Solomon Islands blocks US, China, Taiwan from Pacific's top political meet
Kirsty Needham
, Reuters
Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele
Photo:
RNZ / Samuel Rillstone
Solomon Islands Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele has said that 21 donor countries, including the United States and China, will not be invited to the region's top political meeting, a move that follows pressure from Beijing to exclude Taiwan.
China's biggest security ally in the Pacific Islands, the Solomon Islands is hosting the annual meeting of the 18-member bloc's forum in September.
Three island states have diplomatic ties with Taiwan and not China, and they had expressed concern Taiwanese officials would be blocked from entering the country.
Solomon Islands switched ties from Taiwan to China in 2019, and removed Taiwan from a list of countries eligible for concessional entry in April.
Beijing, which has deepened its ties in the Pacific, claims Taiwan as its own territory.
Manele told the Solomon Islands parliament on Wednesday his cabinet had decided no dialogue partners would be invited to this year's event, because a review of each country's relationship with the Pacific had not been completed.
He said he had informed the forum's 18 leaders of the decision this week.
The World Bank, Asia Development Bank and civil society groups would attend, he added.
Opposition party politician Peter Kenilorea Jr, chairman of the parliament's foreign relations committee, said the decision was "a massive missed opportunity" for Pacific Island countries to meet global donors.
"We know this issue is all about China and Taiwan," he told parliament.
After forum leaders were told of the decision, Marshall Islands President Hilda Heine criticised interference in the forum's affairs in a speech to the Taiwan ally's parliament.
China had "interfered" at last year's meeting in Tonga to change the language of the leaders' communique, Heine said. References to Taiwan were removed after Chinese diplomats complained.
The Pacific Islands is among the world's most aid-reliant regions, and on the frontline of rising sea levels.
The region has also been a focus of increasing security competition between the United States and China.
While US allies Australia and New Zealand are the largest forum members, neither Beijing nor Washington are part of the group.
Kenilorea Jr said he feared that China, which has a strong presence in Solomon Islands, will hold bilateral meetings with Pacific leaders on the margins of the forum regardless.
"This could be seen by some PIF leaders as a betrayal of the collective and could risk an even bigger rift of the group," he said in comments to Reuters.
China's embassy did not respond to a request for comment.
The forum's foreign ministers will meet in Fiji next week.
-Reuters
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
20 hours ago
- RNZ News
Solomon Islands PM calls for pause on Forum dialogue partner meeting
Solomon Islands Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele, right, at the 53rd Pacific Islands Forum Leaders Meeting in Nuku'alofa, Tonga. August 2024 Photo: RNZ Pacific / Lydia Lewis The Solomon Islands Prime Minister has made his case as to why at least twenty countries should be essentially blocked from a key Pacific meeting in Honiara next month. Speaking for the first time to media since news broke of his plans, Jeremiah Manele proposed that Pacific Islands Forum leaders defer the annual dialogue partner meeting till next years' summit in Palau. China and the USA, along with 19 other countries, are Forum dialogue partners. The plan is something Palau's President - a vocal supporter of Taiwan Surangel Whipps Jr backs . Manele insists partners are not being excluded rather his proposal is purely operational with a review into the Pacific's regional architecture not yet finalised. The review is the Pacific Islands Forum leaders' response to the increasing interest from a growing number of Forum dialogue partners wanting a seat - and a say - at the regional decision-making table. "What we are saying here is, let's give some more time for the region to put the process a new process in place so that we can effectively engage with our partners going forward, not now, but the later stage, once we are ready," Manele told local media in a press conference Friday local time. "It's a decision that we take based on the region's interest." Manele went on to explain how he went through appropriate channels -- first meeting with the Troika (the past, present and future hosts of the PIF leaders meeting) who've endorsed his proposal. He said now it's up to the rest of the leaders to have their say: "We understand this decision requires sacrifice, including foregoing special guest invitations during this forum, but it is necessary to ensure engagement is conducted through a robust, transparent and strategic mechanism that reflects our priorities, protects our sovereignty and strengthens our collective voice globally," Manele said. Observers will still attend, including