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Huge problem needing immediate attention

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DEAR EDITOR, the seemingly intractable problem of youth unemployment in the Solomon Islands must be resolved quickly and by all means possible.

Next year the Solomon Islands will have a general election and whichever political party or coalition of parties forms the new administration one of the greatest challenges for the government, as I see it, will be to effectively address the seemingly intractable problem of youth unemployment, but how?

The Former Prime Minister of New Zealand, Helen Clark, is one of the latest to say that the issue of youth unemployment in the Solomon Islands is a potential time bomb.

An editorial piece in the Solomon Star following the successful Melanesian Arts and Cultural Festival gave a similar stark warning.

Writing in the Solomon Times on Line publication in 2014, I said:

“The seemingly intractable problems associated with youth unemployment in Honiara and the resulting evidence of increased substance abuse, including the growing and use of marijuana, the consumption of kwaso (home brew), incidences of anti-social behaviour and criminal acts have featured significantly in Editorial columns of the local press and in other articles this past week.

“Honiara isn’t alone in facing the problems highlighted and, indeed, it can be said many of the Pacific states face the same, if not more serious, issues arising from the respective nation’s ability to manage development and provide for the rapidly growing population. The Solomon Islands is no exception.

“The various schemes implemented by the government, such as the rapid employment scheme and the offshore, seasonal work offered to young people engaged in fruit harvesting simply isn’t enough to meet the needs and expectations of the growing numbers of school drop outs and idle youth flooding into the national capital from the provinces.

“I am not alone in describing the current situation as a security challenge akin to a ticking time bomb, although I likened the situation of the unemployed youth in 2009 to a tinder box. (See my letter to the Pacific Islands Report entitled, ‘Idle Solomons Youth a Tinder Box’, published on 10 December 2009)”.

In the same article I suggested that the then SIG re-examine the findings and projected solutions to youth unemployment in the excellent report styled, ‘The State of Pacific Youth – 2005’ written under the support of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF Pacific) and funded by the New Zealand’s International Aid and Development Agency (NZAID.

My recommendation, if followed, might not have proved helpful for in the subsequent report of the same name in released in 2011 the conclusion was that nothing much had changed and youth unemployment continued to be a substantial challenge in Pacific countries.

In the last few days the Prime Minister, the Hon. Rick Hou, signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Australian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Senator Marise Payne, on a Labour Mobility Scheme

The idea of the scheme will possible provide Solomon Islanders with the opportunity to gain valuable skills and income while assisting businesses in rural and regional Australia.

A similar kind of scheme already exists with New Zealand allowing for Solomon Islanders to participate in fruit harvesting.

While greatly appreciative of the help offered by Australia, New Zealand and all the other players, locally, including Youth@Work, few have been taken to scale to address the demand that exists.

The successor to the ‘State of Pacific Youth’ reports that I have referred to has been the development of a Pacific Youth Development Framework 2014-2023. This is said to be a coordinated approach to youth-centred development in the Pacific, prepared by the Social Development Division of the Secretariat of the Pacific Community in Suva, Fiji.

Having read through the lengthy Framework over the last couple of days and studied the contents carefully, and without wishing to be critical, I very much hope the development guidance offered will help to ease the growing and worrying state of youth unemployment in Solomon Islands and in the neighbouring Pacific region.

When I consider the continuing widening gap between the country’s population and its ability to economically sustain its people with a recurring declining economy prompt-up by substantial donor aid and a continuing inadequate education system, I do concern myself greatly for the job prospects of the burgeoning Solomon Islands youth.

As an outsider one might legitimately pose the question of me as to why I care.

I can give several reasons apart from having an ongoing interest in the welfare, health and livelihoods of the people of the Solomon Islands.

When I left school, now many years ago, I too faced the long-term prospect of unemployment in Britain, but my situation was resolved by being conscripted into National Service in 1959.

After the Second World War (1939-45), the young men of Britain were called upon to meet new challenges in a rapidly changing world.

