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Surviving the Weather Coast’s ‘hungry times’

63 year-old Harrison Bita slurp up noodle as his cat lazily looks on. Villagers also depend on goods from shops when bad weather persists during 'time hungry'

BY JARED KOLI

ON a steep slope overlooking the treacherous Solomon seas, a lone figure sits under a tree staring into the distance, the shade from a nearby tree offers a cool respite from Harrison Bita’s  struggle for survival with the land.

The 63-year-old’s community at Mandakacho, on the weather-coast of Guadalcanal is an area renowned  for  unpredictable weather and physically challenging landscape. Sandwiched between the rolling hills that fall into the ‘tasimauri’  or living ocean as it’s known in the local dialect.

For Chief Bita and his people, the only place they set their gardens is on the steep slope and narrow flat land along the coast. From June to August, the weather in these parts can be harsh with months of continuous rain making food production an arduous task.

Dark Cumulonimbus clouds hovering above the mountains of the Guadalcanal Weather Coast. The weather here is unpredictable. Photo. JARED KOLI

Changes in weather and climate patterns exacerbated by climate change has turned the land against the very people it is supposed to serve, and destroys their food crops, year after year. 

The Weather Coast is not for the faint hearted – compounded with mountainous, rugged terrain, steep coastal mountain slopes, irregular shipping services and is expensive outboard motor transport.

“From March to July it is always raining and it’s often the time of the year we experience low crop, in some instances, whatever crops we grow will not go to harvest,” said Celestine Aloatu, coordinator of the now defunct Talise Community Base Training Centre.

Celestine Aloatu once involved in bulking and banking planting materials for farmers in Talise after realising the need.

Aloatu said the rainy season in south Guadalcanal can be so extreme, sometimes it takes up to six months of continuous rain. However, this year, they experienced a change. 

“In the beginning of the year we tend to expect big swells, but it didn’t happen, the sea is fine right from the beginning of the year. So you see, it slightly changes, this time last year, we experienced very high seas and heavy rain. It is becoming unbelievable,” he said.

Chief Bita said people refer to this period as “time-hungry” with yam and cassava no longer available in most villages due to pests and diseases.

Sweet potatoes leaves turned yellow with tiny little holes are common during and after bad weather

“Heavy rain brought flooding, made worse by strong winds and rough seas and people are normally forced to remain in their houses. It destroys root crops and vegetables grown near river banks,” said Mr Bita.

Sixty-three year old Harrison Bita points to where huge waves normally reach during rougn seas eroding coconuts and coastal trees

When this happens, villagers depend on breadfruit, banana, dry coconuts and wild yams to survive, as well as goods from shops, which usually run out of stock if bad weather persists.

“Breadfruit is the main food we often rely on during times of disaster, and also wild yam, locally known as ‘uvi matua’,” Bita adds. 

Ara and Koburu

The two main climate systems affecting the Solomon Islands are the south easterly trade winds (Ara) that blow from May through to October and the north westerly monsoon winds (Koburu) that blow from December until March.

During Koburu, winds and abundant rainfall can be expected – a period where tropical cyclones form while Ara triggers higher rainfall.

The weather coast region of south Guadalcanal receives heavy rainfall of 5,000mm to 8,000mm annually during two wet seasons, the first from January to April, the second from May to September.

Rain about to drop in Viso area, south Guadalcanal. This is an usual sight in this part of Guadalcanal as weather may change anytime during the day

Maria Bola, a farmer and church leader at Ngalitaverona Village knows what too much rain means for crops.

“It usually leads to sweet potato leaves having small holes. Cassava only bare vines. Bananas also dwarfed and failed to yield good fruit — they were usually smaller than their usual size.

“Almost every crop is affected during the rainy season, sometimes the heavy rain can also cause landslides,” Maria said.

White Fungus disease that affect cassava stem is one of the diseases people discovered after months of heavy rain. Photo by JARED KOLI

Mr Aloatu said the intense saturation of the soil and made sweet potatoes and cassava fail to tuberise in waterlogged soils.

“We experienced a decline in the fertility of soil where we cultivated our root crops. We usually did our farming on sloped areas, and every year heavy rainfall erodes nutrients away from the top soil.

“Gardens on flat lands were waterlogged, enabling a new environment which harbours thriving plant pests and diseases that affect our staple root crops like cassava, sweet potatoes and taro,” said Aloatu, who has been involved in food bulking for many years until recently.

A rural-based training center he ran until recently offered life skills training such as carpentry and joinery to students as well as farming.

