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Front-liners and certain population first to be vaccinated: Ogaoga

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BY MAVIS N PODOKOLO

FRONT liner workers and certain groups of individuals are first to be vaccinated because potentially they can be diagnosed with the virus from those who are exposed to the virus.

This was echoed by Dr Divinyl Ogaoga, chair to Technical working group of covid-19 vaccine, yesterday at the first covid-19 vaccine talkback show.

He said those who are working at the airport and on ports and those looking at covid-19 patients at our hospitals will be first to be vaccinated.

Ogaoga said by looking at data available globally, there are certain groups of people from general public who are at a higher risk of getting the disease.

“They are those who have underlying long term medical conditions like those present with NCDs are one priority group to be vaccinated.

“Also, the older you are the risk of getting the disease at a higher risk a more on the older age group, so this are also prioritized in getting the vaccine.

“So, we are going to receive first 24 thousand doses, so the plan of the first round of vaccination will be in Honiara and surrounding Honiara in parts of Guadalcanal,” he said.

Nono lagoon, people and development, Decision making and survival in the midst of conflicting interests

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People and the natural environment

According to Edward Hviding (2005), Nono Land consists of a small subsidiary lagoon on the south eastern-end of New Georgia Island in Marovo Lagoon in the Western Province. Traditionally, Nono Lagoon was communally used by the Choe and Nono people for multiple purposes.

Strong customary knowledge sources repeated that somewhere in the lower part of Choe River estuary is where traditional ceremony and celebrations are performed.

For centuries past, Nono Lagoon is life to the local inhabitants; the permanent users of its natural environment. Subsistence economy, maintenance of lifestyles and recently commercial development were largely practiced in the area. People collect food including the regular diet of ‘riki choe ’ or ‘riki peno’ and mangrove fruits (ure petu ), fish, mud crabs and other marine food types from the lagoon.

On land, people collect bush materials for housing from the local famous rich sago palm forest along the dense sides of Choe River. The river bed is where people collect a popular local food shell or mollusk, called ‘deo choe ’ (deo davala).

Its abundance is well known in Choe River.

Additionally, people use the natural forest ecosystems for hunting and gathering. Gardening is little affecting the region; however, some nearby villagers were frequently visiting their ancestral places in Choe and Nono lands; in what should be known today as one of the wildlife nests of terrestrial and marine lives in Marovo Lagoon.

Only Zaira village or Dokoso Land Protected Area (Zaira Resource Management Area), which is located on the southern weather coast of Vangunu Island is the largest remaining thickest canopy in the beautiful lagoon. Its land and sea resources were managed under traditional practices called; “Hope or taboo”.

Nono Lagoon is faced with numerous challenges regarding its natural resources. On the management level, there is evidence of reluctance to adopt conservation initiatives.

This needs more awareness through education-environmental programs. If resource management and conservation plans have to be actualized; community resource owners and leaders must understand the core value of their natural resources in the long run (not to undermine thoughtful effective management in the short-term).

The resource management utilization strategies therefore were crucial workable plans that must be grounded at the very heart of any societal development; if sustainable development is to be fully realized.

The Marine Protected Area (MPA) previously set up in the small-enclosed coastal lagoon of Nazareth village is signaling opportunities for conservation initiative in the region.

Challenges however, include disorientation by illegal poaching and continuous community unregulated influences. Lack of serious attention by the community leaders aggravates its ineffectiveness. Disloyalty to the initiative is obvious.

In the past years, the first unsustainable commercial operation is logging. Within this period, mining prospecting is covering Mt.Tiroa in the dense interior of Nono Land.

Evidence of division between the once happy Choe and Nono people is awakening.

As observed, some parts of Choe and Nono lands were heavily disturbed by logging activities. Buffer zones or areas close to the rivers which are illegal for logging activities must be monitored in infinity.

Long term impacts from unsustainable commercial logging is an issue to life-time local dwellers who depend on their environment for their daily survival.

The natural environment and its biodiversity would be losing their ecological capacity functions in trying to compete against the harsh environment soon to expose.

These were serious environmental issues in years to come.

