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Women in Maritime launches Association

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BY MAVIS NISHIMURA PODOKOLO

SOLOMON Islands Women in Maritime Association (SIWIMA) is officially launching its setup today.

In a recent interview, Solomon Islands Maritime Safety Administration (SIMSA) Director Captain Tim Harris briefly explains the detail of this association.

“SIWIMA is different from SIMSA, and it has its own constitutions, aims and missions.”

Mr Harris said its aim is to raise women working in the Solomon Islands Maritime Industry and to enable all working individuals to have equal opportunity and also to promote women in this sector.

Also SIWIMA is to create national support system to raise awareness and advocate issues concerning women’s empowerment and gender equality.

Naha clinic closes for renovation

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Naha clinic

BY MAVIS NISHIMURA PODOKOLO

AS of today Naha health clinic is closing its doors so that renovation work can be carried out by the Honiara City Council (HCC) maintenance team.

Mr Arian Simbe, Nurse Manager of Honiara City Council (HCC) Nursing Service division, says renovations will commence on Monday next week.

“Replacing of facilitates will be more on the entire structure of the building including, roofing iron, ceiling, walling and other minor parts of the heath facility.”

A notice issued by the Naha clinic manager stresses that public must seek medical attention from other HCC clinics until Naha health centre resumes operations

“We regret for any inconveniences this may cause. However we appreciate your understanding and corporation in this matter,” the notice said.

For the nurses serving Naha clinic, Mr Simbe said they will be deployed to Vura Clinic, Kukum Clinic and some will join the Kukum night shift that ends at 10pm.

With the closure of Naha clinic, Mataniko health centre is now set to reopen.

Mataniko clinic has also undergone renovation and will resume health care service as of next week.

$64m remain in Gov’t arrears

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Minister Hurry Kuma

By Mike Puia

THE government’s total arear now stands at $64 million. In 2017, it was $138 million.

Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Finance and Treasury (MoFT), Harry Kuma, could not elaborate on what made government arrears reach $138 million.

Instead Mr Kuma said they hope these remaining arrears will be settled by mid this year.

When responding to questions, he said there is no payment arrear related to the Bloody Ridge land.

In fact, Kuma revealed most of these arrears are orders by the High Court.

Kuma however confirmed their Ministry and the Prime Minister’s office signed an agreement on the Hell’s Point waste land.

He did not disclose anything about the agreement.

Kuma said the Ministry of Lands and Housing Survey can provide information about land acquisition.

Police investigate alleged grooming incident

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BY JENNIFER KUSAPA

POLICE in Munda Western Province are investigating the alleged sexual grooming incident in the Western province.

Deputy Commissioner Gabriel Manelusi speaking during the Police Commissioner’s media conference said that investigation into the alleged incident is ongoing and police are calling on people surrounding Munda who may have information to come forward and tell police.

He said the suspect is an Asian man working in a logging company in the province.

He said the alleged incident occurred on March 11 at one of the rest houses there.

Mr Manelusi acknowledge the prompt reporting made by the woman who reported the matter and calls on every Solomon islanders to stand strong and report such behaviour.

Such behaviour violates the law of this country and everybody has to stand strong and work together, Manelusi said.

SINU and WorldFish sign MOU

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SINU Acting VC Prof Basil Marasinghe and Country Director for Worldfish Ms Delvene exchanging copies of MOU.

BY LYNTON AARON FILIA

SINU Acting VC Prof Basil Marasinghe and Country Director for Worldfish Ms Delvene exchanging copies of MOU.

SOLOMON Islands National University signed a new Memorandum of Understanding with the WorldFish yesterday.

SINU continues to expand its local and international networks through widening and strengthening of its academic, corporate, bilateral and multilateral stakeholder collaborations.

The form of collaboration signed between SINU and WorldFish aims to provide and foster world class scholarship through academic excellence, research and practical competency training.

Furthermore it seeks to explore opportunities in the area of research and institutional capacity building, to complement each other’s efforts in the pursuit of knowledge, in order to transform lives and provide relevant solutions to challenges confronting Solomon Islands’ living aquatic resources.

SINU’s Acting Vice Chancellor Prof Basil Marasinghe said SINU and WorldFish share common interest in accelerating scientific research, particularly in fisheries and other living aquatic resources that will benefit both current and future generations of Solomon Islands.

Mr Marasinghe said they have agreed to foster their relationship by entering into a MOU through which both parties will implement programme and activities stated specifically in the collaborative agreements.

