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‘Government will not refund semester-1 fees’

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BY BARNABAS MANEBONA

GOVERNMENT will only pay second-semester fees for its 2021 scholarship recipients. No refund for any privately paid semester-one fees.

This comes about due to temporary measures in the government scholarship programme for this year which will see recipients get sponsored beginning 2021 semester-two.

Recipients who had paid their fees for semester-one will not get a refund from government.

This clarification was made by Mr James Bosamata, deputy secretary to the ministry of education (MEHRD) in light of queries to the 2021 SIG Scholarship programme.

Due to covid-19, government could not process its 2021 scholarship programme last year, with applications only made available in January this year. Hence, the scheme will officially start funding at semester-two.

Speaking during the government talkback show on Sunday, Bosamata said:

To anyone paying for his or her own fee in ‘Semester One’, the government will not be able to refund it because the government will only ‘fund or refund’ what is stated in the scholarship letter advice the Ministry of Education and Human Resources Development (MEHRD).

MEHRD Deputy Secretary (DS) Mr James Bosamata made this known after being asked if whether a student approved late on scholarship because of the process will get refund from ‘Semester One’ fees paid on their own.

“Inside a scholarship award it will mention ‘effective semester two 2021’. So anyone paying for their own fee on semester one, the government will not be able to refund it. Because the government will fund or refund what is stated in the scholarship letter,” said Bosamata.

“On your scholarship letter it will mention that your studies or scholarship commence from semester two 2021. So the government will be responsible as of that time, therefore anyone [self-sponsoring] first, the government will not refund it. It [Government] will only [pay] on the time a scholarship is effective.”

Oil spill charges

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The bulk carrier Quebec's ship captain has pleaded guilty for spilling oil at the Graciosa Bay in Temotu Province

Foreign skipper faces court action

BY BEN BILUA

CAPTAIN of a foreign bulk carrier accused of spilling oil into the pristine waters of Graciosa Bay, Temotu Province, more than two weeks ago is facing charges in the High Court.

He is being charged under the country’s Maritime Regulations.

The Panama-registered vessel arrived in Graciosa Bay on 20 January 2021 to collect logs from an Asian logging company when it started spilling thick oil into the bay.

Government immediately dispatched a team to the site to assess the magnitude of the spill.

Director of Solomon Islands Maritime Association Thierry Nervale told the Island Sun yesterday the team returned to Honiara last Friday.

 “They’ve completed their assessment and are now compiling their report,” Nervale said.

“What I can tell you now is the master of the vessel has been charged and his ship detained,” he added.

Nervale said he and the team met with the Marine Pollution Advisory Committee to discuss and advise cleaning options and follow-up actions.

“We are now preparing for the cleaning along the coast and working to complete the inspection and investigation report as well as the impact assessment report.

Earlier Nervale confirmed that the oil spill was serious because it spread onto the coastal areas as well.

“What I can confirm is that it is serious enough and spread on the coast that it requires cleaning operations but should remain within our capacity in-country,” Nervale said.

Officials from SIMA with coordination support from the National Disaster Management Office (NDMO) were part of the team sent to assess the situation.

They were there to assess the impact of the oil spill, as well as inspect and investigate onboard the vessel.

Part (a) of the Solomon Islands Maritime Amendment Act 2018 general principles adopted the polluter pays principle – a clear provision stating that a person or entity who breach the law must pay for the damages.

Part (b) of the general principle states that in the event of a risk of damage to the marine environment or to human health, a lack of complete certainty regarding the extent of the risk is not a reason for not acting to prevent or minimise the risk.

If found guilty the Master will be liable to pay $50,000 penalty or imprisonment for 5 years, or both.

Warriors still optimistic

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Honiara City FC striker Ali Mekawir tries to get through two Laugu players Jeffery Bule, left and Alick Stanton during the Telekom S-League at Lawson Tama.

City move into fifth spot

BY PETER ZOLEVEKE II

REIGNING TSL Champions Solomon Warriors are yet confident for a top spot finish this season after maintaining their second spot in 6-3 win over FC Isabel United yesterday – seven points behind leaders Henderson Eels.

Honiara City FC continues their fine form following two draws to grab three points in a 2-0 win over Laugu FC to move in the fifth position on the league standings.

Despite conceding three goals Warriors Head Coach William Omokirio plays down worries in his defence department.

“The goals came in the dying minutes where we had injuries and it allows conceding the goals,” Omokirio stressed.

Jerry Donga scored eight minutes from kick-off before Gagame Feni and Dennis Ifunaoa extended the lead after Sam Vahia pulls one goal back before half-time.