Unsustainable practices of harvesting natural resources must be controlled or eliminated in the region. While there are rural people relying on their environment, some educated people must assist in drawing attention towards creating sustainable resource use policies and resource management plans for better and regulated utilization purposes.

Resources management and sustainable development were important concepts in our contemporary society. Development aspirations must begin where and how these concepts are indispensable. At the rural level, management and sustainable utilization of both terrestrial and marine resources are the central attitude of daily survival behavior.

This doesn’t mean a change of resource use preference; it though integrates conscientious awareness about the importance of the natural environment for future use. In that, it would mean sustainability and management are regulated practices in the ever changing society; an emphasis of parallel latitude. People’s responsibility today is to secure the horizon of their future generation’s survival.

For those resource management actions employed; natural resources utilization must be the testimony of contentment otherwise mere ignorance adds to a gross problem of resource scarcity and competition which would become the ordeal of distress.

Besides, mining prospect is targeted on some parts of Choe and Nono lands. Therefore, a sustainable future will also consider a committed sacrifice, integrity and responsible stewardship in decision making. The powerful and prevailing conduits would be through law-abiding leadership qualities.
Mining and Logging

Although mining would bring a ‘million-dollar dream’ to its frontier; it can also leave behind ‘millions worth of environmental issues,’ conflicts, reconciliation processes and damages, which are all (in unforeseen dilemma or at times) beyond people’s capacity.

Let’s not forget the Bougainville Crisis of Paguna Mining, OK Tedi Mining in PNG, the aftermath of Nauru Phosphate Mining and Gold Ridge Mining leakage issues in Solomon Islands.

Consider the sizes of the islands, the freshwater bodies, the fresh air and the seas. They were the limited aggregate resources people are made part of and responsible for. People depend on them and they depend on people for their better caring, management and sustainability.

The land and ocean is where people make most of their living. The natural environment is where people derive natural resources to meet their immediate needs, for example income and school fees.

Therefore, commercial interests surrounding the sea and land would require practicing sustainable utilization behaviors and management.

All activities carried out on land would consider the wider impacts that will be triggered in the ocean or sea and freshwater bodies. Pollution and destruction in the environment would mean the biodiversity is affected. People are also affected. The balance of biological and ecological interconnectivity will certainly decline or diminish; causing instability and changes to the biomass structure, food links and generally instability to the ecological interconnectivity within the natural environment.

To get the depiction, scientific evidences proved that deforestation rate in Solomon Islands is beyond sustainable harvest limit.
Furthermore, consider the case of fishery death toll in Central Marovo Lagoon in early June in year 2011.

The first alarming instance is spotted as a small fish was struggling to its death on the sea surface at the river estuary of Gepae and Cheara villages while few minutes departing from Cheara on ‘M.V. UTA Princess’ (previously ‘Atoll Way’) (about 7am, Monday 6th June 2011).

There are two possible scenarios over the cause; and they are worth taken on-board. First, it is a natural occurrence (algal bloom) that associates with changes of climate and weather patterns. Secondly, it may link to high concentration of sediments at the sea bed of the river estuary. This may associate with excessive human activities on land. The obvious activity is logging. Know that there are five river bodies sourcing the estuary in this location, and so as in Nono Lagoon.

Hence, the responsibility of rural dwellers and guardians of Nono Lagoon is to maintain the sustainability of their natural resources and oppose all development that are involved in unsustainable practices. Let alone the past experiences are lessons to achieve a better and fair Nono and Choe sustainable way of life in the future.

Together, a future way of life can be protected and managed. That means, sustainable development must be prioritized.
Conservation, management and sustainability
Conservation development includes understanding managing the uses of natural resources; consider their interconnectivity and maintaining their sustainability for future use.

On the other hand, it would also mean considering other life forms from our intents or plans.

These understandings were considerably envisaged in global considerations like that of Agenda 21 Chapter 17: 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) and the 1982 Third United Nations Conference of the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS III) – Law of the Sea Convention (LOSC).

