China’s growing hold over the Solomon Islands is “alarming,” a powerful opposition figurehead said yesterday, ahead of elections that could further entrench Beijing’s foothold in the region.
“During these past five years, there have been so many things that China was involved in. It’s really alarming at the moment,” Daniel Suidani said in an exclusive interview.
Suidani said he is troubled by what he believes is Beijing’s corrosive impact on democracy in the island nation. Solomon Islands has warmly embraced China under mercurial Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare, with the two nations inking a murky security pact in 2022.
Photo: AFP
A torrent of Chinese aid and investment has flowed into the country during Sogavare’s five years at the helm, and the 69-year-old has vowed to further deepen these ties if he is re-elected tomorrow.
Fearful the money could one day come with strings attached, former Malaita premier Suidani was one of the rare provincial leaders who refused to cash China’s checks.
Suidani accused Chinese interests of working behind the scenes to help keep pro-Beijing members in parliament.
“They are very, very involved in this government,” he told Agence France-Presse on a scratchy phone line from Auki, Malaita’s coastal provincial capital. “They are involved in other things, so there is no doubt that they must be involved in elections. Because they have been doing it for some time.”
Sogavare has repeatedly denied China poses a threat to the country, and says foreign critics should not meddle in the Solomons’ sovereignty
Suidani’s provincial government was so concerned about China’s sway, it blocked telco giant Huawei from building desperately needed cellphone towers on the island. One of the most galvanizing figures in Solomon Islands’ politics, Suidani commands an enthusiastic base of supporters on Malaita.
He was abruptly ousted as Malaita’s provincial leader in February last year, defeated in a motion of no-confidence while he and his supporters were absent from parliament.
Suidani has accused Sogavare’s government of orchestrating what he said was an underhanded maneuver to silence one of its most vocal critics.
Observers of Pacific politics believe Sogavare has demonstrated increasingly autocratic tendencies in his quest to stay in power. “For the international community, I would like to say that we need your support,” Suidani said. “We want to share the same freedom and liberty that everyone else shares.”
Solomon Islands is one of the least-developed nations in the world, and Sogavare firmly believes its path to prosperity lies with Beijing. However, his main rivals are deeply skeptical of his pact with China, and have signaled a willingness to re-establish ties with traditional security partners Australia and the US.
“The 2024 election is going to be a very critical one for Solomon Islands,” Suidani said.
The capital, Honiara, was abuzz with fervent election campaigning yesterday morning, as parties carted hollering supporters into the city on an endless procession of packed flat-bed trucks.
The international scramble for influence was clear: giant “Radio Australia” billboards hung over the only route into town, while police cars slapped with “China Aid” stickers trundled past on potholed roads.
A boisterous rally for former prime minister Gordon Darcy Lilo was held on a muddy, waterlogged field on the city’s outskirts. Teacher Josep was among a crowd of hundreds noisily clamoring for a change of government.
“The economy is collapsing. I want the people of Honiara to rise up and reclaim our country,” he said, as supporters honked their agreement through conch shells and plastic horns.
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