“It’s a very good performance from the boys, we all were looking forward to the game we also know that to keep the second spot all our games are important. And by winning today’s (Sunday 14th February) game it helps the team to build up for the next match,” Omokirio said after the match.

“We have to maintain our form if we have to return top in the league. Our opponents made a very good fight, they played very well on occasions they caused us a hard time, especially in defence.

Feni collected a brace before Alvin Hou adds another in the 80’minutes despite a late comeback attempt from FC Isabel.

Two second-half goals by Alick Solo and Coleman Wasi aids valuable three points for the capital boys over a determined Laugu FC.

Following a goalless first half Solo broke the deadlock with a fine header before Wasi extended the lead for the Jerry Allen coached side in the final ten minutes of play.

Laugu FC remains in the third position in the league.

TSL Match Week 18 continues on Wednesday 17th between top contenders Southern United against Central Coast FC at 4 pm.

Govt position on school fees to be made known soon

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Acting Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Education and Human Resource Development (MEHRD) Mr James Bosamata .

BY BARNABAS MANEBONA

RESULTS and messages needed to be advised on from the ‘Rapid School Survey’ carried out by government to address school fees currently charged to students will be made known this week.

Ministry of Education and Human Resources Development (MEHRD) Deputy Secretary (DS) James Bosamata said their senior management team will be meeting today to discuss the report, especially its recommendations.

Hopefully this week,

Mr Bosamata during yesterday’s nationwide talkback show said ‘hopefully this week they will come out or announce’ the position of MEHRD or the government as far as school fees for 2021 is concerned.

“In the last talk-back show I talked about the Rapid School Survey, after we completed that assignment [on that week] we took time to really analyse what we found out from the survey.

“So hopefully this survey, its results, messages we need to advice on, we should tell it this week. Our senior management team will be meeting tomorrow morning [today] to discuss that report, especially the recommendations of that report.

“So hopefully later next week [this week], we will come out or announce what will be the position of MEHRD or the government as far as school fees for 2021 is concerned,” said Bosamata.

MEHRD Permanent Secretary (PS) Dr Franco Rodie in response to earlier queries explained also that after submission, the analysation of the rapid school survey data collected will then be used as a basis for ‘policy direction’ on school fees currently charged to students.

Rodie on this ‘strategy’ reasoned that these are tough times and Solomon Islands Government (SIG) or MEHRD is conscious of the situation parents are in and will make attempt to respond.

Manila 4th repa-flight likely March 7

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Chairperson for NHA and Secretary to the Prime Minister, Dr Jimmie Rodgers.

BY MAVIS N PODOKOLO AND BANARBAS MANEBONA

THE fourth Manila repatriation flight is likely on March 7 but is yet to be confirmed, said Dr Jimmie Rodgers, deputy secretary to the Oversight Committee, yesterday.

“We are looking at one more flight to Manila because we still have more than 40 students left in the Philippines.

“Tentatively this flight is schedule for 7th of March, but we have to reconfirm whether that is the date or it will be delayed because we are trying to also link people from other parts of the world on to that destination,” said Rodgers.

He said this is because there are still some people from the UK, USA, and also there are foreigner nationals yet to come to work on the major projects like the Tina Hydro, the airport construction, the road construction.

“They have been approved to come so we are looking putting them together in one location, to send the flight to Manila to pick them all up rather than trying to get them to transit at Port Moresby. We will confirm within next week,” said Rodgers.

 “Last Friday the Oversight Committee tentatively agreed to repatriate the remaining students from the Philippines on March 7. But as SPM has said, there are also other citizens in other countries depending on the numbers we might reorganise those numbers from the Philippines.

“But keep listening out next week for further updates over repatriating our students from the Philippines,” said James Bosamata Deputy Secretary to Ministry of Education Human Resources Development.

No evidence patients died from sleeping on floor: NRH

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NRH CEO Dr George Malefoasi. Photo by GCU

BY MAVIS N PODOKOLO

NATIONAL referral hospital (NRH) has rebuffed observations that ‘sleeping on the floor due to lack of bed’ is one contributing factor to deaths at the emergency ward.

Chief Executive Officer of NRH, Dr George Malefoasi says, “There is never an evidence shows patient die or increasing the severity of illness of a person who slept on the floor due to bed shortage because the hospital wards are disinfected daily by our cleaners.

“Whilst bed shortage is an ongoing hospital management issues, there are no evidence or an incident where people die because of sleeping on the floor at the hospital.

“These hospital wards are disinfected daily by our cleaners.

