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[March 29, 2022]
By Kirsty Needham
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Solomon Islands Prime
Minister Manasseh Sogavare said the backlash to his country's security
negotiations with China was "very insulting", in his first comments on a
security treaty he said was ready to sign.
Australia, New Zealand and the United States have expressed concern
about security negotiations between the Pacific island nation and China
which became public last week after the leak of a draft security treaty,
prompting concern over a Chinese base in the region.
Sogavare told his parliament on Tuesday the leaked security document was
a draft and he would not give details on the content of the final deal.
"We are not pressured in any way by our new friends and there is no
intention whatsoever to ask China to build a military base in the
Solomon Islands," he said. The islands switched diplomatic allegiance to
mainland China from Taiwan in 2019.
New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said on Monday it was a
"potential militarization of the region", and Australia's defence
minister Peter Dutton said Canberra would be concerned if the deal led
to a Chinese military base in the Pacific.
In a speech to parliament, Sogavare expressed criticism of larger
countries who he said didn't care if Pacific islands went under water
because of climate change and considered the region "the backyard of big
Western powers".
He also denied opposition claims that a security pact with China would
lead to an autocratic government.
The opposition has accused Sogavare of using a new police pact with
China, and striking a security deal, to prop up his leadership.
During anti-government riots last year, Sogavare said the Chinatown
district in the capital Honiara was burned down and there were also
threats to sports infrastructure for the 2023 Pacific Games, a reference
to seven stadiums being built by China in a deal struck after the
islands switched diplomatic allegiance.
"If any country does not have the political appetite to do that, we must
have an alternative arrangement in place," he said, adding that
infrastructure gifted to the Solomon Islands must be protected.
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Solomon Islands' Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare addresses the
United Nations General Assembly in the Manhattan borough of New
York, U.S., September 23, 2016. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File Photo
Australia provided police assistance
to Sogavare to restore order after the riots under a 2017 security
treaty, and New Zealand, Fiji and Papua New Guinea later also sent
police.
The leaked draft said the security treaty would allow China's armed
police and the military to protect Chinese projects.
Sogavare rejected suggestions that China's presence was a security
threat to the region.
He said the Pacific islands nation would not "pick sides", and the
security treaty with Australia would remain in place.
Sogavare said he written to Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison
on the matter, as well as explaining the Solomons' position to Fiji,
Papua New Guinea and the Pacific Islands Forum, the main regional
group for political and economic policy cooperation, in calls.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin told a regular
briefing in Beijing on Tuesday that its "law-enforcement and
security cooperation" with the Solomons Islands was in accordance
with the law and international norms.
"We hope relevant countries respect Solomons' sovereignty and the
decisions it made, instead of thinking condescendingly that they are
entitled to demand what the Solomon Islands can or cannot do," Wang
said.
Australia's Foreign Minister Marise Payne told parliament on Tuesday
that Canberra's security treaty with Honiara had been extended to
2023, adding diplomats had "regularly and respectfully raised our
concern" about the China security negotiations.
New Zealand’s Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta, in Fiji, said in a
statement five defence personnel would stay in Honiara until May,
and New Zealand would "continue to raise our strong condemnation" of
Solomon Islands' proposed agreement with China.
(Reporting by Kirsty Needham in Sydney; additional reporting by Lucy
Craymer in Wellington and Yew Lun Tian in Beijing. Editing by
Kenneth Maxwell, Raju Gopalakrishnan and Raissa Kasolowsky)
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