National Service, a standardized form of peacetime conscription was introduced in 1947 for all able-bodied men between the ages of 18 and 30 to undertake 2 years of military service.

National Service gave me the means of overseas travel, opportunities for further education and led to employment after finishing my military engagement.

I have a very much more personal reason, however, for concerning myself about the numbers of unemployed young people in the Solomon Islands.

In 1998, when serving as the Commissioner of Police in the Solomon Islands I accurately provided the intelligence to forecast the early occurrences which was to lead to the tragedy of the ethnic tension years.

My report and advice, including help for the local police force, and then weakened substantially by years of neglect by successive governments, went unheeded at home and regionally.

What followed was an unprecedented ethnic tension from 1999 resulting in armed conflict with militia groups and ultimately resulted in the late intervention of the Regional Assistance Mission to the Solomon Islands (RAMSI) in 2003.

In the intervening period from 1999 to 2003, the dreadful and tragic ethnic trouble caused serious economic, social and political disruptions and loss of lives and property.

The conflict also negated the programme of important structural reforms that had been initiated by the Solomon Islands Alliance for Change Government (SIAC) in 1997.

The strife consequently used up valuable resources that would have otherwise have gone to improving basic service delivery, education and educational reform.

Taking many years to get the economy back on track to its pre-ethnic crisis helped to rob the youth of potential job opportunities.

A National Youth Policy was unveiled in 2000 in order to promote youth development but it appeared to fail in meeting it’s outlined key strategic challenges, perhaps because of funding shortages or the economic and political weaknesses that lingered after the onset of the ethnic tension.

In 2018, I see, with few exceptions today’s young people are floundering. They are uncertain about what they want to do with their lives. They need a structured opportunity that will allow them to feel needed and capable and, above all, they need paying jobs.

It will be for the Solomon Islands Government to try and provide the work opportunities the youth of the country greatly and urgently need.

I truly hope to see such happen before the predicted social consequences that have been foreseen really do occur.

Yours sincerely

Frank Short

Improving financing and capacity building to counter the threat of climate change in SI

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DEAR EDITOR, tens of thousands rallied across the world over the weekend, including in New Zealand, Australia, the United Kingdom, France and the United States in a rebuke of the dismissal of climate science and a call for action on climate change.

While the Solomon Islands remains committed to the Paris Agreement it must not remain silent and continue to work diligently to improve the means of implementation by improving financing and capacity building in order to counter the increasing threat of climate change in the country, especially when witnessed in coastal areas already seeing sea water intrusion and loss of cultivable land.

Evidence of the Solomon Islands Government efforts to improve financing and capacity building was apparent in early June this year when the World Bank approved a project to reduce reliance on fossil fuels and to ensure more than 9,300 Solomon Islanders would benefit from new of improved electricity services, including renewable energy sources such as solar.

Further evidence of the SIG’s ongoing efforts to develop renewable energy sources came last week in Nauru.

The Solomon Islands Prime Minister, Rick Hou, met with Norway’s International Development Minister, Nikolai Astrup, at the Pacific Islands Forum leaders’ summit and the PM was told Norway wanted to help the Solomon Islands develop its renewable energy resources.

In thanking Mr Astrup, Prime Minister Hou also reportedly thanked Norway for its significant contribution to the Green Climate Fund, to which it is providing more than US$270 million over four years.

It is believed that part of that fund has already gone to the Tina Hydro Project.

It is seen as vitally important for the Solomon Islands Government to do everything possible to mitigate the effects of climate change and help from regional partners, the World Bank and friends like Norway will have gone some way to satisfying citizens that some positive steps are being taken to aid capacity building and reduce the need for the importation and use of costly fossil fuels.

Yours sincerely

Frank Short

Delayed delivery of beds and wheel chairs

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DEAR EDITOR, the promised freightage of 100 hospital beds and some 30 wheel chairs for delivery to the Solomon Islands Ministry of Health and Medical Services has been further delayed because the hospital beds are still to be released by the Wellington Hospital in New Zealand pending the delivery of replacement hospital beds for the hospital.

