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HCC urges repatriation of dead bodies

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City Mayor of the Honiara City Council Eddie Siapu.Photo credit- MAVIS PODOKOLO.

BY MAVIS N PODOKOLO

FAMILY members of dead persons are called to repatriate the body home due to grave site scarcity in Honiara.

This call was made by the City Mayor of the Honiara City Council Eddie Siapu during the celebration of the country’s 45th Independence anniversary held in Honiara last week.

He said at this point in time, space to bury our dead at the present Grave site in Kola Ridge is scarce.

“I therefore appeal to all residents to repatriate the body of any deceased family member back to his or home village for proper burial,” Siapu said.

He said Honiara City council is currently working close with relevant ministers to secure new cemetery site.

“City Council is working closely with relevant ministries of the national government and Guadalcanal Provincial Government to secure a new cemetery site,” Siapu said.

Fini’s government welcomes Chinese investors to develop Bina Harbour

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MPA for ward 3 (Buma), Hon Martin Fini.

By EDDIE OSIFELO

The Malaita New Government for Fundamental Redirection (MNGFR) has expressed its welcome to any Chinese investor willing to develop the Bina Harbour project in West Kwaio.

The project involves the expansion of the port to international standards and the development of tuna fisheries.

According to an article published by The Sunday Guardian on July 9, 2023, the Minister of Fisheries and Marine Resources, Hon. Nestor Ghiro, signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Chairman of the China National Fisheries Corporation (CNFC) in Beijing in May of the same year.

The signing of the MOU reportedly opened the door for the China Engineering and Construction Company and China Harbour Engineering Company to seek financing for the project, estimated to cost US$180 million.

The article’s author, Dean Baxendale, suggests that there may be additional implications to China’s involvement in the Bina Harbour project.

Baxendale points out that Bina Harbour is one of the few natural deep water ports in Malaita and highlights Malaita’s strategic location in the archipelago, implying that it could serve as a docking location for the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) navy vessels, potentially countering the American security pact with Papua New Guinea.

However, it should be noted that these geopolitical implications mentioned by Baxendale are speculative and not confirmed by official sources.

Prior to the MOU signing with China, the New Zealand Government, through Mekem Strong Solomon Islands Fisheries (MSSIF), was already providing long-term technical assistance and funding support for the Bina Harbour project.

A project office was established, managed by Johnstaff International Development (JID), which is funded by the New Zealand Government.

The Bina Region Arrangement for Governance (BRAG) within the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources is supported by the New Zealand Government to safeguard the interests of the Bina and Langa Langa communities that have rights over the land, water sources, and the harbour required for the project.

It is worth noting that the press release issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and External Trade regarding the MOU signing did not specifically mention any Chinese investment in Bina Harbour.

The press release states that the MOU enables CNFC to invest in the Solomon Islands in areas of mutual interest.

Minister Ghiro emphasized that the purpose of the MOU is to strengthen the fisheries cooperation between the Solomon Islands and the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and promote tangible entrepreneurial developments in the country.

Malaita Premier Martin Fini expressed his support for China’s involvement in developing Bina Harbour, stating that if the MOU allows China to undertake the project, he welcomes it.

Premier Fini emphasized that Malaita has not witnessed significant development in major projects like Bina Harbour and Suava Bay for the past 45 years from what he refers to as “Western countries.”

He believes that if China is willing to contribute to the tangible development of these projects, it aligns with the desires of the people of Malaita.

Premier Fini visited Beijing in May to present his government’s policies on fisheries, tourism, agriculture, and education, aiming to prioritize tangible development over ongoing debates on social media regarding Western geopolitics.

DIVERS BLOCKED

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West Are’are locals turn back foreigners wanting to scuba WWII wreckage

BY SAMIE WAIKORI

Foreign divers have been blocked from diving a World War II wreckage at the West Are’are Lagoon.

Three foreigners were reportedly turned back last week by locals when they failed to show their approval from the Malaita provincial government for their diving expedition.