“There are no big trees left on where we make food gardens because year after year we use the same land, this makes it even more vulnerable to erosion, and so when it rains topsoil gets washed away to the sea, carrying with it organic matter and soil nutrients.

Coastal erosion was evident in south Guadalcanal.

“I think that is also one of the factors that contribute to the problem of poor crop yields we experience here,” said a villager, Elson Francis.                   

Rains, floods and disaster

“The flooding occurred last year from May, June, July and August, four solid months of rain, and one of the worst I’ve seen,” said Francis.

“This is just a small stream but when it rains, floods can be very destructive and often destroy food gardens,” he said.

A villager, Elson Francis walks up a dried up stream. After months of heavy rain last year, part of the village on his left was swept away, forcing families to relocate further up to higher ground

Further up the stream floods also uprooted and carried away two homes.

Part of this village was swept away, one of the houses standing there was washed away by the floods, forcing families to move to higher grounds.

He said only an elderly woman remained in the village whose house was spared during the flood.

Climate Change

The Director of the Solomon Islands Meteorological Service David Hiriasia said while global temperature fluctuates on a daily basis, the long term average is a temprature increase which is consistent with global warming and the findings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

Mr Hiriasia said the country needs the data to back-up what the elders in rural communities have witnessed, and SIMS has recently installed observation weather stations in Marau, east Guadalcanal, Avuavu and Biti in south Guadalcanal and one at Kohimarama.

SIMS is working with communities to revisit traditional knowledge on weather and climate and develop a crop calendar.

Coconuts being eroded by high coastal waves at Talise beach, south Guadalcanal,

“One of the communities on the weather coast of Guadalcanal we work with is within the Moro movement area.

“We develop some crop calendar to promote local crop production such as yam. We would like to expand this, but it also depends on funding, when we collect these traditional knowledge, we can also see these changes,” Hiriasia said.

He said SIMS is collaborating with different stakeholders such as women groups, agriculture agencies, farmers to give them forecasts so that they can plan ahead and choose what crop would be suitable for a period in the weather forecast.  

But hundreds of kilometers away on the Weather Coast Chief Bita continues to wonder what climate change will hold for his people and what the future will bring.

  • This feature story is produced with support from the ABC International Development Media reporting on climate change story grant 2021

Ministry warns of collapse of Beche-Der-Mer from illegal harvesting

BY MAVIS N PODOKOLO

The ministry of fisheries (MFMR) is warning of a collapse in the local beche-de-mer industry if illegal harvesting continues unabated.

MFMR Director Eddie Honiwala said beche-de-mer stocks are down and may not recover if the illegal activities continue.

Honiwala echoed this yesterday as the ministry destroyed confiscated illegally harvested beche-de-mer.

“It is important for our people to note that our beche-de-mer stocks are fished down and if this continues, this fishery will collapse soon. We don’t want to drive this important fishery down that path,” he said.

Honiwala said the current ban to harvesting is to give the beche-de-mer stocks time to recover.

“With the current level of over-fishing and low density around the country, the closure period should be longer than five years.

“Continuous illegal harvesting will not do any good to the BDM stocks, or to our communities but will drive this important fishery to a level where, we will no longer have the beche-de-mer fishery in the future and our future generations will no longer have any beche-de-mer fishery to enjoy as today,” he said.

He said in the previous data recorded it showed that majority of the confiscated beche-de-mer products were of low value species.

“This is an indication that high value species were no longer found in many places, so people have no option but to fish low value species.”

Beche-de-mer fishery was closed in 2019 under the prohibition order made under section 22 of the Fisheries Management Act 2015.

Under the prohibition order, fishing or possession of any species of beche-de-mer from fisheries waters is prohibited, effective from May 31, 2019. Further to the above, export of any species of beche-de-mer is prohibited effective from June 30, 2019.

PATROL BOAT BASE SETBACK

The Lofung Border and Patrol Boat Outpost site plan in the Shortland Islands

BY JARED KOLI

With a few days to go for Ground-breaking ceremony, the proposed multi-million dollar border patrol boat base project is staring up a brick wall.

Accusations, court threats and warnings are mounting against FAMOA Trust Board over Lofung land (on which sits the site earmarked for the new patrol boat base).

FAMOA trust board is the body which the national government is liaising with over the project. FAMOA is supposedly the representative of all the landowners.

But, some landowning tribes are saying this is not so, and are warning government against dealing and making arrangements with FAMOA and its working committee.

