Pacific Islands to boost regional policing after leaders meeting
PHOTO CAPTION: A Tongan Marine sights in on a target during a squad live-fire range in support of Rim on the Pacific (RIMPAC) 2022. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Sydney Smith via U.S. Defense Visual Information Distribution Service)
By Kirsty Needham
SYDNEY (Reuters) -The Pacific Islands Forum has endorsed a plan to boost police numbers among its members, cutting the need to rely on external forces in a crisis, with China security ally Solomon Islands supporting the Australian-funded initiative on Friday.
The bloc of 18 nations has the potential to play a strong and active role in regional security, Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown, the forum's chairman, said on the final day of an annual meeting of leaders.
The Pacific Islands were "a region of collaboration and support and working together, rather than a region of competition and a region where other countries look to try to gain an advantage over us", he told a press conference in Tonga.
Some analysts see the plan to set up a regional policing unit to be deployed to tackle major incidents as a move by Australia to block China's growing police presence in the region, amid strategic rivalry between Beijing and Washington.
The Solomons, which has police ties with Australia, the forum's largest member, as well as China, which is not a member, said it had agreed to the Pacific Policing Initiative.
"We also endorse, as part of developing this initiative, the importance of national consultation, so that it is owned and driven by countries, so we really do appreciate the initiative," said Solomon Islands Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele.
Tonga's Prime Minister Siaosi Sovaleni said it would reinforce the existing regional security architecture.
The leaders had also agreed to the terms of a fact-finding mission to New Caledonia, riven by months of riots, for talks with relevant parties to try and resolve the crisis, he said.
The French territory belongs to the forum, where there is support among several Melanesian nations for the independence aspirations of its indigenous Kanak population.
The forum has accepted U.S. territories Guam and American Samoa as associate members, a final communique showed.
TAIWAN TENSIONS
Forum leaders reaffirmed a 1992 decision on ties with Taiwan, the communique added, sparking an angry response from China.
A development partner since 1993, Taiwan sent Tien Chung-kwang, its deputy foreign minister to Tonga to meet its three Pacific allies, Palau, Tuvalu and Marshall Islands.
China's special envoy to the Pacific Islands, Qian Bo, told reporters in Tonga the reference to Taiwan in the communique "must be a mistake" because 15 forum members have diplomatic ties with Beijing, the ABC and Nikkei reported.
Bo had lobbied during the week for Taiwan to be excluded from the forum's official functions, the Chinese embassy's website showed.
"Any attempt by the Taiwan authorities to brush up their sense of presence by rubbing shoulders with the forum can only be self-deceptive," China's foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said in Beijing at a regular press briefing on Friday.
The United States, among the forum's 21 dialogue partners, sent U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell to meet Pacific leaders and pledge $20 million to combat climate change.
It is also set to unveil an initiative next week for the Pacific to combat drug trafficking.
Climate change dominated the week-long talks in Tonga, and Sovaleni highlighted on Friday the need for more resources to ameliorate its impact.
(Reporting by Kirsty Needham in Sydney; Additional reporting by Joe Cash in Beijing; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Miral Fahmy)