MPA for Ward 24, Peter Clay Taraumae told SunAuki yesterday this was the result of not following protocol or procedures put in place by authorities.

He explains that WWII wreckages and relics are protected by law and foreigners have to go through processes in order to access or view them.

“Two weeks ago, I received a tip that locals within West Are Are lagoon were collaborating with some foreign divers to dive a WWII plane wreckage within the lagoon,” Taraumae said.

“I researched the tip and found it to be genuine, so I informed landowners of Ruakoaa Islands, who are at Oterama, Nari’ekeara and Masihuro villages on the matter.

“Upon dialogue, landowners demanded to know reasons for diving the plane within their sea and whether the divers and their local acquaintances get approval from MPG,” he said.

Taraumae said the divers and their local hosts got wind that he was looking for them.

“They called me and we arranged to meet on Tuesday last week in Auki. Unfortunately, our meeting did not take place.

“Despite the meeting, I expect the divers to submit proposals containing the purpose of their diving and await approval from the executive government.

“Nothing as such happened. On Wednesday a OBM from Ta’arutona picked them from Auki and transported them to West Are Are lagoon,” he said.

The MPA alerted leaders within Oterama and surrounding communities to meet with the divers and question them on their purpose for diving.

He said the landowners met with the divers and asked them for documents showing approval from the MPG, which they did not produce.

He said the landowners viewed this as failure to comply with protocols and told them not to dive.

According to the MPA, the plane wreckage is located about 40m deep near Ruakoaa Island within West Are Are lagoon.

Logger exports without Forest’s permission

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By EDDIE OSIFELO

CAPE West Enterprise Limited exported round logs on June 23 to overseas without the permission of the Commissioner of Forest.

The company is engaged in logging operations at Qoiqoi, Tangarare in West Guadalcanal.

A reliable source revealed to Island Sun that the license holder is Anthony Veke, the Minister of Police, National Security, and Correctional Services, and Member of Parliament for West Guadalcanal.

Commissioner of Forest, Reeves Moveni, refused to allow the shipment after the company failed to pay a fee of $50,000.

Moveni issued the directive while he was in Brisbane with the Minister of Forestry, Dickson Mua, instructing not to permit the shipment.

However, to their surprise, the shipment proceeded behind their backs.

The close source claimed that the directive to allow the shipment came from a higher authority and not from the Commissioner of Forest or Minister Mua.

The source asserted that this is corruption in its purest form, questioning why the person in the higher authority allowed the shipment when the company did not comply with forestry regulations.

Officials from the Ministry of Forestry traveled to the logging site to halt the shipment, but they were allegedly confronted by landowners wielding knives.

Cape West Enterprise is owned by Joseph Anea, who is the elder brother of Veke.

Despite attempts, Island Sun was unsuccessful in contacting the company.

Solomon Islands celebrates 45th years of independence

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Flag dancers and cultural dance performers.

BY MAVIS N PODOKOLO

LAWSON Tama Stadium in Honiara was packed yesterday with thousands who have flocked witness the commemoration of Solomon Islands’ 45th year of independence.

Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare when delivering his independence remarks congratulated the country on its 45th Independence Anniversary. 

“Men and women, boys and girls across the country – from far-flung atolls in the East to the towering mountain in the West, pristine oceans in the South to the rugged interiors of the North. I bring you warm greetings and congratulations on our 45th Independence Anniversary.

“Today Solomon Islanders across our beloved nation are celebrating this significant occasion, commemorating the day we obtained our political independence,” Sogavare said.

Flag dancers displaying the 45th years of independence

“We are truly blessed and fortunate to enjoy and live in a peaceful country. We may not be where we want to be as a country but I thank Our Almighty Father in Heaven for his never ending love, guidance, protection and blessings.

“This country is a Christian country with strong conviction and faith, and it is in God that we put our faith in.

“I have faith in our country, our children and our future. We all want a resilient, peaceful and united Solomon Islands for our children and their children.

“It is our duty, not only as leaders but as parents to ensure that the country we leave to our children is one that is resilient, peaceful and united.