The Saraba Clan/Group, which claims land rights on Lofung land, said the government’s arrangement with FAMOA “will be a disgrace, irresponsible and loss on part of the Government if the case that will be filed in the High Court be ruled not in favour of FAMOA Trust Board”.

“As with the Kome Clan/Group, we will also be filing a case in the High Court soon or amidst the period of the ground-breaking and when the work starts at the site,” Mr Brenden Maena says in a statement on behalf of Saraba Clan.

Mr Maena claims that the FAMOA Trust Board’s registration as a charitable trustee and the transfer of the registered land at Lofung in 2003 obtained by FAMOA Trust Board were done by unscrupulous means. 

“Further we will be filing a case to the court claiming that land or site below the high-water mark at Lofung, Shortland Islands as customary land and owned by Saraba and Kome Clans.

“Lastly, the Australian Government is cautioned of releasing the fund and for spending their taxpayers’ money on the project at Lofung where the land or site is still in dispute and that would cause disharmony of peace among the people of Shortland Islands,” he warns.

Earlier this week, Alisae Laore of another landowning group also threatened to challenge the FAMOA Trust Board in court for selling the 20 hectares at Lofung.

Laore said FAMOA Trust constitution states it has no right to sell or lease land to the government.

He said even the constitution of FAMOA Council of Chiefs allows provision in Part 4 and Part 6 to identify true landowners and return the land back to them.

“Why did the FAMOA Trust Board ignore its own constitution?” he asked.

As such, Laore said he will challenge the Board in court for allegation of fraud.

Furthermore, Laore said the Board’s move to sell the land to the government defies its policy to return all alienated land to the original landowners.

Laore provided a deed of sale agreement signed by his grandfather in 1900s that they are the true owners of the land.

He said a chief’s decision of FAMOA Council of Chiefs was reached in 1988 which decided that they have the ownership right over that land.

Local businessman and surviving founding father of FAMOA Trust George Taylor has also called on the Commissioner of Lands to revoke the Perpetual Estate (PE) title held by FAMOA Trust Board.

Taylor said the PE title held by FAMOA for the past 20 years for whatever reason was illegal.  

“If FAMOA has fixed term estate (FTE) then it is 100 correct they own the land. The PE title was held illegally by FAMOA. The government must revoke the PE title.

“We are very happy with the project, it is a national project, but we are not happy with what the Government is doing with FAMOA Trust Board and its working committee.

“Government knows very well that this is wrong, but why entertained FAMOA,” he said. 

Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Police and Correctional Services, Karen Galokale earlier told Island Sun the current subject land is registered under FAMOA as legal Perpetual Estate holder and not a customary land.

But Taylor said the comments made by the PS were wrong and totally ignorant of this matter.

“You cannot talk from that chair to say FAMOA holds the PE title, you cannot process anything that is wrong, because the PE title with FAMOA is wrong.

“The Government have all the right with the project,” he said.  

Meanwhile, Chairman of the FAMOA Working Committee, Pellion Buare earlier said FAMOA still stands by its commitment to meet with the concerned parties after finalising all the arrangements with the national government. 

He maintained that FAMOA is the registered owner of Lofung land, which is the site for the project.

Meanwhile, Ground-breaking for the new outpost at Lofung has been set for June 23, 3021.

Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare and Australia High Commissioner are expected to attend the historic groundbreaking ceremony.

The Australian Government is funding the multimillion-dollar Border and Patrol Boat Outpost project, which Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare jointly announced in Honiara on October 7, 2019.

New health centre for Ghombua villagers

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New Ghombua Rural Health Clinic officially opened. Picture taken during flag raising and singing of the national and provincial anthem song.

WALKING for hours under the scorching heat of the sun simply for medical attention, worst still, losing a family member or friend along the way will now be a thing of the past for around 5,000 villagers in and around Ghombua community, east Guadalcanal.

On Tuesday this week, the villagers  gathered in excitement to witness the opening of their new Rural Health Clinic (RHC).

Guests escorted by pathfinders, flags raised, national and provincial anthems sang, speeches, choirs from community men and women followed by red velvet cake and ribbon cutting and community feast with presentation of gifts were part of the celebrations to mark the official opening of the clinic.


GP Deputy Premier and Health Minister touring the clinic’s pharmacy.

Though a joy-filled event, time was also spared for the entire community to come to a stand -still with the laying of wreaths to remember family members and friends who have passed on and those who have dreamt of a clinic but never lived to witness their dream come true.