“However, the overcrowding of the wards will be jeopardising the infection control measures undertaken.

“This is why the hospital management is so concern of too many people coming in the hospital. Unfortunately, it can be deemed as people coming to hospital forgetting or subconscious that they are in the hospital that accommodate sick people, not a community centre.”

Island Sun had raised the matter to CEO Malefoasi last week following public concerns that some of the deaths at the emergency department included patients who were lying on the floor because of lack of beds.

Scholarships already awarded, ‘not true’: MEHRD

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Deputy Secretary MEHRD James Bosamata

BY BARNABAS MANEBONA

RUMOUR that certain applicants have already been awarded with 2021 Solomon Islands Government (SIG) scholarships is ‘not true’.

The ministry of education (MEHRD) rebuts this saying selection process had only just begun.

“It is not an overnight process as applications were just closed two weeks ago (January 31) and the selection will have to go through stages for weeks before results come out,” said Deputy Secretary (DS) James Bosamata of the Ministry of Education and Human Resources Development (MEHRD).

Speaking during yesterday’s nationwide talk-back show, Mr Bosamata explains that results probably will come out around April because the 2021 scholarships will be effective in the second semester of this year.

“In fact it is a process, it is not an overnight thing.  It has to go through the stages on the selection process. So last two weeks it was closed, and then the process will start on which it could take a number of weeks or even months before results come out. We are looking at around perhaps April because we already said that 2021 scholarships will be effective on the Second Semester of 2021. I think that is the confusion,” said Bosamata.

“Some [anxious] say SINU will be starting on February 15, the USP will start on March 1, and they ask what will become of them. But as far as scholarships are concerned, it will be effective on the second semester. Because of the effects of Coronavirus [Covid-19] last year, that cycle of 2021 scholarships starts late. We need to plan properly, we need to consider the different factors affecting it, and therefore it will not be effective in the beginning of this year as during normal times.

“So those of you applying, be relaxed in the meantime, the process will take its course.”

According to the MEHRD Deputy Secretary’s advice on the online system, there is no need to queue in order to search for the (scholarship award) list.

“If you go into your account on the online application, it will tell you the status of your application. There is no need for ringing on phones to our offices or emailing or coming to office in person. Just check through your online system and the system will inform you the status of your application where it has reached. Or when an application is rejected, on checking, the system will also tell this and that there will be reasons provided,” said Bosamata.

“So those of you applying relax and follow the process of the scholarship selection.”

In addition, Mr Bosamata also took the opportunity to highlight that there is a reform in the education and that scholarships now come under the Solomon Islands Tertiary Education and Skills Authority (SITESA).

“The National Training Unit [NTU] is shifted to SITESA and renamed the National Scholarships Division [NSD]. It is a division under SITESA, and SITESA is created as an Act of Parliament passed in March 1, 2017. The establishment of SITESA and reforms on scholarships and tertiary sector is a result of the SITESA Act 2017. So if you have query on scholarships, refer it to NSD at SITESA on ‘Level Three’ Lee Kwok Kuen [LKK] building, Point Cruz,” said Bosamata.

Hospital nightmare

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National Referral Hospital

20 beds, 60-100 patients per day at the Emergency

BY MAVIS N PODOKOLO

THE Emergency Department (ED) at the national referral hospital (NRH) sees 60 to 100 patients per day. This is with only 20 beds.

And, this imbalance in service versus patients is doubling, says Dr George Malefoasi, chief executive officer of the NRH.

Mr Malefoasi also indicated that such overcrowding promotes more illness and death.

In trying to address this problem, NRH is resorting to med-term solutions such as buying more mattresses for the ED, discharging patients in time at the inpatient wards, and bed-sharing among the in-patient wards.

Recently, concerns were raised on patients having to wait on the floor, or the benches at the nearby outpatient, along the corridor, any space one could lay or sit on.

Replying to enquiries via email on the matter last week, Malefoasi admits that “Bed shortage is an [on]going issue at our main referral hospital here, as it is everywhere in the world”.

“The gap between the demand for health care especial hospital beds is doubling whilst the number of beds are stagnant or reduced due to unforeseen changes,” he explains.

“The Emergency Department is the point of entry of most patients, once seen they are then referred for admission to the in-patient teams depending on severity of illness or given treatment and investigations ordered for follow up.

“The Emergency Department has 20 beds and sees from 60-100 patients in a day.

“The admission rate is 13.6 [percent] from the data in 2020, an increase from 12 [percent] from 2019.

“Admitted patients to the wards at times can spend from [less than] 24 hours to up to [seven] days in the Emergency Department waiting for a bed on the ward.