“In closing, let me once again wish you all a Happy 45th Anniversary celebration on behalf of the Democratic Coalition Government for Advancement,” Sogavare said.

PM Sogavare, GG Sir David and Police Commissioner Mangau joined the crowd during the flag raising to mark the 45th independence anniversary.Photos by MAVIS PODOKOLO

He said it is by God’s grace and intervention that all people become one

“We are Solomon Islands because of God Almighty, the Creator of the Heaven and Earth, The Alpha and Omega, the Beginning and the End, the Sustainer of Life,” Sogavare said.

On the same note Honiara City Council City Mayor Eddie Siapu call on all resident of Honiara and Solomon Islands to take ownership of Honiara because Honiara City

“Let us look after the city that we can enjoy the services provided by the city all work of lives. The city council cannot do it alone we need public support.

Crowd sitting at the Lawson Tama grand stand that were part of the celebration

“To our donor partners and friends thank you for being part of our 45th independence anniversary celebration and thank you for finance and moral support you have all rendered throughout the years in the country,” Siapu said.

He also thanked Guadalcanal province and the national parliament for their ongoing support as well.

Micro Polly dancers showcasing their item.

“As we celebrate our 25th independence anniversary today (yesterday) let us continue to work together to fulfil the dreams of our forefathers, remembering the struggles and sacrifices they fought to give us this gift of sovereignty. Let us pay tribute to their wisdom and heart felt passion for us to become one nation and one people,” Siapu said.

The theme of the celebration reads“Rising above and overcoming our challenges as one people”

NO FAITH IN RAINBOWS

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Prime Minister, Manasseh Sogavare

PM Sogavare uses independence anniversary speech to strongly condemn LGBTQIA+

BY JENNIFER KUSAPA

Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare has reiterated his strong stand against the Rainbow community.

In his speech to mark the country’s 45th independence anniversary yesterday, Mr Sogavare strongly condemned the adoption of theLGBTQIA+ issue in Solomon Islands saying it will destroy the Christian faith and cultural values.

LGBTIQA+ stands for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer/questioning, asexual, and many other terms (such as non-binary and pansexual).

Sogavare said Solomon Islanders need to uphold their Christian and cultural values and not be influenced by such issues.

“Fellow Solomon Islanders… I’m increasingly uneasy about theLGBTQIA+ issue that has gained prominence. I will explain why I’m concerned. What happens there is not a concern to us, of course.

“My concern is how LGBTQIA+ has served their foreign policy and how that would affect us.

“That is why I’m concerned. I do not want the issue of LGBTQIA+ to be weaponized against us and used as a condition to accessing aid.

“I’m watching and following the debate there very closely and as conscious as possible of how the contents of television and movies that capture this are infiltrating our society.

“That is why the Government is establishing the SIBC TV that we own and do programmes that advise on our values.

“We have values, and we will not allow others to impose their values on us,” Sogavare said.

He said Solomon Islands has the Christian faith, values, diversity, culture, heritage, and tradition, which define Solomon Islands as a nation.

He added that the Solomon Islands must celebrate its heritage and cultural values.

“Our values and faith define us as a country of islands separated by sea but connected by History, traditions, blood ties, inter-marriages, the Church and Government, and also our faith and our creator, which are what hold us together culturally and spiritually,” Sogavare said.

This is not the first time for Solomon Islands leaders to openly express homophobic sentiments.

In 2017, PM Sogavare reportedly shared his homophobic views to a local church group, speaking against same-sex marriage.

In 2018, the then-governor general Sir Frank Kabui cautioned the nation against the ‘onslaught’ of the LGBTQ into Solomon Islands’ societies.

Same-sex marriage and same-sex sexual activity is illegal in the Solomons, upholding the law which criminalised it in the 1880s.

PM TRIP TO CHINA

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Prime Minister, Manasseh Sogavare

35-member delegation head out this weekend

By EDDIE OSIFELO

Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare is set to lead a large delegation to the Peoples’ Republic of China (PRC) this Sunday, according to confirmed sources.