“Truly a historic moment for our people,” community and church leader Silas Ratu said.

“We have witnessed the devastation that lack of a easy to access clinic can cause and today we are overjoyed that we have our own rural health clinic just steps away from our homes,” Ratu stated.


Mothers came out in numbers with their children to listen to the speeches during the official opening of the clinic.

Chief Issac Lewa, who was also given an opportunity to speak, only stood and repeatedly uttered the words: “Thank you, thank you, thank you to each and everyone of you!” to demonstrate that words cannot even begin to describe the tremendous joy within the community.

The construction of the AHC was made possible with funding from the Provincial Governance Strengthening Program ( PGSP) – Provincial Capacity Development Fund (PCDF) implemented through the Ministry of Provincial government in partnership with the community and contractor, Reinunu Construction.


The smiles says it all. “ Yaaaaay! We now have our own clinic, thank you everyone

The Ministry of Health and Medical Services, through its Guadalcanal Provincial Health team, provided the technical support in terms of design including all necessary works to enlist Ghombua with the medicines supply chain and placement of a nurse at the clinic.

Both the Deputy Premier Lazarus Rima and Provincial Health Minister Francis Iso in their remarks reiterated the province’s commitment towards service delivery to the people and the need for community members to look after the facilities provided.

“Guadalcanal is glad to have qualified for the PGSP-PCDF over the past years and has used the opportunity to engage in various projects, throughout the province,” Rima said.

“Last financial year, Guadalcanal had embarked on 15 projects, 14 of which were completed, and Ghombua is amongst the 14 completed projects,” he added.


New Ghombua Nurse Rebecca Masaodo who previously worked at the Totongo Clinic in East Guadalcanal assuring the community of her commitment and dedication towards serving their health needs in her remarks.

“Thank you to the Ministry of Provincial Government, Ministry of Health, community members, contractors and all stakeholders whom have contributed towards this clinic.”

The Provincial Health Minister Iso in his remarks acknowledged the community for their determination and commitment towards the project that had enabled it to come to its fruition.


Mothers preparing food for a feast to mark the opening of their new clinic.

“Your support is the backbone to the success of this project and I hope other communities can also learn from Ghombua’ s commitment and cooperation in working together to achieve this important health milestone for the community,” Iso said.

“It is important that the facility is taken care of since it is now in your hands to continue providing the much needed health services to our people now and into the future,” he added.

Dr Joel Denty, Director of Guadalcanal provincial health, used the occasion to highlight the importance of respecting the facility and the health workers, the nurses who will be working there.

“I would like remind you all that there are many cases in which health facilities have been disrespected including nurses working these clinics, which have resulted in their closure,” Denty said.


A villager carrying a wreath to lay in honour of all those who have passed on.

“This must not be the case here,” he added.

“The last thing we want is to close the clinic. Treat the facility well including the nurse who will take care of more than 5000 people that is within the catchment area of Ghombua.

“With this kind of number the nurse herself will not be able to even find time for leisure, even banking in Honiara.

“She will be overwhelmed and therefore take care good care of her as we work on getting additional nurses to assist her.”

Head of St John Ambulance, Douglas Kelson, who provided new bed linens for the clinic also offered to provide two of St John volunteers to assist the nurse for the time being until an additional nurse is recruited.


Douglas Kelson ( L) handing over more bed linens to Deputy Premier Hon. Lazarus Rima inside Ghombua Clinic.

Kelson said St John Ambulance will also be installing two-way radio at the clinic to ensure smooth communication and swift action for any emergency cases that needs urgent medical attention at the National Referral Hospital.

The event, which was also attended by Guadalcanal Provincial Ward Member, Holsey Chainivila and Rose Tala provincial Minister for Women, Youth and Children, came to a successful close.

—MHMS

Western Education conducts retirement practice reforms

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Students and teachers who were part of the forum

BY BEN BILUA
Gizo

WESTERN Province Education Authority (WPEA) is undergoing major reform on School’s retirement practices.

Schools operating under Western Province Education Authority are now provided with official stamps in an effort to make sure financial transactions are property receipted.

In an interview with Island Sun Gizo office, Principal Education Officer of Western Province, Freedom Tozaka said the initiative is a mechanism that WPEA thinks best as far as proper use of School grants is concerned.

“We always talked about transparency but we forgot very simple approach can lead to achieving so called transparency.

“We need to look at available approaches, simple as the one we embark on (providing stamps) to make changes.