bodies like the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank and the UN agencies. China has strengthened ties in the Solomon Islands and other countries in the Pacific. Photo: Xinhua / Liu Bin/EPA Manele dismissed claims that China/Taiwan tensions are to blame. "We acknowledge public concerns and media narratives regarding Forum matters, but let me be very clear, Solomon Islands is a sovereign nation," Manele said. Marshall Islands President Hilda Heine joined leaders from Tuvalu and Palau in strongly worded comments putting the region on notice that the future unity and stability of the Forum hangs in the balance of decisions that are made for next month's Forum leaders' meeting in the Solomon Islands - just three years since the organization pulled back from the brink of splintering. Last year, RNZ Pacific captured China's representative to the PIF meeting in Tonga asking Cook Islands prime minister Mark Brown to change the final communiqué which recognised Taiwan and China separately. Earlier this year, Solomon Islands' prime minister Jeremiah Manele warned government workers against engaging with "Taiwan." In a statement, Jeremiah Manele reaffirmed his government's commitment to the One-China Policy, raising eyebrows in Palau . However Manele insists this is not about geopolitics, rather a proposal based on the region's interest: "Decisions related to the Pacific Islands Forum are made collectively by Forum members through established processes grounded in the Pacific way, emphasizing respect dialog and consensus."

RNZ News
a day ago
- RNZ News
As Trump's deadline for Russia comes due, White House preps for possible summit with Putin
By Kevin Liptak , CNN President Donald Trump's deadline for Russia to end its war in Ukraine or suffer severe economic punishment expires 8 August, but it's unclear how he plans to proceed amid new efforts toward a summit with Vladimir Putin and delicate trade negotiations with China. Photo: Reuters/Getty Images via CNN Newsource United States President Donald Trump's deadline for Russia to end its war in Ukraine or suffer severe economic punishment expires Friday (local time), but it's unclear how he plans to proceed amid new efforts toward a summit with Vladimir Putin and delicate trade negotiations with China. Trump promised earlier this week to apply new sanctions on Russia even as he questioned how effective they would be. The White House said Wednesday he still intended to slap "secondary sanctions" on countries that continue to purchase Russian energy. But by Thursday - after he initiated preparations to try and meet Putin face-to-face - he was less committal. "It's going to be up to him," Trump said, referring to Putin, when asked whether his deadline still stands and the new measures would take hold. The complications of applying new sanctions on Moscow while simultaneously preparing for potential talks with Putin only underscored the uncertain moment for the war in Ukraine. Trump has been wary of appearing to be strung along by Putin, with whom he's grown increasingly frustrated and has accused of duplicity. But he is also eager for a peace deal, and seems open to hearing out the Russian leader face-to-face. US officials suggested Thursday nothing had been finalised - including the format, date or location for talks. In the past, Trump has been reluctant to apply new sanctions on Moscow, fearing they could push Putin further away from the negotiating table. His renewed threat to apply both sanctions on Russia itself and purchasers of its energy this week was the closest he'd come to implementing new measures. On Wednesday, for example, he announced an additional 25 percent tariff on India to go into effect later this month as punishment for importing Russian oil. The president has also been considering other options, including targeting the aging tankers that make up Russia's "shadow fleet" used to skirt existing Western sanctions, administration officials said. Officials have also looked for ways to tighten enforcement of sanctions on Russia that are already in place. Some European officials privately said they feared a summit was just another attempt by Putin to prolong the war while also avoiding new US sanctions. Several European leaders spent Thursday on the phone with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky discussing how to approach the new diplomatic efforts. Trump has sounded no less frustrated with Putin in recent days and isn't ruling out the new economic measures. Even so, he has tasked his team with moving ahead on a potential summit, and American officials were working through the logistics and policy preparations for a meeting both the White House and the Kremlin have said could occur as early as next week. The Kremlin seized on the prospective summit on Thursday, saying they were moving ahead with plans for talks. Putin even raised a potential location, the United Arab Emirates, though no venue has been settled upon. The meeting "may take place in one of the Arab countries," Russian state media TASS reported