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Solomons leader claims neutrality to UN but defends China ties
by AFP Staff Writers
United Nations, United States (AFP) Sept 23, 2022

Solomon Islands leader Manasseh Sogavare on Friday told the United Nations his South Pacific country remains neutral despite growing ties with China, charging that he has been "vilified" for the relationship with Beijing.

The sprawling archipelago switched diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing in 2019 and signed a security pact with Beijing in April, with some critics warning of authoritarian tendencies by Sogavare.

"We will not align ourselves with any external powers or security architecture that targets our or any other sovereign country or threatens regional or international peace," the prime minister told the UN General Assembly.

"Solomon Islands will not be coerced into choosing sides."

He said his country of fewer than one million citizens has been unfairly targeted and subjected to "a barrage of unwarranted and misplaced criticisms" as major powers vie for Pacific influence.

"Solomon Islands has been vilified in the media since formalizing its relationship with China," he said.

Sogavare has deepened his nation's ties with China and earlier this month he was successful in efforts to change the constitution to delay scheduled elections until 2024 at the earliest.

The four-time leader has twice been ousted by votes of no confidence and faced street protests against his decision to switch diplomatic recognition.

After widespread rioting in the capital Honiara and demands for his ouster last year, his government signed a secretive defense pact with Beijing that -- according to a leaked draft -- allows him to call in Chinese security forces to quell unrest.

Sogavare at the UN called on all countries to "not inflame tensions" in or near the Taiwan Strait, amid mounting concerns over the self-governing democracy claimed by Beijing.

"Any miscalculation could threaten international peace and security and could have disastrous consequences on global trade," he said.


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WATER WORLD
As tiny Tuvalu sinks, PM fights to save the archipelago's identity
New York (AFP) Sept 21, 2022
The flag of Tuvalu contains nine yellow stars - one for each of the islands that make up the tiny Pacific archipelago, home to some 11,000 people. Today, however, two of those atolls are on the verge of being swallowed by rising sea levels as a result of the global climate crisis that has already done irreversible harm and will likely leave the nation uninhabitable in the coming decades. What happens to a country when it disappears beneath the waves, when all its people are forced to leave? ... read more

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