“I believe that providing avenues or platform for organisation to follow is the best way forward,” he said.

Tozaka said his office will distribute the stamps to schools in the coming weeks.

He warned school administration that retirement without proper receipt will not be considered truthful and that issuing of receipt in any financial transaction is paramount.

“My office will not tolerate excuses for failing to provide official receipt as we have already make this easier for schools to comply.

“I must encourage school administrations or whoever responsible for school grants to be responsible in the welfare of their financial reports.

“Make sure the financial report must be accommodated with official receipt, that is the message I want to put across,” Tozaka said.

On the same note, he urge school administrations to make use of the official stamps to achieve the purpose of transparency in the use of school grants.

Violence as a Human Rights abuse

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DEAR EDITOR,

A worrying number of wom­en in the Solomon Islands experience domestic vio­lence.

Statistics have shown al­most 64% of women in our society have encountered domestic violence at some point in their lives.

Others never pursue help since domestic violence is accepted as a private matter which is normal.

It is also evident that some police are reluctant to im­pose their duty to protect victims from private acts of violence.

Moreover, our culture plays a role in silencing victims, that man dominates house­hold hence incidents of do­mestic violence should not be reported.

Daily occurrences of do­mestic violence happen at homes but only 5% of the women report to police. Incidents are underre­ported because women are unsatisfied with the police response and response du­ration.

Others fear for their lives and avoid reporting inci­dents to the police due to receiving threats from of­fenders.

Families and communities must be heedful and vo­cal of such incidents and should report to responsible authorities.

Domestic violence is a hu­man rights abuse. Although domestic violence is re­garded as a private matter to some women, the human rights structure delivers a tool to challenge this opin­ion and reframe it as a mu­tual problem that society as a whole must address.

Our government recognizes and responds to the high rates of violence against women with significant Acts like the Family Pro­tection Act.

Therefore, Police and re­sponsible authorities must have the responsibility to exercise due diligence to prevent, examine and pun­ish violators by imposing maximum penalties as the laws allow and protect the victims.

JILGINA KIMISI

S11015706

USP HONIARA CAMPUS

127 join nursing service

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Julia Karufe, Aryan Sio and Paru Fiona with their certificates of nurse registration

BY MAVIS N PODOKOLO

UP to 127 young men and women joined the nursing service yesterday in a ceremony held to confer their status as “registered nurses”.

This new lot are expected to further boost the country’s human resource capacity in the health sector.

They received their nurse registration confirmation yesterday at the Holy Cross Cathedral, Honiara.

Speaking on the occasion, National Head of Nursing Council Solomon Islands and guest speaker Michael Larui encourages the newly registered nurses to work with their full scoop of practise to meet the needs of the health system.

Beckster Harrison and Hellison Wasi with family members

Larui said nurses have been key part of the leadership during the current public health crisis

“While I acknowledge the work of colleague nurses, I wish to challenge us to ensuring that all patients receives patient –centred and high-quality care,” Larui said.

Clayrickeith Bulehite congratulated by family members

“Nurses are central to the design of health systems that focus on public health, prevention and primary care,” he added.

Larui told the nurses that their voice has the community’s trust, therefore nurses must get and pass right information to the public and not to entertain misinformation and disinformation in relation to the current COVID-19 pandemic.

Some of the male nurses ready to receive their full registration to become Registered Nurses

“This voice is needed now more than ever. During public health emergencies and disasters, vulnerable populations are at a risk of poor to severe illness.

“As nurses, we must strengthen the support to following up on the disabled communities and increase the country’s contraceptive prevalence rate by improving  family planning and child health services,” he said.

One of the female nurse receiving her badge

Larui also encouraged nurses to ready to be deployed to rural health centres.

“Absenteeism and lateness to work, conflict of interest and insubordination must not be the norm instead; nurses must be professionally competent in their practice and conduct.

Three of the female nurses ready to receive their full registration to become Registered Nurses

“The profession needs you to contribute nursing meaningfully to the overall health service delivery,” he said.

New nurses told to spread correct messages

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Vezilyn Isom places a badge on one of the male nurse who was commissioned yesterday.

BY MAVIS N PODOKOLO

NEWLY registered nurses are reminded to not spread false and misleading information about the COVID-19 pandemic.

National Head of Nursing Michael Larui made the reminder to the 127 new nurses who officially joined the nursing service yesterday.

His reminder came in the wake of the recent report that says some of health workers are spread misinformation on vaccines.

