More Pacific Islands leaders withdraw from forum summit
The number of leaders attending the Pacific Islands Forum summit has dropped further, with both the president of the Marshall Islands and the Cook Islands prime minister pulling out.
It was revealed at the weekend that Kiribati President Taneti Maamau was not attending the gathering and his nation had formally withdrawn from the forum.
Nauru’s Lionel Aingimea was also understood to not be attending, ostensibly because of the soaring levels of Covid-19 in his country.
Now, Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown has also pulled out, saying he wants to focus on the election, which will be held in three weeks.
Marshall Islands President David Kabua said he would have attended the summit, but was not able to because of a legislatively binding action to terminate the country’s membership in the forum. That legislation had resulted from the five Micronesian leaders threatening to pull out 18 months ago over the failure of their nominee to be given the secretary generalship.
A forum committee announced last month that a remedy had been found for this rift and that it would be voted on at this week’s meeting.
Kabua announced that the Marshall Islands were no longer members of the forum, and had not been since March.
The five Micronesian states which raised concerns at the appointment of Cook Islands politician Henry Puna as secretary general of the forum were the Marshalls, Kiribati, Nauru, Palau and the Federated States of Micronesia.
Federated States of Micronesia president David Panuelo said he was surprised and saddened by Kiribati’s decision to withdraw from the forum.
‘‘It’s a bit surprising, because we believe that the Suva agreement – when we came last month and met with the forum chair, was a big achievement . . . I did say that the cloud has lifted from the Pacific because of that achievement. We did achieve the reforms that Micronesian subregion was asking [for].’’
Panuelo reiterated his country’s commitment to membership in the regional group.
European Union ambassador to the Pacific Sujiro Seam said the withdrawal of Kiribati was sad news for the region. –