US cautions after Hawaii neighbor Kiribati gets Chinese police
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[February 27, 2024]
By David Brunnstrom and Kirsty Needham
WASHINGTON/SYDNEY (Reuters) - The United States on Monday cautioned
Pacific Islands nations against assistance from Chinese security forces
after Reuters reported that Chinese police are working in the remote
atoll nation of Kiribati, a neighbor of Hawaii.
Kiribati's acting police commissioner Eeri Aritiera told Reuters last
week uniformed Chinese officers were working with police in community
policing and a crime database program.
Kiribati is a nation of 115,000 people whose closest island is 2,160 km
(1,340 miles) south of Honolulu, and the news comes as Beijing renews a
push to expand security ties in the Pacific Islands in an intensifying
rivalry with the United States.
Asked to comment on the Reuters report, a spokesperson for the U.S.
State Department responded using the abbreviation of the People's
Republic of China: "We do not believe importing security forces from the
PRC will help any Pacific Island country. Instead, doing so risks
fueling regional and international tensions."
The official added that Washington did not tolerate China's
"transnational repression efforts," including its attempts to establish
police stations around the world.
"We are concerned about the potential implications security agreements
and security-related cyber cooperation with the PRC may have for any
Pacific Island nation's autonomy," the spokesperson said.
Kiribati is considered strategic not only given its relatively proximity
to Hawaii, but because it has one of world's biggest exclusive economic
zones, covering more than 3.5 million square km (1.35 million square
miles) of the Pacific.
It hosts a Japanese satellite tracking station and China has announced
plans to rebuild a World War Two U.S. military airstrip on Kiribati's
Kanton Island, prompting U.S. concern.
The United States countered with a pledge in October to upgrade the
wharf on Kanton island, a former U.S. military base, and said it wants
to open an embassy in Kiribati.
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Lagoons can be seen from a plane as it flies above Kiritimati
Island, part of the Pacific Island nation of Kiribati, April 5,
2016. REUTERS/Lincoln Feast/File Photo
China has not responded to a Reuters request for comment on the role
of its police but in a January social media post its embassy named
the head of the "Chinese police station in Kiribati."
Kiribati's acting police commissioner Aritiera said Kiribati had
requested China's policing assistance in 2022 but there was no
Chinese police station. Up to a dozen uniformed Chinese police
arrived last year on a six-month rotation.
A Chinese embassy source confirmed the uniformed officers were
working in Kiribati but also said China had not established a police
station.
China's efforts to strike a region-wide security and trade deal in
the region, where it is a major infrastructure lender, were rejected
by the Pacific Islands Forum in 2022.
However, Chinese police have deployed in the Solomon Islands since
2022 after a secret security pact criticized by Washington and
Canberra as undermining regional stability.
Papua New Guinea, the biggest Pacific Island nation, said this month
it would not accept a Chinese offer of police assistance and
surveillance technology, after news it was negotiating a policing
deal with China prompted criticism from the United States and
Australia.
(Reporting by David Brunnstrom and Kirsty Needham; Editing by
Stephen Coates)
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