Berliner Boersenzeitung - Pacific bloc backs joint police plan, maintains Taiwan ties

EUR -
AED 3.885787
AFN 71.938999
ALL 98.919807
AMD 417.498258
ANG 1.907912
AOA 965.882003
ARS 1068.650177
AUD 1.625337
AWG 1.906902
AZN 1.802665
BAM 1.960174
BBD 2.137389
BDT 126.503484
BGN 1.955847
BHD 0.398785
BIF 3062.680476
BMD 1.057921
BND 1.418165
BOB 7.315047
BRL 6.320389
BSD 1.058622
BTN 89.542812
BWP 14.402867
BYN 3.464431
BYR 20735.246053
BZD 2.133781
CAD 1.482835
CDF 3037.290761
CHF 0.932213
CLF 0.037338
CLP 1030.256509
CNY 7.661149
CNH 7.668074
COP 4681.299173
CRC 537.980145
CUC 1.057921
CUP 28.034899
CVE 111.029196
CZK 25.265055
DJF 188.014086
DKK 7.460038
DOP 63.90252
DZD 141.035102
EGP 52.443677
ERN 15.868811
ETB 131.397851
FJD 2.395186
FKP 0.835035
GBP 0.83085
GEL 2.978089
GGP 0.835035
GHS 16.40185
GIP 0.835035
GMD 75.112747
GNF 9129.856163
GTQ 8.168305
GYD 221.475842
HKD 8.232263
HNL 26.663663
HRK 7.546422
HTG 138.734666
HUF 412.911788
IDR 16753.232474
ILS 3.84544
IMP 0.835035
INR 89.460051
IQD 1385.876139
IRR 44525.242213
ISK 145.337556
JEP 0.835035
JMD 166.792192
JOD 0.750176
JPY 158.424727
KES 137.004754
KGS 91.831537
KHR 4262.362939
KMF 493.996485
KPW 952.128244
KRW 1476.344271
KWD 0.325226
KYD 0.882139
KZT 546.990592
LAK 23216.070503
LBP 94789.69661
LKR 307.689508
LRD 189.583383
LSL 19.074714
LTL 3.123765
LVL 0.639926
LYD 5.163056
MAD 10.581364
MDL 19.372588
MGA 4966.938133
MKD 61.505856
MMK 3436.085222
MNT 3594.814539
MOP 8.487118
MRU 42.232596
MUR 49.140818
MVR 16.355854
MWK 1835.492809
MXN 21.555774
MYR 4.702499
MZN 67.612112
NAD 19.074709
NGN 1781.48599
NIO 38.93542
NOK 11.682834
NPR 143.269378
NZD 1.814324
OMR 0.407163
PAB 1.058622
PEN 3.97091
PGK 4.203652
PHP 61.995745
PKR 294.211667
PLN 4.301768
PYG 8267.840186
QAR 3.851365
RON 4.976781
RSD 116.960581
RUB 112.628944
RWF 1451.996184
SAR 3.974546
SBD 8.861706
SCR 15.963784
SDG 636.3432
SEK 11.534408
SGD 1.417089
SHP 0.835035
SLE 24.068089
SLL 22184.073485
SOS 604.605564
SRD 37.454265
STD 21896.822908
SVC 9.262757
SYP 2658.057389
SZL 19.074701
THB 36.29054
TJS 11.538612
TMT 3.702723
TND 3.324027
TOP 2.47776
TRY 36.691763
TTD 7.172735
TWD 34.333799
TZS 2792.911047
UAH 44.034142
UGX 3906.75473
USD 1.057921
UYU 45.353348
UZS 13620.729584
VES 50.302077
VND 26814.587453
VUV 125.598473
WST 2.953282
XAF 657.424021
XAG 0.034552
XAU 0.000399
XCD 2.859084
XDR 0.809807
XOF 656.175709
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.907146
ZAR 19.106635
ZMK 9522.559752
ZMW 28.502525
ZWL 340.650039
  • RBGPF

