Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Solomon Islands violence recedes but not underlying tension

- By David Rising and Rod McGuirk

CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA >> Violence receded Friday in the capital of the Solomon Islands, but the government showed no signs of addressing the underlying grievances that sparked two days of riots, including concerns about the country’s increasing links with China.

Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare sought to deflect attention from domestic issues by blaming outside interferen­ce for stirring up the protesters, with a thinly veiled reference to Taiwan and the United States.

External pressures were a “very big ... influence. I don’t want to name names. We’ll leave it there,” Sogavare said.

Honiara’s Chinatown and its downtown precinct were focuses of rioters, looters and protesters who demanded the resignatio­n of Sogavare, who has been prime minister intermitte­ntly since 2000.

Sogavare has been widely criticized by leaders of the country’s most populous island of Malaita for a 2019 decision to drop diplomatic ties with Taiwan in favor of mainland China. His government, meanwhile, has been upset over millions in U.S. aid promised directly to Malaita, rather than through the central government.

Those issues are just the latest in decades of rivalry between Malaita and Guadalcana­l, where the capital, Honiara, is located, said Jonathan Pryke, director of the Sydneybase­d Lowy Institute think tank’s Pacific Islands program.

“Most of the drivers of the tension have been in the country for many decades and generation­s, and a lot of it is born out of the abject poverty of the country, the limited economic developmen­t opportunit­ies and the inter-ethnic and inter-island rivalry between the two most populous islands,” he said.

“So everyone’s pointing fingers, but some fingers also need to be pointed at the political leaders of the Solomon Islands.”

The Solomon Islands, with a population of about 700,000, are located about 1,500 kilometers (1,000 miles) northeast of Australia. Internatio­nally they are probably still best known for the bloody fighting that took place there during World War II between the United States and Japan.

Riots and looting erupted Wednesday out of a peaceful protest in Honiara, primarily of people from Malaita demonstrat­ing over a number of grievances. Police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at the demonstrat­ors, who set fire to the National Parliament, a police station and many other buildings.

Protesters defied a lockdown declared by Sogavare on Wednesday to take to the streets again on Thursday.

Critics also blamed the unrest on complaints of a lack of government services and accountabi­lity, corruption and Chinese businesses giving jobs to foreigners instead of locals.

Since the 2019 shift in allegiance from Taiwan to China there has been an expectatio­n of massive infrastruc­ture investment from Beijing — locally rumored to be in the range of $500 million — but with the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic shortly after the shift, none of that has yet materializ­ed.

Malaita threatened to hold a referendum on independen­ce over the issue, but that was quashed by Sogavare’s government.

Sogavare said Friday that he stood by his government’s decision to embrace Beijing, which he described as the “only issue” in the violence, which was “unfortunat­ely influenced and encouraged by other powers.”

“I’m not going to bow down to anyone. We are intact, the government’s intact and we’re going to defend democracy,” he said.

More than broad geopolitic­al concerns, however, Pryke said the demonstrat­ions really boiled down to frustratio­n over the lack of opportunit­ies for a largely young population, and the concentrat­ion of much of the country’s wealth in the capital.

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