Friday, citing an unnamed source. The TASS source also said Europe is not being considered as a location for the summit. The idea for a meeting arose during talks Wednesday between Putin and Trump's foreign envoy Steve Witkoff; the Kremlin said it was Trump's idea while the White House said it was the Russians'. Trump relayed his intentions for a summit to European leaders in a phone call afterward. He said in that conversation he wanted to meet Putin, but also meet with both Putin and Zelensky in a trilateral formal, according to sources familiar with the call. A day later, Trump said he would not condition a summit with Putin on the Russian president also meeting with Ukraine's leader. "No, he doesn't," Trump said when asked whether Putin must meet Zelensky for his own summit to proceed. "They would like to meet with me, and I'll do whatever I can to stop the killing." He didn't rule out moving ahead with the new sanctions, which have been championed by Republican lawmakers and welcomed by European leaders. But he suggested he first wanted to hear Putin out. "We're going to see what he has to say," Trump said. "It's going to be up to him. Very disappointed." Trump's first use of so-called secondary sanctions - his threatened additional 25 percent tariff on India - is set to take effect on 27 August. India is the second-largest importer of Russian energy products. Moscow's biggest customer is China, with whom Trump officials are engaging in a delicate negotiation over trade. US officials have described significant progress on those talks. But earlier this week, Trump did not rule out applying the new secondary sanctions on Beijing, despite the potential for scuttling the trade discussions. "One of them could be China," he said. "It may happen. I don't know. I can't tell you yet." China's leader Xi Jinping held a phone call with Putin on Friday, in which he welcomed that Moscow and Washington are working to "improve their relations," according to Chinese state broadcaster CCTV. "China is glad to see Russia and the United States maintain contact, improve their relations, and advance the political resolution of the Ukraine crisis," Xi told Putin in a phone call held at the latter's request, CCTV said. - CNN

RNZ News
2 days ago
- RNZ News
Solomon Islands blocks US, China, Taiwan from Pacific's top political meet
By Kirsty Needham , Reuters Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone Solomon Islands Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele has said that 21 donor countries, including the United States and China, will not be invited to the region's top political meeting, a move that follows pressure from Beijing to exclude Taiwan. China's biggest security ally in the Pacific Islands, the Solomon Islands is hosting the annual meeting of the 18-member bloc's forum in September. Three island states have diplomatic ties with Taiwan and not China, and they had expressed concern Taiwanese officials would be blocked from entering the country. Solomon Islands switched ties from Taiwan to China in 2019, and removed Taiwan from a list of countries eligible for concessional entry in April. Beijing, which has deepened its ties in the Pacific, claims Taiwan as its own territory. Manele told the Solomon Islands parliament on Wednesday his cabinet had decided no dialogue partners would be invited to this year's event, because a review of each country's relationship with the Pacific had not been completed. He said he had informed the forum's 18 leaders of the decision this week. The World Bank, Asia Development Bank and civil society groups would attend, he added. Opposition party politician Peter Kenilorea Jr, chairman of the parliament's foreign relations committee, said the decision was "a massive missed opportunity" for Pacific Island countries to meet global donors. "We know this issue is all about China and Taiwan," he told parliament. After forum leaders were told of the decision, Marshall Islands President Hilda Heine criticised interference in the forum's affairs in a speech to the Taiwan ally's parliament. China had "interfered" at last year's meeting in Tonga to change the language of the leaders' communique, Heine said. References to Taiwan were removed after Chinese diplomats complained. The Pacific Islands is among the world's most aid-reliant regions, and on the frontline of rising sea levels. The region has also been a focus of increasing security competition between the United States and China. While US allies Australia and New Zealand are the largest forum members, neither Beijing nor Washington are part of the group. Kenilorea Jr said he feared that China, which has a strong presence in Solomon Islands, will hold bilateral meetings with Pacific leaders on the margins of the forum regardless. "This could be seen by some PIF leaders as a betrayal of the collective and could risk an even bigger rift of the group," he said in comments to Reuters. China's embassy did not respond to a request for comment. The forum's foreign ministers will meet in Fiji next week. -Reuters