I am led to understand, however, by ‘Take My Hands’ by partner charity organization in Auckland, that at least the first of two forty foot containers with 50 hospital beds and the wheel chairs will be shipped from New Zealand on or about the 29 September 2018.

The medical authorities at the NRH have been made aware of the delay.

The Solomon Islands Forest Association (SFA) previously donated more than $US11,000 for the shipment of the two forty foot containers in order to aid the NRH and two provincial hospitals with the much needed hospital beds.

Yours sincerely

Frank Short

Voter registration in Choiseul goes well

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BY BARNABAS MANEBONA

VOTER’S registration in Choiseul Province has gone well without any complain since the starting on the 3rd this month, September.

According to the Member of Provincial Assembly (MPA) for Ward 12 at Varisi Lavata Hon Nerio Ulemiki reporting, the turn up was high with a lot of people visiting the voter registration centres to update their voter registration details.

“Many of those who were not eligible to vote in the last election because they were not registered and a lot of young youths who have just turned 18 years old recently were happy to go forward and register their names to vote in the upcoming National General Election (NGE) for 2019,” said Hon Ulemiki.

First win defines good start: Waita

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National under-16 coach, Stanley Waita.

BY ROMULUS HUTA

SOLOMON Islands national under-16 head coach Stanley Waita says the first win snatched yesterday signifies a good start for them in their OFC Under-16 Championship campaign.

This follows the 5-0 drubbing of Melanesian neighbours PNG, thanks to four goals from Raphael Le’ai and a goal from Chris Satu.

Speaking to the media in the post-match conference, Waita said they started a bit late in the first half, but as soon as they scored the first goal, things appeared to favour them.

“My boys started a bit late where we supposed to go with a high intensity game plan but it didn’t work out.

“But we managed to put things together quickly and scored the first goal which gave us confidence to go further in the contest.

“Before going into the match, we’re confident of winning it. We just need to be patient and do the right thing.

“Playing under this type of weather is also a new thing for my boys. But I’m happy that they came out with the first win,” Waita outlined.

The win puts Solomon Islands equal with New Zealand on three points but had to move down to occupy the second spot on the Group A table due to the advantage the young All Whites have following the 8-0 thrashing of Vanuatu in the earlier fixture of the day.

“After New Zealand secured a big win in their first game, we feel that we too must step up in our game to take us closer to them.

“In pool game situations, I need to calculate well how we’re going to go taking into considerations the makeup of the other pool. I would like to finish the pool at the top. Therefore, we need to come out with a win in Wednesday’s game against New Zealand, which would be a good thing for us.”

Solomon Islands created many scoring opportunities in the first half but could only find the net five times due to fine defending from their opponent.

Waita admits to have regretted missing the other goal scoring chances which could have increased the winning margin.

“In football a lot of things happen and one of them includes missed chances. We missed out on a couple of chances where we’d like to score more goals. In football, when you miss chances, you miss chances. When you score goals, you score goals.”

Waita gave credit to a good defensive-playing PNG side that held them out physically in a couple of occasions on the pitch.

“PNG played very well. They are more physical than us. We didn’t expect them to come out as strong like that. I give credit to a very good PNG side for putting up a good defensive play against us.”

Waita added that the victory is certain to ease things down a bit on him especially when faced up with the pressure of playing a competition on home soil.

“There is a lot of pressure playing a competition on home soil and trying to deliver the title to home fans. In Solomon Islands, supporters always expect positive results.

“It’s a very tough thing to handle but I’m putting up my hand to deliver a good result in this competition.”

Solomon Islands will play New Zealand in their second match Wednesday afternoon and explains that he needs full backing from the home crowd.

“I want all home supporters to go behind the team.

“I urge all supporters to come out in numbers when we take on New Zealand on Wednesday.

“I’m a Liverpool fan and when you go to Anfield, there’s always a 12-man Liverpool. The 12th are the supporters. So supporters, please come out and let’s play with 12-man on Wednesday against New Zealand,” Waita appealed.

