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Fire and Rescue officers undergo breathing apparatus training

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Fire Officers during the Fire training in their suits

FORTY officers of the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force (RSIPF) Fire and Rescue Service are currently undertaking self-contain breathing apparatus (SCBA) training at the smoke cell training facility at the Rove Police Headquarters in Honiara.

“This training is to train firefighters on how to use breathing apparatus inside any smoked environment,” says Director Fire and Rescue Services, Superintendent Rodney Kuma.

“This is the first time such training is being taken by the RSIPF fire officers in a proper controlled environment.

“This is the second training activity under a 10-week training program that started two weeks ago.

Fire officers during the training

“Two instructors from Fire and Rescue New South Wales are conducting the training which is funded by the Australian Government funded Solomon Islands Police Development Program (SIPDP).”

Fire instructor, Robert Ferguson from Fire and Rescue New South Wales says, “I am honoured to train these officers in providing basic skills. Now it’s up to them to put them into practice.

“There have been other trainings in the past and I can say that there has been a big improvement in the RSIPF Fire and Rescue Service but we always have to learn.

Fire Officers during the Fire training in their suits

“The basic skills have been given to them and they are very good. They just need to practice them because they have a very important job in the community. That’s what the communities are expecting from us.”

Kuma said, “I want to thank New South Wales Fire and Rescue and SIPDP, and our Fire Advisor for their continuous support in providing instructors to conduct such training for the RSIPF Fire and Rescue Service.”

–POLICE MEDIA

Two fire fighters demonstrate their skills

Women’s leadership project launched

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DEAR EDITOR, quoting Radio New Zealand International – April 4, 2018. “A new leadership project aimed at advancing gender equality has been launched in Samoa.

“The Women in Leadership in Samoa project also seeks to improve women’s leadership in the country

“Samoa has taken significant steps towards gender equality and women now hold five of the 50 seats in Parliament, in accordance with a constitutional amendment in 2013 to ensure 10 percent of the seats are held by women.

“A record 24 women stood in the 2016 election, three times as many as in the previous poll.

“Despite these developments organisers of the WILS project said barriers remained which prevented women from engaging in political leadership.

“They include limited pathways into political leadership, certain perceptions about women’s roles, financial constraints, gaps in civic education and the need for broader support.

“The project aimed to address such challenges and support increased women’s representation at all levels of leadership.

“The WILS project is a joint initiative between UN Women, UNDP and the governments of Samoa and Australia” Copyright : RNZI 2018 (All Rights Reserved)

Yours sincerely

FRANK SHORT

Tonga earns US$45m a year from seasonal work

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DEAR EDITOR, quoting Radio New Zealand International – April 4, 2018, “Tonga’s government says the country earns close to US$45 million every year from the seasonal workers programme in Australia and New Zealand.

“The Minister of Internal Affairs ‘Akosita Lavulavu made the statement at the recent presentation for a programme for former seasonal workers who were interested in starting businesses in Tonga.

“Mrs Lavulavu told Radio Tonga the Ministry was willing to invest in similar programs to help seasonal workers living in communities in the outer islands as well.

“Bea Duffield from Australian Business Volunteers who facilitated the training said the programme was important and could help participants and contribute to the local economy.

“Dr Duffield said the program was proving to be a success with nine businesses developed so far.” Copyright:   RNZI 2018.   (All Rights Reserved)

Yours sincerely

FRANK SHORT

Rural health care as a fundamental human right

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DEAR EDITOR, Ms Ruth Liloqula, the chair of Transparency Solomon Islands (TSI) in recent days told the SIBC and Radio New Zealand International that allegedly local MPs are using foreign aid and development projects to divert public attention away from the misuse of domestic funds.

While she was reportedly not criticising overseas development partners and welcomed their assistance, she was essentially claiming MPs were allegedly using deflection tactics about the use of the multi-million dollar constituency development funds (CDF) from Taiwan over which they had complete control.

What constitutes constituency development?   Given that 87 percent of the rural population in the Solomon Islands are going without access to proper health care due to the almost derelict state of the rural health care clinics, I would assume that the re-building or substantial repairs of those clinics would fall within the definition of “constituency development.”

If I am right, then prima facie it does not seem either foreign aid development or money from the CDF is doing anything to improve the situation and one learns almost daily of one or more rural health clinics in such a poor state that the local community are essentially deprived of their human rights to health care.