Conservation, sustainability and management concerns with regards to the natural resources and environment were common with these international instruments. However, for instance, the implementation of UNCED at the regional level is a challenge generally by lack of domestic (national) aptitude for environmental management. But such incapacity would not be overlooked (or simply ignored) as we are already facing serious environmental issues like coral bleaching (e.g. Fiji 2002; Marovo Lagoon 1997), sedimentation (e.g. Marovo Lagoon) and coastal erosion (e.g. South American coastal villages).

Regional organizations like the University of the South Pacific (USP), South Pacific Applied Geosciences Commission (SOPAC), and the South Pacific Regional Environment Program (SPREP) were crucial towards the sustainability, conservation and management of our environment with regards to the resources found there; for example, fisheries. However, they have specific roles within their own objectives over the natural environment. Sub regional organization like Parties to the Nauru Agreement (PNA) is an example of conservation and management of tuna stocks within specific Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs) and the adjacent High Seas.

Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA) and the Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC) have their stronger support and aim to the management of tuna resources in our national waters. As a sole simple pacifying sentiment generally echoes as “tuna is as significant to the Pacific just like oil is to the Arab nations.” No wonder tuna has been referred to as the “oil” in the Pacific region. Therefore, it is reasonable to recognize that this commercial offshore fishery has its linkage of survival from the coastal environment. Regulated policies and instruments must be upheld as always maintained in the model of integrated coastal zone management.

It would be reflective then to state that Marovo Lagoon is home to some of the richest bait fishing grounds in the world. In the past, Solomon Taiyo Limited (STL) depended on these fishing grounds for bait-fish catch during its operation (pole-and-line fishing). An experience was correct with their presence (fishing fleets) in Nono Lagoon. The closest anchorage that can be recalled was about fifty meters from the reef slope of Tupaerenge Island. These were evidences that the seas (or lagoons) were home-breeder to all kind of fish species which some are vital for commercial development in the country.

Therefore, the local communities were the foundational actors towards stewardship, conservation and management of the natural resources, as they are the owners of their places. And that assistance and support must transpire in all worthy aspects of development in order for them to act from where they were instead of where they can’t go.

Historically, conservation initiatives were already practiced in Marovo Lagoon; however, significant actors like the owners of the area, NGOs and the responsible government-departmental sectors must maintain their commitment and support. The development goals upheld must be clear and achieved provided that the objectives, strategy actions and the implementation process are functional. Monitoring and evaluation were crucial parts. This is where feedbacks are essential for review and changes necessary to avoid flaw functioning of the development process. Conservation initiative has resource management use plans in its context and output.

Generally, sustainable development with regards to natural resources would require understanding of resource use patterns and the installment of policy framework while carrying out competent management tasks. The implementation of monitoring programs is a priority to monitor the goals of development. Conservation and sustainable development were vital to achieve employment proliferation and economic growth. However, in all aspect of sustainable development, it prompt challenging indefinite calls like political will, moral will, compromises and a lot of hard thinking to contemplate upon.

Decision making: the choice

Undeniably, conflict of interests regarding natural resources utilization is one major problem faced consistently today, however, successful development is hardly achieved otherwise sustainable. The sustainability of natural resources is people’s responsibility through effective management. In a deeper understanding, people’s local effort is to harmonize sustainable management for the sake of their natural resources continuous supply for future survival. And that reiterates incorporating sustainable development and efficient management in all activity that concerns the natural environment.

More so, making decision for sustainable future through development aspirations requires deeper understanding over the cultural aspects of the communities concerned (custodians or owners of the resources). The underlying notion here is whether the transcending of any model of management structure appear horizontal, vertical and/or parallel in its integration in all sectors or institutions, the obligation is still at large.

Decision making therefore should not undermine the conscience of choosing the better future from a solitary short-sighted cell, in contrast to the omniscience lens.

Finally, choice is the most powerful intrinsic art of making decision; for better or sloppier.

By Vaera Talilotu Pulekera and Emmanuel Mangale.

PS clears the air over Western province’s ‘failed project

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BY ALFRED PAGEPITU

Western provincial Secretary (PS) Jeffery Wickham has clarified the offer being given to the Ministry of Police, National Security and Correctional Services to develop the site of the failed multi-million-dollar tourism complex project in Gizo.