“This means that new patients presenting that day to the Emergency department may not have a bed as it is already occupied by those awaiting transfer to the ward.

“Studies such as that of Richardson. D (2006). MJA 184.4, have shown that overcrowding in the Emergency increases the chance of morbidity and mortality.”

Also contributing to the problem is what Malefoasi termed as ‘access block’, in which patients referred for admission by specialists in the in-patient wards cannot be provided any free bed there due to ‘no free beds in the wards’.

“This back flow then contributes to overcrowding due to no free beds in the ED and the wards.” Malefoasi explains.

Plans and measures undertaken

“Doctors, nurses along with the management are continuous engaging in monitoring, discussing and finding ways to manage the bed demand and shortage issues as a daily routine as well as longer strategic measures.

“The ideal situation is providing more beds which means building additional wards and so on but this is medium and long tern plan of the Solomon Islands Government.  

“First, at the ED, the management is buying additional mattresses for patients to used whilst proper beds are freed up. Communications among departments and ED will be strengthened, and bed management will be strengthened. Hence, a study on the patient flow in the hospital will be undertaken soon in the few days’ time. The objective is to identify local barriers to effective patient flow and provide recommendations of potential strategies that may more effectively support patient flow.

“Secondly at the moment, at clinical level (wards), nurses and doctors in-charge are ensuring patients are discharged on time. The clinicians ensure the discharge protocols are followed, and a diagnosis is reached quickly and right treatment prescribed as much as possible within their allowed days of stay in the hospital.

“Third, there is a ‘bed sharing measure’ which is activated so that patients from ED could be transferred for admissions on time and help free up beds at the ED. Bed sharing will happen in the wards to allow other department to accommodate other patients and secondly there is a ward space identified for 1-2 beds to accommodate spill over of ED patients without beds. This is short term and temporary measures whilst long term change happened.

“One of measures still at a negotiation and discussion stage with the Doctor at the Good Samaritan Hospital and the Health Director for Guadalcanal province is to relocate long stay patients from Guadalcanal Province there for completion of treatment and management e.g. TB patients and Diabetic patients, which are currently occupying beds.”

Lawson Tama for all sports

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Lawson Tama Stadium. Photo supplied.

BY PETER ZOLEVEKE II

HONIARA City Council (HCC) Sports Department has cleared that the council’s intention was for all sports to similarly use the Lawson Tama stadium.

HCC Sports Director Fox Qwaina told SunSPORTS in an interview this week.

“It has come to our attention that football does not allow any other individual sports to use the Lawson Tama grounds,” says Qwaina.

“But it is an HCC owned property and we want all sports to have access to the stadium since there are no training venues available.

With that, HCC is planning to use the field for athletic running tracks to host competitions this year.

The Solomon Island Football Federation (SIFF) assigned Lawson Tama’s turf manager Rubin Oimae is responsible for maintaining a strict regimen of care which includes chemical treatment and seed planting.

He said opening up the field to other sports risks damaging the ground he told ABC News recently in an interview.

Meanwhile, HCC is proposing a school sport carnival for individual sports in May this year.

Rugby player convicted

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National rugby star Daniel Saomatangi.

BY PETER ZOLEVEKE II

THE Solomon Island Rugby Union Federation (SIRUF) is supporting a national rugby player who was found guilty in the Magistrates Court for assaulting a couple at the Heritage Park Hotel last year.

Formidable and influential rugby union and league player, Daniel T Saomatangi has been remanded for sentencing sometimes next week.

The 19-year-old was charged with one count of causing grievous harm and one count of common assault.

However, his co-accused Ned Taungaika was acquitted of the charges.

“SIRUF has supported Daniel with a reference letter as requested,” SIRUF said in a statement to SunSPORTS.

Local rugby players and team mates were also vocal through social media in support of the player going through one of the moments in life that could be reputable to his rugby career.

Daniel represented the country at an early age in both rugby codes and had been an ambassador identified by the Pacifique XIII last year.

He was awarded the Best Forward player in the Honiara Rugby Union Association (HRUA) League 2020, he also represented the country in the league code in the 2015 Pacific Games in Papua New Guinea (PNG) – his first international rugby league tournament was in the 2018 Emerging Nations World Championship where Solomon Island (Solies) came out Plate Winners.

Daniel represented the National U18 7’s team to the Youth Olympic qualifier in Sydney, Australia 2018 and also the SI National fifteens team to the Oceania cup in PNG 2019.

He played a vital role in the HRUA league premier division for home club Avaiki triumph in 2020 – SIRUF.