“I firmly believe that the MOU signed today will greatly benefit the people of Solomon Islands, and I appreciate the work carried out by the Institute of Maritime and Fisheries Studies of SINU and Worldfish in preparing this MOU,” Marasinghe said.

Country Director of WorldFish Ms Delvene said WorldFish has been in Solomon Islands since 1986.

Delvene said WorldFish at present conducts research projects in fisheries with the involvement of communities in various provinces.

She hopes after signing of MOU with SINU, WorldFish with participation of the SINU’s department of fisheries can carry out research projects at a higher level which will benefit Solomon Islands.

Woman facing assault charge to appear in court

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BY JENNIFER KUSAPA

THE case against a woman facing assault will be mentioned again in court today.

The accused, Ms Roko, was initially charged with two other co-accused on another matter, and whilst on bail Ms Roko re-offended and was charged with an additional charge of assault causing actual bodily harm.

She then was remanded in custody for that matter.

The other case she is also alleged to have involved in was the matter which occurred in May last year.

On the previous occasion the prosecution told the court that the matter was a part-heard case and yet to be completed.

This is in relation to the case of Lionel Aenasi, Rachel Roko and other accused who was under warrant of arrest since he was released on bail last year.

The three accused were charged in relation to an incident which occurred on May 26 of last year where Roko, wife of the victim, was angry because of her husband did not return home after work.

The two pleaded not guilty to the charge against them and a trial date was set.

The victim was a bus driver. On May 25 last year he did not return home but went out drinking with his friends.

It was when the husband came the next day that the wife expressed her anger and both argued over the issue.

Police said that from that argument Roko left their house and returned with five of her relatives in a car.

Police alleged that the men were armed with bush knives and one of them with a kitchen knife. The victim was asleep but was woken up by Roko calling for him to open the door.

He then opened the door and the wife went into the house and grabbed one of their children.

It was during that time when the woman got out of the house her brothers went inside and attacked the victim and stabbed the victim in the right eye.

Sikua’s case listed for mention today

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BY JENNIFER KUSAPA

THE case against the former Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Police, National Security and Correctional Service Edmond Sikua is listed for interim mention today.

The trial date into the case has already been set for July 2 to July 31 this year.

Mr Sikua is charged with seven counts of official corruption contrary to section 91(a) of the Penal Code Cap 26.

Sikua was charged in relation to the allegation on December 22, 2016 for allegedly awarding government tenders worth $630,436.50 to Beeds Investment, a company registered and owned by his two daughters.

Prosecution alleged Sikua is by default the chairman of his ministry’s tender board.

The allegation said between December 18, 2015 and August 29, 2016 Beeds Investments responded to calls for tenders and was awarded business contracts for service delivery to the Ministry of Police, National Security and Correctional Services on seven different occasions.

The Ministry of Police, National Security and Correctional Services have made payments of $630,436.50 to Beeds Investments for these services.

Prosecution further alleged that Sikua used his position of power and influence within the Ministry to manipulate the tendering process for his own and his family’s pecuniary advantage.

Sikua is the third public officer to have been arrested by Janus, since the establishment of the joint taskforce.

Without effective national plan and leadership, abundant external aid undermines domestic governance

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TRANSPARENCY Solomon Islands commends development partners and donors who are trying to ensure their funding assistance have an impact on the lives of people of Solomon Islands.

We congratulate you and urge that you continue to consult widely.

We also note that whilst this is the case, there are others who continue as usual, identifying the issues, consulting with stakeholders but at the end of the day, the solutions that stakeholders believe will work ends up with no funding.

They avoid addressing the real issues, but they have achieved the goal, they have consulted with the stakeholders.

We also know that there are countries that have harnessed aid to deliver on their national plans providing insight, vision, and leadership.

Here in Solomon Islands we are currently receiving, or preparing to receive, increased external aid for our social and economic well-being and development.

Old and new donors–bilateral, regional and multilateral–are lining up to assist us, with a range of motives that they only partly disclose.

Some of them know us well, some are newcomers with only a vague idea of our situation and needs.

Of course they are all welcome—“Please do help us, all you donors, even if we are not quite sure why you have come, or what your strengths and weaknesses are.…”

But wait, we say in Transparency Solomon Islands—while this is going on, what is happening to our own, domestically financed development efforts?

A striking effect of the abundance of external aid to Solomon Islands is that it weakens what should be the home-grown developmental role of domestic expenditure by national and provincial governments.

