Solomon Islands to sever ties with Taiwan, shift alliance to Beijing
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[September 05, 2019]
By Jonathan Barrett
SYDNEY (Reuters) - The Solomon Islands
intends to sever diplomatic ties with Taiwan and align itself with
Beijing, the leader of a high-level government team representing the
South Pacific archipelago has said.
The switch, which still needs to be formalized, would be a prize for
China in its bid to peel away allies from what it considers a wayward
province with no right to state-to-state ties. Only 17 countries now
recognize Taiwan.
Solomons lawmaker Peter Shanel Agovaka told a parliamentary committee
that after four decades of independence and a long-term alliance with
Taiwan, it was time to make a change.
"We cannot sit for the next 40 years with our friends Taiwan. It is time
that we make new friends - it's time that we should move on with our
life," Agovaka said on Wednesday, according to a recording of the
meeting in the capital Honiara.
"Our new relationship will deal with a One China policy; a One China
policy that recognizes only Beijing as the official government
administration," he said in the recording, a copy of which was obtained
by Reuters.
The meeting was open to the public, but the recording has not been
broadcast.
Agovaka is a senior minister and leader of a government team convened
recently to speak directly with Beijing.
The government is waiting for a task force report on the issue before it
formally decides on a switch to Beijing.
The task force is dominated by lawmakers who support a diplomatic
change, two political sources with direct knowledge of the issue told
Reuters.
China and Taiwan have fought a tug-of-war for diplomatic recognition in
the South Pacific for decades, with some island nations switching
allegiances for financial gain.
The South Pacific has been a diplomatic stronghold for Taiwan, where
formal ties with six of the 16 island nations make up more than a third
of its total alliances.
Commenting during a regular daily news conference in Beijing, China's
Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang would only say that China was
willing to have relations with all countries on the basis of the "one
China" principle. That refers to China's stance that Taiwan and it both
belong to one China.
Taiwan said it is watching developments in the Solomons.
"Relationship with Solomon Islands currently is stable, but we are
closely monitoring the situation and development," said Joanne Ou,
spokeswoman for Taiwan's foreign ministry.
Solomon Islands has been assessing its Taiwan alliance since new Prime
Minister Manasseh Sogavare took control after a general election in
April and started looking for ways to improve the country's economic
prospects.
The former British protectorate, an archipelago of just over 600,000
people, relies on timber exports to generate income.
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Houses are seen in Honiara in the Solomon Islands, June 3, 2019.
Picture taken June 3, 2019. AAP Image/Darren England/via REUTERS
The Solomons have recognized Taiwan since 1983. It is the largest of
the Taiwan-aligned Pacific countries, with access to the airfields
and deepwater ports dating back to World War Two.
TAIWAN SUPPORT
A diplomatic shift threatens to divide the island nation.
Sixteen MPs have cited potential "compromised freedoms" as a reason
against the switch in an open letter last month, while the country's
university student population is largely backing Taiwan.
An observer at the committee hearings told Reuters there would be
push-back against a switch, though it was not clear if there were
options to block the government's desire for change.
"The government is trying to make a relationship with China now, but
to formalize it we need to wait for the report," the observer said.
Anti-graft agency Transparency Solomon Islands has urged caution in
changing ties over concerns that the Solomons will not be able to
hold firm against Beijing's interests.
China is offering to bankroll a development fund for the Solomons to
help with a transition away from Taiwan, which currently provides an
annual $8.5 million contribution to the island nation.
John Moffat Fugui, a Solomons' parliamentarian and head of the task
force evaluating diplomatic ties, said on Wednesday that Beijing
would pay into a fund even though it usually preferred "grants,
concessionary loans and sometimes gifts".
"But for you, we will give you a [Rural Constituency Development
Fund] for a certain period," Fugui said, referring to recent
negotiations with Beijing officials.
The Lowy Institute said in a report last month that Canberra and
Washington are concerned about the Solomons switching recognition to
Beijing.
"A switch by any one (of the states that recognize Taiwan) may
stimulate others" to abandon Taipei, the Australia-based think-tank
said.
The number of nations recognizing Taiwan has been dwindling, with El
Salvador in Central America, Burkina Faso in West Africa and the
Dominican Republic in the Caribbean, all switching to China last
year.
(Reporting by Jonathan Barrett in SYDNEY; additional reporting by
Yimou Lee in TAIPEI and Ben Blanchard in BEIJING; Editing by Michael
Perry and Darren Schuettler)
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