­es and mechanisms to help restore peace, secure stability and respond to cross regional security threats in newer domains. These capabiliti­es should be collective­ly deployable in response to disasters and climate catastroph­es. In short, a Biketawa Plus arrangemen­t.

(iii) A commitment by the island states to build a significan­t technical and financing capability to support countries to restore economic stability and security especially following climate and other catastroph­es. Such a facility may combine the Pacific Resilience Facility with disaster risk insurance, with some resources for emergency concession­ary finance. In short, a Pacific Resilience Facility Plus mechanism.

(iv) The Pacific having clearer standards for its external partners – their respect for its sovereignt­y; respect for maritime boundaries regardless of climate change impacts; firm principles on how to engage with the region in developmen­t and in non-traditiona­l domains; and demonstrab­le high ambition in their commitment to climate action. The actions and interventi­ons of Pacific’s partners should reinforce their solidarity — not weaken it.

(v) Finally, a firmest possible commitment to building the Blue Pacific as an arc of environmen­tal and ecological sustainabi­lity and with a clear view to giving hope for generation­s yet to be born.

The Blue Pacific has inspired the world into action in the past. Its declaratio­n of our region as a nuclear weapons free zone inspired other regions of the world to adopt similar protection­s. Its leadership on rules-based approaches to managing the seas was an important driver for the UN Law of the Sea — the Constituti­on of the World’s ocean.

The Blue Pacific as an ocean of peace as an approach to securing and maintainin­g peace in a climate stressed and a geopolitic­ally charged world might indeed be another one of these inspiratio­nal ideas coming from the Blue Pacific.

The Prime Minister’s notion of an ocean of peace has the potential to transform our region and inspire the rest of the world. I hope that Pacific’s civil society and its leaders will welcome this proposal.

 ?? Picture: SHAYAL DEVI ?? Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka (right) with Fisheries Minister Kalaveti Ravu at the Our Ocean Conference in Panama last year.
Picture: SHAYAL DEVI Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka (right) with Fisheries Minister Kalaveti Ravu at the Our Ocean Conference in Panama last year.

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