If Ms Liloqula’s commentary does anything to influence a change in the Solomon Islands and there is more targeted use of the CDF towards the rural population then the government and MPs must be fully cognisant health as a human right creates a legal obligation on the state to ensure access to timely, acceptable health care.

In addition, a state’s obligation to support the right to health includes the allocation of maximum available resources, and that must surely mean functioning rural health clinics and facilities.

Yours sincerely

FRANK SHORT

Monitoring and tackling NCD in SI

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DEAR EDITOR, in an article published in Thursday’s edition of the Island Sun this week, Dr Jason Diau, the Chief Executive Officer of the Atoi Adventists Hospital, was quoted as having said non-communicable disease is a heavy burden on the health status of the country’s population.

He went on to add that the issue needs to be seriously considered and quickly addressed with a timely data base detection and a comprehensive treatment plan to prevent premature deaths from NCD’s.

Across the whole Pacific region NCD, principally cardiovascular diseases, cancer, diabetes and chronic respiratory diseases, have become the leading cause of premature death and disability.

In 2011 Pacific Islands Forum leaders and ministers of health declared the Pacific region to be in “a human, social and economic crisis” due to the significant and growing burden of NCDs

The prevalence of NCD risk factors (high obesity, tobacco use, alcohol abuse, elevated fasting blood glucose and hypertension) and the ensuing social and economic impact of premature mortality, morbidity, lost productivity, and escalating health care expenditure poses one of the biggest threats to development across the region.

Some years ago, I read of an independent assessment system for measuring actions to reduce NCDs.

The voluntary alliance had no conditions for membership and then served some 22 Pacific Islands territories and relevant technical partners active in NCD monitoring, drawing them together to better utilise the extensive NCD data-related activity already underway across the region.

The technical partners include: the Pacific Community (SPC); the World Health Organisation (WHO); the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC); the Pacific Research Centre for Prevention of Obesity and NCDs (C-POND), based at Fiji National University; the Pacific Islands Health Officers’ Association (PIHOA); and several universities.

The Post Declaration progress in NCD monitoring has been significant, with considerable growth in a number of areas. Three examples include: (i) a rise in the number of epidemiology technicians equipped to conduct NCD monitoring activities.

This has been due to Pacific Public Health Surveillance Network (PPHSN)’s newly implemented training and capacity development programme for ‘Strengthening Health Interventions in the Pacific (SHIP)’ which includes several Data for Decision-Making training modules, and the development of an integrated approach to NCD monitoring and policy intervention in the northern Pacific.

It is perhaps timely for a current evaluation of NCD monitoring because, as Dr Diau has said, the Solomon Islands is still greatly at risk from non communicable diseases and it is not too late to begin promoting and encouraging healthier diets to reduce salt, fat, sugar and foods that contribute to obesity and also encouraging healthier lifestyles, including a better focus on daily exercise.

Yours sincerely

FRANK SHORT

Funding source for rural health project

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DEAR EDITOR, when Solomon Islands Finance Minister, Manasseh Sogavare, handed down this year’s $4.068 billion budget in parliament last week he said the government expected to collect more money during 2018 with 3.5 billion of the total budget being sourced locally from import duty on fuels and from withholding tax.

Mr. Sogavare also said “Given our current situation and the limited availability of information on the progress of many ongoing projects, the Government has made a concerted effort to defer and delay several non-performing projects, which realistically won’t be executed or completed successfully in the remaining 8 months of the year.

“We are trying to deliver a credible and realistic budget for 2018; therefore all budgetary allocations have to be supported with some assurance that the resources that have been targeted will be delivered successfully.”

It seems unrealistic to expect the Solomon Islands government, having reduced its development budget by 52 percent or S639 million in 2018, to give any real attention to the situation prevailing in the rural health sector where the 80 or more percent of rural community dwellers are bereft of essential healthcare access and where nearly all of the rural health clinics are in very poor repair and some already totally collapsed and beyond repair.

The rural health clinics, numbering more than 130 in Colonial times, have been allowed to rot because of decades of under-investment in rural health care and where the heath care of the rural population is supposed to be guaranteed by law.

The Solomon Islands government needs to address the missing rights and to adopt a comprehensive and systematic approach to rural health care.

Given the shortage of money what can the government do?

