AUKUS Neocolonial Rule Enacted: Australia Deploys Federal Police, Defence Force to Solomon Islands Amid Unrest

Australia will deploy Defence Force personnel and federal police to the Solomon Islands in the Pacific “to calm the situation” amid unrest that has seen businesses in the Chinatown district of the capital, Honiara, set on fire.

This comes after a planned protest in Honiara on Wednesday led to public disorder that saw the destruction of a leaf hut adjacent to the Parliament, a police station, and a high school.

Further unrest on Thursday, reported by witnesses who posted photos to social media, showed smoke billowing and destruction in the capital.

“The situation remains volatile with reasonably large crowds on the move,” Prime Minister Scott Morrison told reporters on Thursday afternoon, adding that the Solomon Islands local police force were “stretched.”

“We have received reports of more buildings burning on the main road in the centre of Honiara, including a large commercial building and a bank branch. And there is increasing number of people on the streets,” Morrison said.

“Earlier this afternoon, I received a formal request from the prime minister of the Solomon Island, Minster Sogavare, under our 2017 Bilateral Security Agreement, under article 2, clause 1, for assistance for the provision of safety and security of the Solomon Islands and to support the Solomon Islands police force,” he said.

Their mission is expected to last for weeks, Morrison said, who advised the prime ministers of New Zealand, Fiji, and Papua New Guinea of Australia’s intentions.

“Our purpose here is to provide stability and security to enable the normal constitutional processes, within the Solomon Islands, to be able to deal with the various issues that have arisen,” he said.

The primer minister stressed that Australia’s deployment did not indicate “any position on the internal affairs of the Solomon Islands.”

Suidani has stood firm in his support for Taiwan, despite pressure from federal colleagues and Beijing.

However, the Australian prime minister said he had not received any advice that the unrest was connected to any larger geopolitical concerns, namely the change of diplomatic allegiance from Taiwan to China.

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