Pacific islands leaders commit to regional unity in face of superpower
rivalry
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[July 14, 2022]
By Kirsty Needham
SUVA (Reuters) - Pacific island leaders
have agreed to take a united approach as the United States and China vie
for influence in the region, and to push developed nations for bolder
action on climate change, which they say is the biggest threat they
face.
A communique to be released on the final day of the Pacific Islands
Forum meeting in Suva will show the leaders agree to consult each other
before entering into security arrangements, forum secretary general
Henry Puna told reporters.
The approach taken by China, which asked 10 out of 18 forum members to
endorse a pre-prepared security and trade deal in May, without time to
consult, was rejected by forum leaders this week, he said.
"The region did not accept that approach," he said at a press conference
on Thursday.
The biggest member, Australia, provides aid and policing throughout the
region but was excluded from China's proposal, as were several nations
that have ties with Taiwan.
This week the United States said it would triple funding to the Pacific
islands under a fisheries deal, amid concern over China's security
ambitions for the region and a decade of rising Chinese investment.
Puna said Pacific islands "can't afford to be enemies with anyone".
"There are opportunities to be had... however certain issues like
security, it does have regional impacts, and that is the issue that
leaders have asked each other to share and dialogue with each other so
everybody knows what is happening," he said.
In an interview with The Guardian on Thursday, Solomon Islands Prime
Minister Manasseh Sogavare said a security deal struck with China in
May, prompting concern from the U.S., Australia and New Zealand, would
not allow a Chinese military base in his country because he didn't want
his country to become a target.
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Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese meets with Solomon
Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare on sidelines of the Pacific
Islands Forum, in Suva, Fiji July 13, 2022. Joe Armao/Pool via
REUTERS
"The reason is regionalism. The moment we establish a
foreign military base, we immediately become an enemy," he said.
Forum chairman and Fiji Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama said the
region was facing complex challenges and leaders recognised they had
strength in numbers.
"Unity was our overriding focus," he said.
An agreement was signed to resolve a rift with Micronesian nations,
as leaders committed to keep talking with Kiribati, which withdrew
from the forum this week.
Agreement was also reached on climate action, nuclear issues and
fisheries, he said, ahead of the communique being released.
The forum will call for the United Nations General Assembly to seek
an advisory opinion from the International Court of Justice on
climate change, as a tactic to boost commitments.
"Australia's new position on climate change was particularly
well-received, and that is reflected in the communique," Australia's
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told reporters.
Bainimarama said Fiji urged developed countries including Australia
to phase out coal and fossil fuels, and step up financing for the
"loss and damage" caused by climate change in small island
countries.
(Reporting by Kirsty Needham; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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