Provincial Secretary (PS) Jeffery Wickham told Island Sun that the provincial government has done all they can in recent years to get the project up and running.

“We are not going to spend our resources investigating what has been a 7 year in waiting.

“We are obliged to know why this project has stalled for this many years but it seems no one is interested in talking to us.

“So, the onus is on the ministries responsible to tell us what is going on,” said Wickham.

He said Western provincial government (WPG) cannot continue to see each day for seven years the sickening incomplete concrete structure.

“So being responsible we must find an alternative developer.”

He said the Ministry of Tourism is fully responsible to initiate investigation but the Province has an alternative plan for the Tourism office.

“We have not forgotten the importance of the Tourism industry in the West. In fact the project is being held up for some 6/7 years by the national government, not our fault.”

“That’s a matter for the Ministry of tourism and Ministry of finance to consider but we are only a recipient of the project.”

Meanwhile concerned citizens of Western province say the Ministry of Tourism and Ministry of Finance have failed to carry-out their investigation into the failed project of the million-dollar tourism complex project in Gizo.

A spokesman Mr Koipala Frederick said the incomplete structure stands as a witness to corruption and poor governance that is rife in the country and the silence is deafening.

This project was a three-year national project which works should have commenced in 2014, but still there is no investigation carried out to find out why there is a delay to the building.

SECRET SALE

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-HCC sells Biosecurity incinerator land off to Asian without consulting Ministry

THE Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock (MAL) in the strongest term condemns the action taken by the Honiara City Council (HCC) to sell off its piece of land that houses the Biosecurity incinerator at Ranadi, east of Honiara.

This was after MAL found out that the land was sold out by HCC to an Asian without the ministry’s knowledge.

“The land is used for destruction of all garbage remove from international vessels and aircraft coming into Solomon Islands,” Director of Biosecurity of MAL, Francis Tsatsia said in a strongly-worded statement.

“It’s a requirement that garbage of this sort must be offloaded and incinerated as biosecurity risk is very high,” Tsatsia added.

“Normal garbage for incinerator in this premises are plants and plant products and animal and their products,”

Permanent Secretary Ethel Tebengi Frances said tshe is very disappointed about the action taken by HCC to sell off the land without consulting her ministry.

“At least the courtesy to inform us so we can negotiate with them (HCC),” Frances said.

“This is a threat to national security of this country during these COVID-19 pandemic as wastes from flights into the country poses a huge threat,” she added.

Frances said MAL will not go down without a fight to retain this piece of land for our national security.

“There had been reports of the fence being removed and our staff being harassed. It is unacceptable,” Frances said.

Tsatsia added: “There was no communication between MAL, BSI and HCC or at least some discussions with BSI as they have been using the site for over 20 years now.

“HCC knows the land and that it’s been a very important and essential for Biosecurity operations.

“The area is best suited for BSI operation.

“It’s away from residential properties and has good security fencing.

“MAL has invested a lot of money for treatment facilities of imported products not meeting SI standards.

“The area has been used for over twenty years. Facilities here include a building for chemical storage, a room for animal product treatment and an incinerator for general garbage disposal.

“It is very risky and difficult for the department in this circumstances and the continuous threat to COVID-19 to our front line staff.

“This operation is not only protecting Solomon Islands from further incursion of pest and diseases through garbage remove for foreign vessel and international aircraft but also has been a revenue earner for the Solomon Islands Government by way of fees and charges.”

He said that the Ministry will try and pursue to take the land back for Biosecurity treatment operation adding this should be done not only under public interests but to safeguard Solomon Islands from the risk of new pest and disease coming in to the country Biosecurity regulated risk items.

This HCC’s illegal sale came just days after the council leadership went before the Public Accounts Committee to answer questions over some of its illegal handling of council matters.

Premier Manetiva sticks to no-logging stand

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CENTRAL Islands Province Premier Stanley Manetiva has issued a directive halting logging in Nautuha district, Boli passage.

Manetiva yesterday was responding to land owners of Nautuha who were asking his government to allow logging to take place on their land.