What about help from the World Bank and Britain’s International Development Agency, DFID? Why these two one might ask?

Well, Britain with its past links with the Solomon Islands and with the soon to be officially opened Solomon Islands diplomatic mission in London might be willing to help through its UK Direct Aid Programme.

The 5 year one hundred and fifty million Direct Aid Programme was launched by the UK Government in 2014 and has reportedly changed the lives of over 3 million of the world’s poorest people since that time in 31 countries.

I query, however, what help the Solomon Islands has had from DFID in terms of helping the most vulnerable in the country’s rural outreaches.

I know, too, that DFID provided five million pounds in 2008 towards a Rural Health Project in China. Yes, China!

The China Rural Health Project was supported by the World Bank and DFID which focused on developing the rural health services and facilities in 40 of China’s provinces.

The World Bank provided a loan of $50 million. It was the 11th health-lending project that the World Bank had supported in China since 1984. Those projects, with total World Bank financing of $973 million, as well as policy studies, have contributed significantly to China’s health service delivery capacity development, major diseases control as well as the health system reforms.

The World Bank is also working closely with the Chinese government in preparing a new lending operation on health reform with the focus being to pilot and establish a people-centered health care delivery system in China. Built on the experiences and lessons of the Rural Health project, the new project will adopt the World Bank’s innovative lending approach, the so-called “Program for Results” instrument.

The World Bank has assisted the Solomon Islands in several ways but not to the extent, as far as I am aware, in directly aiding the rural health needs of the communities suffering from proper health care and facilities.

DFID essentially aims to fund small-and medium sized national and international civil society organizations to reduce poverty and work towards achieving Global Goals. Specifically, UK Aid reaches the most marginalized and vulnerable populations.

DID’s agenda is to ‘leave no one behind.’

With that agenda, I would respectfully ask the UK Government not to leave the marginalized rural communities in the Solomon Islands (denied of their legal rights to health care) behind and to favourably help the Solomon Islands with a Rural Health Service Project, similar to the one supported in China in the past.

I appeal to the World Bank, also, to aid such a project accordingly.

Yours sincerely

FRANK SHORT

$120m donated by partners and agencies to MOHMS in budget support

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DEAR EDITOR, according to information on donor funding to the Solomon Islands Ministry of Health and Medical Services quoted by veteran journalist Alfred Sasako, writing in Thursday’s edition of the Island Sun this week, some S120 million has been included in the SI new development budget in support of the MOHMS.

Mr Sasako said the budget support had come from several countries and sources including, Australian Budget support, the European Union (EU), the Global Fund, the United Nations (UN), UNICEF, the Healthy Lifestyle Promotion Fund, The Fred Hollows Foundation, Australia, KOIKA, the Family Planning, Australia and from the Republic of China (on Taiwan).

As an ardent advocate for the SI MOHMS and for the rights of all people in the Solomon Islands to proper health care and facilities, I greatly welcome the generous donor support reportedly contributed by so many partner countries and international agencies and, in my small way, I thank all for the donations specifically designated to aid local medical services.

Yours sincerely

FRANK SHORT

Use wisely “freedom of speech”

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EVERY students have the freedom of speech same as everyone else.

Freedom of speech protects our right to express ideas and beliefs in any manner that we choose.

It protects our ability to protest and meet other people.

However one couldn’t help but notice the current impasse between SINUSA and SINA and read with interest the ongoing row of both parties in the media.

The last straw is the boycott of classes by the students.

One couldn’t help but wonder if the students are paying their own school fees because certainly as a parent I wouldn’t want to see my money go to waste.

Not to mention an overload for the students in an academic term.

How will they cope this academic term when normalcy returns?

True everyone has the right to ‘freedom of speech’ but when it causes substantial disruption and infringes on the rights of other students or school staff, we are creating and encouraging violations of school rules or illegal activities.

Even the RSIPF has declared the public protest or demonstration by the students as illegal.

True the student body might feel that it is their right to voice their concerns and rights but when it interferes with another person’s education, threatens or intimidates another person then something certainly needs to be done.

On the other hand, students should also remember that with rights, there also comes responsibility.

With such protest, there should be some principles or dignity in how it is being carried out.

It is not what is said that is important but how it is being said.

Use the freedom of speech and such rallies wisely and mostly according to our country’s laws.

Let us not run, even before we can walk.