The delegation is expected to comprise more than 35 individuals.

The PRC Government will only meet the expenses of 20 members of the delegation, while the Solomon Islands Government will handle the arrangements for the rest.

The purpose of the visit and the composition of the delegation are still unclear.

In 2019, Prime Minister Sogavare made his first official visit to Beijing following an invitation from President Xi Jinping of the PRC Government.

This visit took place after the historical signing of diplomatic recognitions by Solomon Islands’ Minister for Foreign Affairs and External Trade, Jeremiah Manele, and State Councillor Wang Yi of the People’s Republic of China on September 21, 2019, in Beijing.

It was a significant visit, marking the first time a Prime Minister from the Solomon Islands had traveled to the PRC under a diplomatic framework.

During the official visit, the Prime Minister engaged with the President and other high-level dignitaries from the Government of the People’s Republic of China.

The visit also included visits to areas of significant importance to both the Solomon Islands and the PRC.

Several Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) were signed between the Governments of the Solomon Islands and the People’s Republic of China, covering various areas such as education, economic and technical cooperation, and foreign affairs.

These MoUs paved the way for enhanced cooperation between the two countries in their respective fields of engagement.

During the Prime Minister’s absence, Minister for Infrastructure Development and Deputy Prime Minister, Manasseh Maelanga, will assume the role of acting Prime Minister.

Malaita workers salary delay causes ruckus

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BY SAMIE WAIKORI

Malaita provincial government workers were not paid their salaries on time this week, and it has caused fear and panic.

The provincial government has said the delay is caused by cash flow problem in the national coffers since priorities have shifted to the Pacific Games.

Many took to social media voicing their frustrations. Others recalled a few years ago when provincial employees were paid with bags of rice to substitute their cash salaries.

Critics say the salary delay was politically motivated.

Malaita’s Admin said: “We understand the Pacific Game is coming up and SIG is very mindful on how it executes its national finance.

“And for clarity, the situation has nothing to do with politics or with MPG, it is because of delay of service grant and measures taken to deliver it.

“The Finance Treasury department assured us that the salary is coming, whilst work on staffs’ payroll had already prepared.

“So, it’s only the matter of releasing the service grant into the provincial account to pay the salary of the employees,” it said.

MPG’s admin also explained that salaries are paid for 10-days work, five working days per week that make up a fortnight.

It said it is not fair to accuse MPG for not facilitating the salary on Wednesday, when it is just the 8th day of the 10 working days.

The admin said if the salary does not come on Wednesday, the other days employees would look forward to are Thursday and Friday.

This paper understands that MPG staffs received their salary yesterday afternoon.

MPG hits back over salary delay saga

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BY SAMIE WAIKORI

MALAITA Provincial Government has lashed out at critics over this week’s salary delay saying it is a one-off occurrence, and does not reflect the provincial admin’s good work.

This week’s salary for Malaita provincial workers did not come through the normal Wednesday.

In a state of confusion, provincial workers and sympathisers took to social media voicing their frustrations and fear that this might be the start to a new trend of delayed salary, or an indication of low cash flow for the province.

MPG’s admin explained that it had reached an understanding with the ministry of provincial governance (MPGIS) in ensuring that its salary portion has a separate bank account to be self-administered.

The admin furthered that under the understanding, it also recognised that MPG must not also touch the salary account for any other usage.

“We divided the fund and we are ensuring that the salary portion must not touch. This is a mechanism in place and it has been guiding MPG’s execution of its grants.

“MPG created that by way of avoiding situation experienced in the past where staffs are paid with bag rice, also for staffs to receive their salaries accordingly.

“So, we are performing well in terms of salaries, and the situation had just faced doesn’t reflect MPG and the mechanism it has been executing on its salary,” it said.

The admin said MPG as a public and statutory institution must ensure proper planning to be in place on how to spends its funds. And the salary account created is part of it.