Meanwhile, the championship will continue today at Lawson Tama with Pool B teams squaring off for their first matches.

Scheduled for 10am today will be Fiji going against Samoa while at 3pm sees New Caledonia taking on Tahiti.

The two finalists of this championship will qualify to represent Oceania at the 2019 FIFA Under-17 World Cup in Peru.

Young All Whites hit eight past Vanuatu

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New Zealand Midfielder Oskar Van Hattum controls the ball past the sliding Ni-Vanuatu player in yesterday’s Group A match of the OFC U-16 championship at Lawson Tama. New Zealand won 8-0. PICTURE: BENZ NEWMAN

BY ROMULUS HUTA

New Zealand Midfielder Oskar Van Hattum controls the ball past the sliding Ni-Vanuatu player in yesterday’s Group A match of the OFC U-16 championship at Lawson Tama. New Zealand won 8-0. PICTURE: BENZ NEWMAN

NEW Zealand thrashed Vanuatu 8-0 on Sunday morning’s opener of the OFC Under-16 Championship at Lawson Tama Stadium.

The big win puts them on top of the Group A table ahead of Solomon Islands, PNG and Vanuatu, respectively.

Oskar Van Hattum was instrumental for the young All Whites side throughout the entire contest having played assist to two goals and also finding back of the net twice.

Played on a wet and a slippery turf, the Jose Figuiera-coached side put up a fine first half performance to find the back of the net five times in the first half through a double each coming from Ryan Verney and Henry Hamilton, respectively while the other was scored by Bradley Wilson.

Eleven minutes into the second Van Hattum added the sixth from the spot to register his name on the score sheet for the first time.

In the 77th minute, he added his second to increase the scoreline to 7-0 before setting up Joseph Lee for the final goal three minutes into injury time.

“I’m really happy.

“It’s a great start. You know, you’d always want to start this tournament with a win. But I think it’s not just the three points but the way we played.

“The wet pitch really suited us where we can be able to play our passing game, positioning game and control the game. So for an opening game, it’s a good start.

““There will be a big crowd and a big support like my experiences before and there will be a different challenge for us in the second game,” a delighted Figuiera said.

The Englishman added that his team’s next match is against Solomon Islands and that poses a big challenge for them.

“We are in a nice position now and we can go back and recover to play against Solomon Islands.

“We’ll take in a lot of confidence from this game (against Vanuatu) and get back and do our recovery now and tomorrow we’ll begin focussing on the next challenge.”

Vanuatu coach Joel Rarua appeared disappointed with the result of their first match and blamed slow movement with the ball for the loss.

“Our strategy could not work in the first game.

“Our boys are a bit slow in their movement and that affected our performance. Defensive mistakes also cost us in the first half.

“But in the second half, we pushed things up a bit and improved our performance with some good defending.

“Having taken into account the performance from the first game, we have identified the weaknesses and there is room for improvement in the second game.

“We have enough time to recover and our boys should be ready to take on PNG in the second match,” Rarua added.

New Zealand will take on Solomon Islands in their second match on Wednesday 3pm while Vanuatu will play PNG in the earlier fixture of the day.

Solomon Islands bit too clinical: PNG coach

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BY ROMULUS HUTA

Solomon Islands striker Raphael Le’ai gets a touch to the ball ahead of the PNG player in yesterday’s encounter at Lawson Tama

PNG under-16 head coach admits that his boys went down to a better side following the 5-0 loss conceded against Solomon Islands in their Pool A campaign opener of the OFC Under-16 Championship yesterday at Lawson Tama Stadium.

Speaking to the media in the post-match conference, coach Anthony Pakatota said Solomon Islands were a bit too clinical for them with their fast-paced plays and that contributes to their loss.

“The first game is always an important game in this kind of tournament. It’s always good to get a good start. We did not start well.

“Solomon was a bit too clinical with their fast pace so therefore, they caught us a lot out wide and also in the inside,” he said.

Pakatota explained that Solomon Islands made good use of the home ground turf to their best advantage and rules out on Sunday’s slippery and wet conditions as a contributing factor.

