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China signs security deal with Solomon Islands, Chinese foreign ministry says

By Eryk Bagshaw
Updated

Beijing: China has signed a security pact with the Solomon Islands, foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said on Tuesday, despite the US, Australia and New Zealand expressing concerns about Chinese influence in the region.

The announcement from China came as US Indo-Pacific chief Kurt Campbell prepares to fly into Honiara to lobby against the deal. The Solomons has yet to publicly confirm if it has fully signed off on the agreement after initialling it with Chinese officials a fortnight ago.

Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare, left, walks with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in October 2019.

Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare, left, walks with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in October 2019. Credit: AP

The Pacific island nation switched diplomatic recognition to Beijing from Taiwan in 2019. After it was rocked by anti-Chinese violence in November, China donated anti-riot gear and offered to send police advisers.

The framework pact was recently signed by State Councillor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Solomon Islands Foreign Minister Jeremiah Manele, foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin told reporters at a regular briefing in Beijing.

He did not give details of where, or precisely when, the signing took place.

“Deliberate attempts to inflate tensions and mobilise rival camps are also doomed to fail,” Wang, the Chinese spokesman, said on Tuesday, when asked about the US officials’ scheduled visit.

Foreign Minister Marise Payne said she was “deeply disappointed” the deal had been signed.

“We are concerned about the lack of transparency with which this agreement has been developed, noting its potential to undermine stability in our region,” she said.

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“Our consistently stated view, including from the perspective of Australia’s national interests, remains that the Pacific family is best placed to meet the security needs of the region.”

Labor’s foreign affairs spokeswoman Penny Wong accused the Morrison government of negligence.

“Despite all of his tough talk, on Scott Morrison’s watch our region has become less secure,” she said.

“His government was warned of this security pact in August and he hasn’t even bothered to send the foreign minister to the Solomon Islands to raise concerns on behalf of all Australians.”

The US had earlier on Tuesday warned Solomon Islands that China’s soldiers could be stationed in the Pacific nation if it signs a security deal with Beijing.

In its first public intervention in the geopolitical rift that is dominating the region, Washington urged Solomons to remember that Australia led the multinational peacekeeping force that restored order after riots in Honiara in November and suggested China’s presence would destabilise an already volatile situation.

US State Department spokesman Ned Price on Tuesday said that assurances from Solomons Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare that there would be no Chinese naval bases had not convinced the US that the deal was in the region’s best interests.

“Despite the Solomon Islands government’s comments, the broad nature of the security agreement leaves open the door for the deployment of [People’s Republic of China] military forces to the Solomon Islands,” said Price.

“We believe that signing such an agreement could increase destabilisation within Solomon Islands and will set a concerning precedent for the wider Pacific Island region.”

The Solomons lies less than 2000 kilometres from Australia’s east coast and is on a key shipping route between Australia, New Zealand, Asia and the US.

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The country has been beset by poverty, corruption and poor infrastructure, pushing its leaders closer to promises of Chinese investment. Beijing has requested it be allowed to protect those investments by force if necessary through a security agreement in exchange for economic cooperation.

Australian officials have been quietly frustrated by the lack of public diplomacy from Washington as they attempted to convince Sogavare to pull out of the deal while respecting Solomons sovereignty. That position came to a head last week when Pacific Minster Zed Seselja explicitly asked Sogavare not to sign the deal in a meeting in Honiara.

“Australia will continue supporting peace, prosperity, stability and our shared democratic values in Solomon Islands and across the region,” Seselja said last week.

Kurt Campbell says the United States' allies will need to do their fair share.

Kurt Campbell says the United States' allies will need to do their fair share.Credit: Andrew Taylor

China has been elevated alongside Australia as Solomons’ top strategic partner after the Pacific nation switched its diplomatic allegiance to Beijing from Taiwan three years ago.

Price said Campbell intended to “share perspectives, to share interests, to share concerns” while in Honiara but did not say when he would arrive.

Campbell, who along with National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan is in charge of China policy in the White House, will also visit Fiji and Papua New Guinea.

Australian officials have been specifically concerned about what precedent the Solomons deal could set for PNG, Australia’s closest neighbour and another key target of Chinese investment in the region. PNG Prime Minister James Marape in February signed an agreement with China’s President Xi Jinping at the Winter Olympics that opposed “other countries’ interference in their internal affairs under the pretext of democracy and human rights”.

Australia is spending $580 million on upgrading six ports across PNG – including turning one into a regional container hub for the Pacific – in an attempt to counter-bid China’s investment in mining and infrastructure. At the same time, PNG has agreed to supply more LNG to China, hitting some of Australia’s exports to Beijing.

Price said Fiji, PNG, and Solomon Islands were important partners to the US.

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“It’s precisely why the secretary met with the Pacific Islands Forum earlier this year when we were in the region,” he said.

Price said Campbell would outline what the US can bring to the region as Washington pushes ahead with plans to establish its first embassy in Honiara.

“We’ll leave it to them to contrast what we offer from what other countries, including rather large countries in the region, might offer,” he said.

with Reuters

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Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/link/follow-20170101-p5aeib