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# CHINA’S BIG PACIFIC SETBACK

Posted on April 30, 2024 4 Comments

China has lost its strongest regional supporter with the Solomons leader, Manasseh Sogavare, being forced to stand aside after failing to gain a majority in the country’s election. After dominating Solomons politics for four decades, Sogavare ‘s governing party won just 15 seats, well short of the 26 seats needed to form government .

Last year, Manasseh Sogavare triggered alarm bells in the democracies when he said that China was “the way to go forward” for the Solomons and insisted – against all the evidence – that China does not have strategic ambitions in the Pacific.

His people have clearly disagreed – forcing him to stand aside in a humiliating set-back, although he won his own seat and will presumably continue to wield influence behind the scenes.

While the Solomons election wasn’t fought solely on the issue of Chinese influence in the country, Manasseh Sogavare’s removal is a warning to other Pacific leaders that closer ties with Beijing is not an election winner.

It demonstrates that Fiji’s Prime Minister, Sitiveni Rabuka, is right to be wary of boosting the China connection and not just because of the risk of offending the democracies and especially close neighbours Australia and New Zealand. Sogavare’s repudiation by his own people when he was so closely identified with the Chinese will not be lost on Rabuka or any Pacific politician.

China has spent hundreds of millions of dollars boosting ties with the Solomons and hoping to capitalise on its strategic proximity to Australia. So there will be rueful faces in Beijing and at its big embassy in Suva, which has been trying to contain the fallout from the unmasking of local businessman Zhao Fugang as a Chinese agent of influence and alleged drug-runner.

That’s what you get with democracies. Damn, damn, damn.

From the Sydney Morning Herald:

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Corruption Rife says

    April 30, 2024 at 6:55 am

    Yadra and Vinaka GD for stepping in to inform us about ex-PM Sogavare. So relevant to Fiji and the Pacific island states which are led by cheap and selfish leaders.

    Startling revelations too on Mr Sogavare by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project: https://www.occrp.org/en/investigations/solomon-islands-pm-has-millions-in-property-raising-questions-around-wealth

    Sadly and as you’ve widely articulated, our youth and potential leaders in Fiji will follow suit in the absence of role models in the high Ministerial offices for Education and Children, let alone that of the PM and AG.

    BTW, OCCRP’s site has interesting (as Fred would say) reports on that Coalition-protected trafficker and agent, Mr Zhao. Hope his protectors will also feature soon in OCCRP’s work. Isa, 2026, please come soon!

    Reply
    • Graham Davis says

      April 30, 2024 at 9:17 am

      Yes, thank you for the OCCRP report. Very interesting reading. Chinese workers fast-tracking the construction of homes for the outgoing PM. What a surprise.

      Reply
      • Corruption Rife says

        April 30, 2024 at 10:47 am

        When such fast tracking happens, regulations are bypassed, thus compromising safety standards. Then stop work orders are followed by work resumption notices, and the vicious cycle continues. Glaring examples are the diplomatic apartments along Princes Rd in Tamavua and the capital’s skyscraper hotel, whose development permit public consultations reportedly occurred the day after bulldozers had already started groundbreaking works!!! Thus, it will be useful to establish how the maze of building regulations and inefficient bureaucracy in Honiara were cleared in record times in order to build and complete ex-PM Sogavare’s mansions before he exits his official home.

        Reply
  2. Nfp voter says

    April 30, 2024 at 8:47 am

    China or no China, I just cant wait for 2026 to give NFP a good old kick in the next elections.

    The great betrayers need to be made an example of.

    Reply

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About Grubsheet

Graham Davis
Grubsheet Feejee is the blogsite of Graham Davis, an award-winning journalist turned communications consultant who was the Fijian Government’s principal communications advisor for six years from 2012 to 2018 and continued to work on Fiji’s global climate and oceans campaign up until the end of the decade.

 

Fiji-born to missionary parents and a dual Fijian-Australian national, Graham spent four decades in the international media before returning to Fiji to work full time in 2012. He reported from many parts of the world for the BBC, ABC, SBS, the Nine and Seven Networks and Sky News and wrote for a range of newspapers and magazines in Australia, New Zealand and Fiji.

 

Graham launched Grubsheet Feejee in 2011 and suspended writing for it after the Fijian election of 2014, by which time he was working at the heart of government. But the website continued to attract hits as a background resource on events in Fiji in the transition back to parliamentary democracy.

 

Grubsheet relaunches in 2020 at one of the most critical times in Fijian history, with the nation reeling from the Covid-19 crisis and Frank Bainimarama’s government shouldering the twin burdens of incumbency and economic disintegration.

 

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