With donors eager to fund suitably labelled ‘development’ purposes’, national and provincial politicians can happily dig deep into domestic financial allocations to comfort and enrich themselves and their political or family supporters.

They can answer anyone who questions this by pointing to the abundant external resources flowing into health, education, infrastructure and commercial investments – see, no problem, there’s plenty for everyone.

But of course everyone doesn’t get it. Without a comprehensive and active overall national plan, leadership, what happens is that the rich people (who know how to work the system) get richer, and the poor (who know nothing) get the left-over cold rice from the rich people’s table.

We need a comprehensive review of the sources and uses of external assistance and domestic development financing, to support and form part of a complete, well-balanced and transparent plan for the use of domestic and foreign funding in Solomon Islands’ national development.

While donors spend on targeted projects, government, instead of programming the use of public funds in a coherent approach, is trying to micromanage development by engaging MPs in delivery of funds in the name of seeding development in their constituencies [so far, no real impact at all].

They leave the rest to the economics of agglomeration and seem to hold the view that development should basically go with the flow, so more funds are spent on the capital.

But wait, from our clients’ experiences with their leaders and the public sector we note that there is an air of arrogance in the corridors of power in Honiara.

Leaders, who got elected by the people and public officers who are paid with public funds from taxes, their resources, seem to have forgotten what it is like to live in a remote village on a remote island.

The rural population or 87 percent of the Solomon Islands population might as well be as far away as the moon. While national leaders often talk about national development plans and policies, few policies, development or strategic plans have been debated and approved by Parliament who pass the appropriation Bill to implement government programme each year.

But again, wait what can we do with the weak governance.

We need to reclaim our government from the loggers, and the fly-in fly-out, consultants who do not have to live with the consequences of their advice, if we want to spread the benefit of government across all regions and islands, we must take a step back and think again.

We should probably recoil from what is taking place and do something creative, innovative and radically and brave.

But how are we the people linked to the situation we find ourselves and our country in today. Can we make a difference to this situation to create a better environment for growth and development of our resources, our children and our environment, complementarity between aid received and our domestic finances to make a better change for ourselves?

Transparency Solomon Islands say yes, we can make a difference and have the power to do so.

We can do so by electing into Parliament politicians with the insight, courage and skills to govern wisely and effectively.

But wait what is the real issue with electing politicians with the insight, courage and skills to govern wisely and effectively.

We say the monetisation of the elections using CDF and other funding sources, and area that is being avoided to date.

The choice is yours and mine. The power they have comes from us so start the discussion now.

Tell us what you think of this issue at Hyundai Room 226, ph:28319.

Why we have rules

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OUR heart goes out to the family members of the young lad who lost his life in the accident at Fou’ala in Malaita.

For families to experience something of this nature is beyond comprehension.

This incident should bring a stern warning to public transport owners of the consequences our ignorance can cause for families.

With that we would like to pass our condolences to the family of the young lad who lost his life in that unfortunate incident and our sympathy to the driver, who didn’t foresee an accident of this sort.

This incident is one of the many unfortunate ones to occur because we fail to be careful.

We take so many things for granted and only realise our mistake when something of this sort happens.

Expiry dates are there for a reason.

Though we might feel or think that our vehicles are okay to carry passengers even after the expiry date, it is not okay.

Rules are there for many reasons, with one of them to safe guide how we conduct ourselves in society.

Had the vehicle owner brought the vehicle for routine check once it expires, problems in the vehicle would have been identified and the owner would have no choice but to fix whatever is wrong so that the vehicle is worthy once again to carry passengers!

The spare parts needed might be expensive or the licence might say to be expensive or waste of time but what is more expensive than life itself?

Spare parts can be bought or even a new vehicle can be bought.

Life is what money cannot buy back.

Let us not do something we might regret later.

Let us not let someone die before we come to our senses.

Huge budget cut affects tourism ministry

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BY LORETTA BRIGIDIA MANELE

THE Ministry of Tourism and Culture (MCT) is unlikely to engage in any big project this year, it is reported.

This, according to the ministry’s permanent secretary Andrew Nihopara, is due to the government’s huge budget cuts.

Mr Nihopara said instead MCT will focus on the “tourism minimum standard” which is about trying to upgrade some of the tourism standard facilities in the country.

He added that they will work on creating awareness about what the ministry’s standard requirements are and look at practical options to roll out the programme.

“That’s what we are basically focusing on,” said Nihopara.

He mentioned that they are also facilitating investor interests from overseas.

Nihopara says MCT can only work in line with what its budget can support.