Sogavare rejects claims gov’t colluded with loggers

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By Gary Hatigeva

FINANCE Minister and Member of Parliament for East Choiseul has categorically denied and rejected claims that logging operators have heavily influenced the government or its ministers over their forestry policies.

At the eve of deliberations into the 2018 Budget at the committee stage, Member of Parliament for Aoke/Langalanga Matthew Wale accused the government in the way it has been handling the logging issues, suggesting that loggers have direct control over government programmes in the industry through the Solomon Forest Association (SFA).

Based on explanations from forest ministry officials during the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) hearings in the way prices are determined for logs domestically, which is seen to have continuously disadvantaged resource owners, Mr Wale claimed that government continues to fail by submitting to loggers, who he described as criminals.

He said the Governor of the central bank, who is trusted far more than the government, informed the PAC that the determined price is set by the logging industry and given to government, and this has been going on since the determined price mechanism was established.

He added that PAC was also informed by the Permanent Secretary of Forests that government negotiates the determined price with the logging industry.

“Wow! Really? Negotiate with the criminals who rape our country and rob our people? This is how bad this situation really is. And it has been this bad for so long, so many years.

“How many years have we carried on with the nonsense of the determined price being lower than the market price? The determined price has never, at any time, been the same as market price,” Wale said.

He suggested those who are in it, have been in it for so long they are numb to it, they can’t see what’s wrong with it, and they have even gone to the extent of defending it.

“How can anyone defend the theft of national resources from the people of Solomon Islands? The country has been literally robbed of billions of dollars. And it is ok? This is state capture by the logging industry.

“We must not allow this same practice to be transposed to the mining industry, as that industry is also being swamped with loggers,” Wale added.

He suggested that government must deregister the SFA, which he repeatedly alleged to be a criminal organisation that exists solely to protect its members’ interests by conspiring against the interests of the people of Solomon Islands.

He further claimed that the Association meet to scheme ways to control government and that they collect cash money to help what he termed as, their pet politicians who do their bidding.

“They give cash to maintain a government that protects their interests against the interests of the people.

“Shame! The government of the people of Solomon Islands has been used to protect criminals who are robbing the people in whose name government gets its legitimacy,” Wale further alleged.

But in his response to the claims made by the Aoke/Langalanga MP, Sogavare suggested that allegation raised against the government are very serious ones that warrants arresting and throwing of people in jail.

“He also raised some serious allegation against the government about colluding with those in the logging industry. Is he saying that they are paying us and influencing the way we make our decisions?

“And other serious allegations, strongly implying that the minister is directly involved and receiving bribes in the design of policies that affects the industry,” the Finance Minister said.

He however emphasised that with regards to the claims and allegations raised by the Independent MP, there are laws in the country and if things like these happen, they should be reported to police for proper actions to be taken.

“Arrest people and put them in jail!

“Otherwise Mr Speaker, don’t use the privilege of parliament to come and say something you have no proof of,” Sogavare warned.

Sogavare then suggested that with no stands behind his claims and allegations, he suggested the Independent MP’s main objective was to discredit everything the government had said about the budget.

“Using his public speaking ability to misinform the public about the genuine intention of the government in the way the 2018 budget is structured,” he added.

“It is no surprise because that is the nature of this man…”

We only travel when it’s necessary: Kuku

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By Gary Hatigeva

MINISTER for the Ministry of Education and Human Resource Development (MEHRD) John Dean Kuku says he only travels overseas to attend conferences and oversea meetings if they are necessary.

The Minister clarified this when questioned during Parliament’s Committee Stage proceedings into the 2018 Budget, over the reduction on the cost of travels from $475,979 in the 2017 allocation to a total $124,021 in this year’s budget under the ministry’s costing estimates for MP’s airfares.

In welcoming the response from the MEHRD Minister, the Member of Parliament for Aoke/Langalanga, Matthew Wale supported the sentiments and applauded the minister on his bold decision.

Wale however called on other ministers to see Minister Kuku’s model as a classic example to follow.

This was something many in various local social media forums also welcomed, saying this is not only saving money for the government but also saves time.

The sentiments were something the former Education Minister and Member of Parliament for Central Honiara, John Moffat Fugui who also shared similar sentiments and suggested that travels should also be done at appropriate timings and if what attended is relevant to the country’s education system.