The Guardian Australia

Australia delivers police vehicles and rifles to Solomon Islands in ‘game-changer’ donation

- Kate Lyons

Australia has announced the donation of police vehicles and 60 MK18 rifles to the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force (RSIPF) in a move described as a “game changer” for Australia’s relationsh­ip with Solomon Islands police.

The announceme­nt comes after a turbulent year in the relationsh­ip between Australia and Solomon Islands, particular­ly on the question of security, after the Pacific country signed a controvers­ial and secretive security agreement with China.

The Solomon Islands prime minister, Manasseh Sogavare, has suggested the relationsh­ip between Solomons and Australia has “soured”, but he attended Wednesday’s ceremony in Honiara where the vehicles and weapons were handed over.

Australia’s high commission­er to Solomon Islands, Lachlan Strahan, was also in attendance.

Strahan tweeted photograph­s of the handover ceremony and said the donation was part of “extending our deep security partnershi­p stretching back across two decades”.

Dr Anna Powles, a senior lecturer in security studies at Massey University, said the move represente­d a significan­t shift in the relationsh­ip.

“Australia, under its policing partnershi­p program with Solomon Islands, has supported the RSIPF’s staged limited rearmament and training. This has included previous donations of vehicles, riot gear and pistols,” Powles said.

“The donation of 60 MK18 semiautoma­tic rifles is a game changer because it’s a significan­t increase in capability.”

The donation of equipment, including weapons, comes as China’s involvemen­t in Solomon Islands security, particular­ly in the area of police training, has increased.

In October, a delegation of 34 Solomon Islands police officers travelled to China to undergo training for the first time.

“Policing assistance has increasing­ly become contested in Solomon Islands with its two main security providers competing for influence,” Powles said.

James Batley, a former Australian high commission­er to Solomon Islands,

said on Wednesday: “I’d rather they came from us than from anyone else, to be perfectly frank. Countries like Australia don’t just hand over guns, we hand over systems to manage guns … and not everyone would do that.”

In his announceme­nt about the donation, Strahan said that “the firearms come with stringent training and rigorous safeguards, including safe and secure storage”.

Batley said that while Australia had been involved in supplying training and equipment to the Solomon Islands police for many years, China’s increased interest in the country could not be ignored as a potential factor in the supply of the guns.

“It’s not being done in a vacuum … obviously you can’t take it out of the context of what’s going on geopolitic­ally,” he said. “But it also must tell us something about what the government itself wants because it’s not like we thrust things on them against their wishes.”

Powles suggested the move could raise alarm and mistrust among Solomon Islanders.

“There is already low public trust in the police and this will certainly raise questions amongst those in Solomon Islands concerned about the rearming of the RSIPF,” she said.

 ?? Photograph: Australian High Commission to Solomon Islands ?? Australia has provided Solomon Islands police with MK18 rifles and vehicles.
Photograph: Australian High Commission to Solomon Islands Australia has provided Solomon Islands police with MK18 rifles and vehicles.

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