He said his government is aware of the logging proposal but is not welcoming any logging to operate in the province.

“Based on our policies and business audiences, we will not allow any foreign or locals to operate logging activities.

“The Central Islands provincial government remains standing by not allowing any logging operations to any customary land.

“My government plans are to develop Ngella in tourism and boost Agriculture and Fisheries but logging and mining.

“Central provincial government operates within the laws to deliver the right infrastructure and services in our provinces.

Our policy still maintained its stand ‘no to logging in Ngella and Central province.”

Manetiva calls on the people of Ngella to work closely with the provincial government together to say ‘no’ to logging activities in the province.

“My government will not support any decision for logging in Ngella,” said Manetiva.

Landowners want GG to intervene

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Governor General Sir David Vunagi

BY EDDIE OSIFELO

A GROUP of concerned forest resource owners from Shortlands and Choiseul is making an appeal to the Governor General Sir David Vunagi.

They kindly asked Sir David to inquire into the allegations of collusion between the Solomon Forest Association, its President and Executive Members, the Attorney General Chambers and the Commissioner of Forest and the Forestry Office on alleged organized crimes and “underhanded” dealings that caused the nation to lose hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue.

Landowners from Kubobangara Customary Land and Kubongava Customary Land in South Choiseul say they have gone through many avenues, legally and constitutionally, but authorities lacked the enthusiasm to correct the wrongs.

“Consider, these wrongs was made in 2007 and now is 2021, a 14-year span, Governments, both past and present did not show any enthusiasm in making corrections to the wrongs,” they said.

A group of Choiseul Landowners claimed that logging companies who are SFA members did not pay them their royalties from shipment of logs harvested from their forest and their other dues.

“Matter was brought to the court, Court Injunction Orders was obtained, proceeds was released by Consent Orders signed by the Attorney General Chambers.

“No matter how the landowners defend their resources from unscrupulous logging companies, foreign logging companies is being shielded by Solomon Forest Association, by a web of complicated ‘contract’, ‘agreement’and ‘deed’, a collusion between Solomon Forest Association, it President, Executives and Members, the Commissioner of Forest, the Attorney General Chambers and the Registrar of Lands and Titles,” they said.

Among the allegations are:

1.   Felling License are issued without going through the Timber Rights Acquisitions procedure.

2.   Grant of Profits was issued to fraudsters or when the land is under caveat.

3.  Logging operations still continue and logs are exported when there are existing court injunction orders.

4.    Awarding Sale Order without advertising for tender.

5.  Proceeds from Export are released by Consent Orders signed by the Attorney General Chambers.

6.   Logging equipment and assets seized do not have any record that the logging equipment and assets seized are being auctioned off.

7.   Felling of protected species of tree (Tubi) and exporting protected species logs.

8.   Smuggling of logs and evasion of export duties.

The landowners said reports lodged with the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force, the Criminal Investigation Department, Fraud Unit, JANUS, from 2014 to date, the case is still pending, excuse, high profile case.

They believed God has chosen our Governor General as the Head of State.

“May the Governor General exercise the Executive Authority of the People of the People of Solomon Islands in the betterment of Solomon Islands,” one of the landowners said.

However, Private Secretary of Government House, Rawcliffe Ziza said it is bit rare for the Governor General to intervene in this kind of case because it is the matter of court to determine.

Ziza, a lawyer by profession, said whatever disagreements must follow the process because it is a dispute between individuals or groups with the authorities.

He said in his experience has not come across such issue where the Governor General intervene in it.

Fatal bomb blast still investigated

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BY JENNIFER KUSAPA

INVESTIGATIONS into the bomb incident in Honiara that killed two expatriates last year is still to be completed.

Police Commissioner, Mostyn Mangau confirmed this when responding to a question at his weekly press conference last week.

He said investigators are yet to finalise their findings on that incident, which occurred on September 20, 2020 in a residential area at Tasahe, in West Honiara.

The bomb blast incident involved two expats, a dual New Zealand -Irish citizen and an Australian national working for the non-government organisation, the Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA) on a non-technical survey of explosive remnants of World War Two in Solomon Islands.

