CHINA / DIPLOMACY
Solomon Islands holds high-stake elections amid warnings on US intervention
Published: Apr 17, 2024 09:22 PM
This photo taken with a mobile phone on July 2, 2023 shows the scenery of Honiara, capital of the Solomon Islands. Situated in the southwest of the Pacific Ocean, the Solomon Islands boasts over 900 islands of various sizes.(Photo: Xinhua)

This photo taken with a mobile phone on July 2, 2023 shows the scenery of Honiara, capital of the Solomon Islands. Photo: Xinhua


Amid media reports on possible US intervention, the Solomon Islands on Wednesday held its pivotal general elections, which are under close watch beyond the South Pacific as it is believed the election results could have an impact on regional dynamics. 

The results could take weeks to come out due to the country's landscape: The ballots must be collected from scattered islands and then wait for the country's 50 members of parliament (MPs) to form a government before they choose the next prime minister, according to media reports. 

Chinese analysts said that no matter who wins the election, the country should be cautious of foreign intervention, as the US might orchestrate unrest of a "color revolution" nature to prevent incumbent Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare from being reelected. 

Sogavare was elected as prime minister in 2019 and has pledged to deepen cooperation with China further if he gets reelected, according to a report from France 24. 

Chen Hong, executive director at the Asia Pacific Studies Center of East China Normal University, told the Global Times on Wednesday that Solomon Islands voters prioritize domestic affairs such as education, health and people's livelihoods rather than power politics. 

The Pacific Island country, through close cooperation with China, has realized tangible progress in those areas, as well as better infrastructure and greater social stability, Chen said. 

No matter who is elected, the Solomon Islands should be cautious of foreign intervention in the weeks of vote counting and government forming, particularly of instigation by the US directly or its agent Australia, Chen warned.    

The West has been cultivating local agency under the guise of "democracy promotion," and the US has a variety of conventional methods to tighten control in Pacific Island countries, namely to deploy its military stationed in the region, mobilize local people to carry out subversion, impose economic sanctions, or use the Pacific Islands Forum to besiege the so-called disobedient countries, Yu Lei, chief research fellow at the Research Center for Pacific Island Countries of Liaocheng University, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

Anti-government riots took place in the Solomon Islands in 2021 with the US and the island of Taiwan being found to lurk behind.  

But the Solomon Islands' domestic law enforcement has improved over the past few years, Chen said, citing the successful hosting of the Pacific Games in 2023 as evidence of enhanced police capability. 

Also, police from countries including Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea are on the ground to help with logistics and keep the peace, ABC reported Wednesday. 

Chen also said locals are not easily deceived by Western slander against China after having seen and enjoyed the fruitful benefits from cooperation with China. Candidates who care for the country and the people will not ignore those benefits, and agenda wants to force a U-turn of Solomon Islands' relations with China is unlikely to success.