Greater representation for Pacific in IPCC needed, survey finds

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BY IRWIN ANGIKI

There needs to be more representation of Pacific island countries and territories (PICT) at the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC), a recent survey has found.

The IPCC is the scientific body which advises the United Nations on global temperature rise.

Pacific research in IPCC reports come from people and institutions outside the region, and this needs to change, the survey highlights.

Results to the current status quo include limited Pacific representation, low inclusion of Pacific experts, lack of Pacific data, Western dominance, low outreach and engagement, data not reflective of Pacific reality, limited opportunities to engage with IPCC and limited traditional knowledge inclusion, the survey has found.

The survey was carried out by the South Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP) and the Australian National University’s (ANU) Institute for Climate, Energy and Disaster Solutions, engaging 125 responses from across 15 PICT.

It was aimed at identifying options for improving PICT representation at the IPCC.

The survey was sent to ‘stakeholders across the Pacific, including practitioners, researchers and academics engaged in climate science, adaptation and mitigation in the region’.

On average, more people were dissatisfied with the current status quo.

Respondents say researches carried out in the Pacific by outsiders “did not reflect local realities and that this research needed contextualisation that could only come from people in the region”.

Traditional knowledge was also pointed out as an important missing factor, which some respondents point out is difficult to include with the IPCC’s current knowledge frameworks.

“I’m not happy with the representation because we have a lot of experts in the Pacific – our own people with both scientific and Indigenous knowledge but they are not involved at the author level. They may be consulted for some input, but most of the writing is done by the Professors and the experts from the first world,” one very dissatisfied respondent said.

“1) Lack of experiential knowledge/impacts from Pacific people. 2) Lack of Pacific voice in terms of other impacts that are not “scientific” for example, Loss and Damage does not include the cultural and heritage loss. 3) There should be more Pacific people/experts contributing to the different parts of the report. At this stage, the science is determined by the global North, but the impacts are felt by the global South that are not represented in the reports,” a somewhat dissatisfied respondent said.

“We need more Pacific Islanders involved in the whole process. This will amplify the voices of our region. They live in the region and know more about the region. [IPCC] Reports are based on findings and assessments carried out by scientists mostly outside the Pacific Region; the need to contextualize the reports has to come from the people of the region, not some assumptions made by outsiders who do not understand the region. We have to be heard, and this cannot be done by a minority of a very few of one or two people,” another somewhat dissatisfied respondent said.

The survey found that increased representation at the IPCC would benefit PICT in many ways including: Strengthen regional data representation in reports, Raise profile and support for PICT issues, Inform international negotiations, Provide local context, Improve responses and decision making, Amplify Pacific voices, and Strengthen Traditional Knowledge inclusion.

“The more representation the more representative the amount of data and analysis that goes into informed climate negotiations,” one respondent said.

“Pacific Islander representation in the IPCC remains shockingly low. In the latest AR6 synthesis report, for example, there were precisely zero Pasifika authors. This is, in itself, inequitable and so should be addressed…As shown recently in Maia Germano (2022) ‘Neutral’ Representations of Pacific Islands in the IPCC Special Report of 1.5°C Global Warming, Australian Geographer, 53:1, 23-39, this lack of representation by Pasifika authors can skew the IPCC’s assessments,” another said.

Options for enhancing representation and engagement by PICT in the IPCC report process include funding for greater inter-Pacific collaboration among researchers, training/greater support for academic writing, support for getting local and indigenous knowledge into IPCC database, and supporting regional organisations/ programmes already doing this work.

Challenges to PICT with lack of representation and engagement was found to be across the board in all three areas of the IPCC process – governance, writing and research.

This includes not enough outreach or lack of opportunities, limited understanding of the IPCC processes, limited time capacity for people to take on extra roles, complexity of applying for IPCC roles, and limited understanding of the importance and role of the IPCC.

Solomon Islands is represented in the IPCC in the governance area by the Meteorological Services Division of the Ministry of Environment (MECDM). The director for Met Service Dave Hiba did not respond to email for comments.

Other prominent academics contribute to writing and research including Dr Morgan Wairiu.