“Misinformation and disinformation about COVID-19 has spread more widely and quickly than the virus itself through network,” Larui said.

“The spread of flash and potentially dangerous claims during a lethal pandemic clearly poses a threat to our national security,” he added.

“For example, even with the announcement of a vaccine that is safe and effective, there is growing misinformation about the immunisation and groundswell movement of anti-vaxxers.

“The initial slow response and turnout to vaccination in Honiara even by health workers was testament to this.

“Nurse’ voice has the community’s trust, therefore nurses must get and pass right information’s to the public. This voice is needed now more than ever,” Larui said.

Violation of Human Rights

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Dear Editor,

As a concerned citizen of this country, I strongly urge our government to recognize the rights of persons with disabilities and hold perpetrators accountable.

I am deeply saddened to learn that in West Honiara, a 40-year-old man has sexually abused a young girl with disability who has become pregnant as a result. This outrageous and abhorrent behaviour should not be treated lightly nor entertained in our communities. 

It is disheartening to also learn that the justice system has failed, yet again, to adequately investigate and punish the perpetrator. Laws should be passed in parliament to protect persons with disabilities, especially women and girls with disabilities, from being exploited, sexually and physically abused. Right now, there is no specific law to protect them and who knows when another young woman or girl with disability will become the next victim.

Our government is a signatory to the United Nations Conventions on the Rights of Persons with Disability and therefore has an obligation to protect their rights. This man’s act is a gross violation of the girl’s right to freedom from exploitation, violence and abuse (Article 16). Persons with disabilities do not enjoy the same level of security as an abled person. They are more vulnerable to the different forms of violence and abuse.

Therefore, I call on our Government and relevant authorities to pass laws to protect the rights of persons with disabilities, to ensure their freedom and to protect them from any forms of violence and abuse.

Veronica Manedika

S11047351

USP SI Campus.

2 DEAD INFANTS FOUND

Police silent over discoveries

BY JARED KOLI

Lifeless bodies of two newborn babies were discovered dumped in two separate locations this week, one in Honiara on Monday and the other in Northeast Guadalcanal on Tuesday.

Few days on, and police are yet to make a statement on these horrific discoveries.

On Monday, a man discovered the dead body of an infant allegedly dumped in a stream at Water Pump area in west Honiara. On Tuesday afternoon, students of Ngalibiu primary school stumbled upon a body of a dead baby boy at the Ngalibiu riverside near Tetere in Northeast Guadalcanal.

Island Sun has managed to get an account of the Ngalibiu incident from students who made the discovery, relayed through a teacher.

“The students were there to cut firewood when one of the students saw the dead baby trapped at the bank of the river, at first he thought it was a doll. But upon examining it, they realised that it was actually a dead baby, stuck just at the riverside,” William Simata, a primary school teacher at Ngalibiu relayed.   

“It was a dead baby boy and still had a fresh look as though he was thrown at the river and got stuck there not long ago. Maybe because the current of the river was not strong enough to carry it away.

“It is still covered with white coating and the umbilical cord still attached,” Simata said.

Security officers at GPPOL station-1 heard of the discovery and went over to the scene and took the dead infant to their base. They then called the police. The matter was attended to by Tetere Police officers.

Details of the discovery at Water pump on Monday is sketchy but a student who was among a crowd that went and witnessed the discovery told Island Sun that it happened on Monday afternoon. It was discovered by a man.

Explicit photographs of both discoveries have flooded Facebook.

Police Media unit did not respond to enquiries by this paper yesterday.

However, an officer at Tetere Police Station when called yesterday said there has not been any arrest. He could not confirm if preliminary investigation on the matter has started.

Calls made to Guadalcanal Provincial Police Commander yesterday went unsuccessful.

The alleged infanticide cases come just two months after a body of a female infant was found in the Holy Cross Cathedral area in Honiara (early April).

Infanticide is a crime of a mother killing her child within a year of birth.

According to Section 206 of the Solomon Islands Penal Code, infanticide is punishable by law.

“Where a woman by any wilful act or omission causes the death of her child being a child under the age of twelve months, but at the time of the act or omission the balance of her mind was disturbed by reason of her not having fully recovered from the effect of giving birth to the child or by reason of the effect of lactation consequent upon the birth of the child, then, notwithstanding that the circumstances were such that but for the provisions of this section the offence would have amounted to murder, she shall be guilty of felony, to wit, infanticide, and may for such offence be dealt with and punished as if she had been guilty of manslaughter of the child.”