Global Times

Slander fails to disrupt BRI projects in Pacific Islands

▶ US, Australian top- down smear campaign against China exposes hegemony mind- set

- By GT staff reporters

The US, Australia and their Western allies have long been conspiring a systematic, topdown smear campaign targeting China’s Belt and Road Initiative ( BRI) projects in the Pacific islands, and these attacks culminated in recent days with the signing of an open, transparen­t security pact between China and the Solomon Islands– a Pacific nation which the US and Australia treated as their “vassals” under hegemony mindset.

From spreading disinforma­tion via mainstream media and non- government organizati­ons ( NGOs) with made- up stories of so- called Chinese military base and clichés of “debt traps,” to deliberate­ly erecting barriers to Chinese employees and rejecting Chinese firms’ access to West- led multinatio­nal financial institutio­ns, US and Australia seem to have used all means in a malicious attempt to obstruct normal commercial relations between China and the Pacific Islands.

Despite the hindrance, BRI projects are being rolled out on schedule across Pacific island nations regardless of Western threats and hysterical attacks, the Global Times learned. After years of absence by the West, and increasing Chinese investment in the Pacific islands, locals and officials have learned to discern the difference between an empty promise and substantia­l cooperatio­n, and as such, locals are not buying into vicious rhetoric against China anymore, Chinese business representa­tives told the Global Times.

“There are clear signs that some foundation­s, NGOs and Western media outlets are colluding with the US and Australian government­s, targeting Chinese- invested projects in the Pacific island nations in recent days,” an executive from a state- owned enterprise who leads that firm’s South Pacific business told the Global Times on the condition of anonymity.

Another manager of a Solomon Islands- based Chinese company, who began business there in 2015, also told the Global Times on condition of anonymity that certain Australian media organizati­ons had travelled to the island nation about two weeks ago, looking to “create some anti- China noises” to disrupt the locals’ cooperatio­n with Chinese businesses.

He also confirmed that local branches of certain NGOs in Solomon Islands and certain women’s associatio­ns were also involved in the campaign to undermine Chinese business.

Organized smearing

Subject to prolonged neglect by the West, the Solomon Islands, with a population of over 600,000, has suddenly become a “favorite” of Australia and the US after it signed a security pact with China – which the West labeled as “a threat”, although China and the Solomon Islands have reiterated on many occasions that the cooperatio­n frameworks complies with internatio­nal laws and practices.

Last week, a high- level US delegation visited the nation to put pressure on it, following a recent visit by an Australian senator. The US Embassy in Solomon Islands has been closed for 29 years. Ambassador Daniel Kritenbrin­k, assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs who formed part of the delegation, said US won’t rule out military action if China “establishe­s a base in Solomon Islands,” the Guardian reported. Japan also dispatched a senior official to the Solomon Islands on Monday.

Western media slandering against Chinese projects has meanwhile escalated over the last few weeks. The New York Times ran a lengthy article, hyping “how a Chinese security deal in the pacific could ripple through the world.” The Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n also claimed in a report in early April that Beijing’s interests in the Pacific Islands are geopolitic­allydriven, as it looks to “create partnershi­ps to extend its security apparatus globally.”

Some Western media also sought to attack a laundry list of China- invested BRI projects, including a suspended port project in Samoa, distorting how these projects created “debt trap” for the local economies.

“Disruption­s to BRI projects in the South Pacific are not new. Australian officials have not stopped badmouthin­g Chinese projects for many years, and the consultant­s sent by Western nations also seek to distance local government­s from Chinese projects,” the anonymous executive said, adding that it is also extremely difficult for Chinese employees with an official passport to secure an Australia transit visa, when often the fastest and most convenient way for them to fly back is to transit through Sydney.

According to the executive, a block on Chinese firms is also rampant in internatio­nal financial institutio­ns, some of which have denied Chinese firms’ participat­ion in projects they launched in Pacific islands for reasons that “do not stand ground.”

Normal cooperatio­n

Chen Canyan, president of China Agricultur­al & Trade Developmen­t of Fiji, told the Global Times that it is “ironic to see swarms of” high- level Western official visits to the Solomon Islands – an island nation that they had long since forgotten – in recent weeks, immediatel­y after the security pact was signed.

“It seems like if any country wants to attract attention from the West, it should not beg them but instead building closer ties with China at first,” Chen said. He pointed out that the unrelentin­g slander against Chinese projects exposes the hegemony deeply rooted in the philosophy of the West, under which they “ideologica­lized and politicize­d” China’s normal economic exchanges with these countries, and to treat the Pacific islands, which they had long perceived as their “backyard,” as a new field of competitio­n for swaying geopolitic­al influence.

“US and Australia have sought to intimidate Pacific Islands nations with their claimed ‘ China threat’ theory, and after that failed, they began hyping so- called ‘ debt trap.’ But the reality is: who is the biggest source of instabilit­y for the region and who brought benefits?” Yu Lei, chief research fellow at the research center for Pacific island countries of Liaocheng University in East China’s Shandong Province, told the Global Times.

Chinese businessme­n said that China’s win- win cooperatio­n with Solomon Islands will also set an example for other Pacific island nations, and could foster closer economic ties after the cooperatio­n yields tangible benefits.

In 2019, the Solomon Islands joined the China- proposed BRI, after establishi­ng diplomatic relations with China. To date, about 10 Pacific Island nations have signed up to the BRI.

“After being disappoint­ed by developed nations, there has been a strategy of ‘ looking north’ among Pacific nations, which equates to developing closer economic relations with Asia, including China, leveraging the region’s capital, technology and modernizat­ion experience to fuel growth,” Chen said.

Yu explained that the infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty under the BRI will aid Pacific Island nations to be connected both “internally” and “externally,” integratin­g them into the global economic system.

On April 22, China handed over a training track and football field venue that will be used for the 2023 Pacific Games in the Solomon Islands. The China- funded training track, constructe­d by China Civil Engineerin­g Constructi­on Corporatio­n ( CCECC), is the Solomon Islands’ first internatio­nal standard modern track, with the entire project due to be delivered by April 2023.

CCECC also helped in constructi­ng a road project connecting two islands in Vanuatu, a spokespers­on told the

Global Times.

 ?? CCECC Photo: Courtesy of ?? View i of f a road d project in Vanuatu built by China Civil Engineerin­g Constructi­on Corporatio­n
CCECC Photo: Courtesy of View i of f a road d project in Vanuatu built by China Civil Engineerin­g Constructi­on Corporatio­n

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