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Posted: 2023-03-22 07:47:22

Samoan Prime Minister Fiame Naomi Mata'afa has warned that China and other outside powers could cite the need to protect their infrastructure projects in the Pacific as a front for establishing a security presence in the region.

Her comments came after Solomon Islands announced that a Chinese state-owned company had won a contract to upgrade Honiara's port in an Asian Development Bank-funded project.

The Samoan PM stressed that China was not the only major power that might want to secure further military access to the Pacific "under the guise of protecting [their] assets".

However, she said, Beijing's move to strike a security pact with Solomon Islands after the 2021 riots – which devastated several Chinese-owned businesses in Honiara — could still establish a new precedent.

"It was presented that China was wanting to bring in security personnel [to Solomon Islands] in a sense to protect those assets — physical and human," she told journalists in Canberra.

"Now it occurred to me … that many countries, particularly in assistance projects, develop assets and have their personnel in receiving countries.

"Now is this going to be a trend where because one country has assisted and has assets, that this becomes an opportunity or a window by which security personnel come in?"

China and Solomon Islands have both repeatedly and forcefully denied that there's any prospect of China establishing a military base in the country.

China may use wharf deal to move navy into Pacific

Fiame also fielded a question on the move by Solomon Islands to award the China Civil Engineering Construction Company (CCECC) a major contract to upgrade Honiara's international port and two other smaller ports.

The project is being funded as part of a broader, $170-million Asian Development Bank project to upgrade roads and wharves across the country.

Some Australian analysts have warned that China might try to exploit Solomon Islands' wharves as "dual-purpose" facilities, which could allow the People's Liberation Army Navy to gain access to the region.

Three women sit a timber meeting table.
Fiame made a thinly veiled reference to the United States when discussing potential military moves in the Pacific.(ABC News)

Fiame echoed that concern, and suggested Australian officials were also watching the project carefully.

"This is a commercial port, although I think the fears are that it might morph into something else … a dual-purpose [facility]," she said.

"I suppose we have to address that, if and when it might happen."

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