Both died from the blast at the office of the project located within the residential area.

Police said the project was here to involve in non-technical survey for data purposes and they were supposed not to remove explosives or bombs found during their survey.

Prior to that incident, police were not aware of the fact the two expats removed bombs from their location, until the incident that day.

Mangau said Solomon Island is one of the heavy battle grounds during World War II and bombs are everywhere.

“Thus, people need to work together with the police once they see any bomb in their location.”

Police also said that after the incident and after attending to the scene, the responsible department within the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force moved all other unexploded ordnances discovered at the NPA residence at Tasahe to Hell’s Point for disposal.

New health bill on the way

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Parliament

BY MAVIS N PODOKOLO

Government is looking forward to tabling the Public Health Emergency Bill in parliament so it can commence before State of Public Emergency ends.

Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare echoed this Monday.

 “It is the intention of my government to table the Public Health Emergency Bill in Parliament so that it can be commenced before the expiry of the State of Public Emergency on 24th March 2021,” Sogavare said.

He said this week’s Consultations for remaining provinces will continue to be followed by consultations with colleagues from the Office of the Opposition and Independent Groups after which the Bill will be finalized for submission to Parliament.

Sogavare said consultation on the new Public Health Emergency Bill is progressing well.

“The Bills Taskforce team met with churches represented by the Solomon Islands Christian Association (SICA) and Solomon Islands Full Gospel Association (SIFGA) last week.

“Our churches are important partners of the government in the fight against COVID-19 and in the broader socio-economic and spiritual development of the country,” he said.

Call for audit on Kukum Market

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Former Honiara City Council Clerk Rence Sore. Photo: Charles Kadamana

By EDDIE OSIFELO

A HONIARA resident, John Langi calls on Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare to order an audit investigation into the incomplete Kukum market in East Honiara.

This was after a construction company believed to be owned by one of the Honiara City Councillors, could not complete the project within the time line, due to lack of finance.

National Government has injected $1.3 million under the Economic Stimulus Project plus Honiara City Council’s estimated $1.2 million towards the Kukum market project last year.

The World Bank provided assistance also under the CAUSE project towards the market facelift as well.

Island Sun understands workers of CAUSE project had started work on slapping the pavement outside the main building of the market this month.

However, Langi said work on the main market building is dormant now.

He said the PM needs to order an audit investigation to justify the money spent already on the project uplift.

Langi alleged the council has outstanding debts with construction companies, therefore it could not continue with the work this year.

HCC Clerk Rence Sore admitted last December that they expected to complete the building before end of 2020 but that was not possible.

Sore said they are likely to complete the market project in the first quarter of this year and should be opened for use straight away.

He said in terms of finance, they have already used up all funding support provided by National Government, World Bank and HCC.

“Since we have already used up that funding support, we are now relying entirely on HCC revenue to complete the building.

“Due to COVID-19, we find it difficult to secure additional support from other donors or partners,” he said.

However, Sore believes they are hoping to complete the building using HCC revenue collections by late January or early February.

But to date, there was no work on the project.

Use of plastic bag to be banned soon

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Minister of Environment, Titus Fika.

BY BEN BILUA

THE use of plastic bags is expected to be banned soon as government begins tough measures on waste management.

Minister of Environment, Climate Change, Disaster Management and Meteorology Titus Fika made the announcement during the launching of Solomon Island Recyclers and Waste Management Association 10-year strategic plan last week.

He said amendment has been made to the Environment Act to ban the single use of plastic bags.

Fika said the decision was made to compliment efforts towards addressing solid waste issue in the country.

He said the flow of wastes to the natural environment is so alarming that immediate intervention should be carried out to mitigate the issue.

Fika adds that solid wastes shipped to the islands on annual basis is another ongoing issue that needs to be stopped.

“We still need to make significant and drastic improvements to waste and pollution management in the country because our streets, rivers, streams and sea are littered with all of waste disposed inappropriately,” he said.

Fika said the recent heavy rain exposes the weakness of our waste management system and the indifferent attitude of the public at large towards waste management.

He said close collaborations between provincial governments, Honiara City Council and the National Government is paramount to address the waste management.