“Lawson Tama is always a slippery and a fast pitch on weather like this.

“Blaming the weather for the loss, I don’t really think so. It goes down to experience, especially when it’s not your home ground, you don’t know the pitch but we can only hope for the best.

“But that’s the advantage they have, you know Solomon Islands used their home ground to their best use.

“We’re a bit slow in recovery in defence; we tightened it up a bit in the second half and the idea worked out to be more competitive,” he added.

PNG will play Vanuatu in their second match set for Wednesday 10am.

Parents worried by social media effects on kids

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BY Ezekiel Talatau

INFLUENCE of social media on students is becoming an increasing worry for parents in the country.

Speaking to Island Sun, a concerned parent who wises anonymity, said she has witnessed her daughter’s academic grades drop as interest in social media grew and she spent most of her time on social media.

Another parent comments that social media affects students’ traditional lifestyle, along with their academic performances.

It is estimated about 20 percent of students using social media are connected with their school and activities, 25 percent show a sign of depression and status updates; 96 percent of students giving up of using Social media have a high grade.

Facebook platform creates a significant connection for students to share ideas and do research and to connect people and family all over the world.

“Currently, there is no assessment been done on students using social media in Solomon Islands, but monitoring them through their activities is one way to investigate,” said a concerned parent.

Community officers ready for important roles in Malaita

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MPGIS permanent secretary Stanley Pirione.

BY GEORGE MANFORD

AUKI

MPGIS permanent secretary Stanley Pirione.

FIFTEEN community liaison officers (CLOs) from the wards in Malaita have concluded their induction workshop last Friday in Auki.

The one-week workshop began last Monday with chiefs and church leaders around Malaita province joining the programme for the first three days.

During the official closing programme last Friday, permanent secretary from the ministry of the provincial government and institutional strengthening (MPGIS) Mr Stanley Pirione thanked the CLOs for their commitment during the training.

He voiced his optimism that the officers are now well equipped with knowledge on their roles and what is expected of them.

“This programme must be carried out in our communities in Malaita making sure that you are representing your provincial government, the police and also the national government to address issues raise in our communities.

“By attending this weeklong training I believe the CLOs have fully equipped with knowledge and understanding regarding their duties as community liaison officers.”

PPC of Malaita province Timothy Apaesi.

Also speaking during the programme, Provincial Police Commander (PPC) of Malaita province Timothy Apaesi said the Auki police will be working closely with the CLOs in the communities in Malaita.

“I believe from time to time we will put our hands together working with our communities trying to address issues and also to reduce other unti-social behaviours in our communities.

“The set up that the Malaita provincial government has set is a way forward for the people in Malaita for addressing lasting peace and also to pave a way forward for development.

“Wishing the CLO’s a good and effective programme in our communities where we all work together for a better Malaita.”

Community Liason Officers in a group photo.

Ministry asked to help Malaita tackle logging problem

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Logging impacts in Solomon Islands IMAGE story.

BY SAMIE WAIKORI

AUKI

THE Ministry of Forest and Research has been asked to work together with the Malaita provincial government to address issues in the growing logging industry in the province.

The call follows worrying observations that logging companies head straight into operations in the province without paying the provincial business fee.

Revenue Officer under Malaita Provincial Government (MPG) who responsible for logging licence fees, Mr Eddro Misite’e made the statement saying this undermines the provincial government.

He said in Malaita province logging companies, upon receiving permits from the national ministry of forestry, go straight into operations and do not bother to pay the provincial business licence fee.

He said sometimes they fail to consult the Malaita province government to pay their business or licence fees before embarking on the business in the province.

Misite’e said they experienced that some logging companies turned up to pay their business fees when they are doing their felling or even shipment of logs.

He said this is non-compliance to MPG ordinance as all businesses to operate in the province must pay their fees first before operating.

Misite’e said this is an area of concern and MFR must work together with MPG on it to ensure this area to be ironed.

He said MPG respect all investors wish to engage in business in the province, hence they must also respect the province as well.