    62.0000

    62

    +100%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    24.54

    +0.08%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.32

    -0.16%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    13.47

    0%

  • NGG

    0.3500

    63.68

    +0.55%

  • BCC

    1.2000

    147.6

    +0.81%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    47.08

    +0.06%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    8.97

    0%

  • RIO

    0.5200

    62.84

    +0.83%

  • BCE

    0.0100

    27.03

    +0.04%

  • GSK

    -0.2000

    34.13

    -0.59%

  • JRI

    0.2000

    13.61

    +1.47%

  • BTI

    0.0000

    37.94

    0%

  • AZN

    0.4200

    67.62

    +0.62%

  • BP

    0.1800

    29.31

    +0.61%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    7.1

    -0.42%

Pacific bloc backs joint police plan, maintains Taiwan ties
Pacific bloc backs joint police plan, maintains Taiwan ties / Photo: Saeed KHAN - AFP/File

Pacific bloc backs joint police plan, maintains Taiwan ties

Pacific leaders wrapped up a key summit in Tonga on Friday, endorsing a major joint policing initiative and rebuffing moves from China's regional allies to sideline long-term partner Taiwan.

Text size:

Leaders trickled back to capital Nuku'alofa after an overnight island retreat, using the tranquil surroundings to try to chart a course through increasingly choppy waters.

Security was a focal point at this year's Pacific Islands Forum, an unwieldy bloc of US partners, China friends, and states still tied to Taiwan.

US-ally Australia convinced its Pacific neighbours to back a landmark plan giving it a greater role in training the region's police.

The scheme would create up to four regional police training centres and a multinational crisis reaction force, backed by $271 million in initial funding from Australia.

Although hailed as a "godsend" by nations such as Fiji, others closer to Beijing were cooler on the idea.

"The only thing that we do not agree to is that it imposes conditions on our own domestic security," Solomon Islands Foreign Minister Peter Agovaka told AFP on Friday.

- Taiwan stays -

Critics suggested the deal was less about police, and more about carving up the region to keep China on the margins.

Such concerns were fanned when Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was caught joking with a top US diplomat about going "halfsies" on the cost.

The forum's final declaration endorsed the policing plan but noted some may need to first conduct their own "national consultation".

China's closest Pacific friend, Solomon Islands, also spent the week agitating behind closed doors to effectively oust Taiwan as a development partner -- ending three decades of participation.

Solomon Islands Foreign Minister Agovaka said the forum was for "sovereign states" and "not states that are governed by another jurisdiction".

The final declaration predictably blocked that idea, and instead "reaffirmed" a 1992 agreement that paved the way for Taiwan to first take part.

The South Pacific was once seen as a bastion of support for Taiwan's claim to statehood, but China has been methodically whittling this down.

In the last five years, Solomon Islands, Kiribati and Nauru have all been persuaded to switch allegiance to Beijing.

Palau, Marshall Islands and Tuvalu maintain diplomatic relations with Taipei, but face constant pressure to change.

US territories Guam and American Samoa were elevated to associate members of the forum, also against the wishes of Solomon Islands.

China's diplomats largely kept a low profile during forum business this week, despite reportedly sending their largest-ever delegation.

But it was impossible to miss the bold "China Aid" plaques that were installed outside the freshly built conference venue, a $25 million gift from Beijing.

- Climate cash -

United Nations chief Antonio Guterres addressed the forum this week, throwing his weight behind renewed Pacific efforts to drum up climate finance.

His climate call-to-arms was reinforced by a new report showing the Pacific's coral atolls and low-lying islands are disproportionately threatened by rising seas.

Tongan Prime Minister Siaosi Sovaleni, the summit host, said Pacific nations had resolved to hold a "global pledging event" to raise cash for a homegrown climate fund this year.

With a new headquarters to be based in Tonga, the fund is currently well short of its $500 million goal.

Although it did not feature on any official agenda, a push for deep-sea mining also generated heated discussion.

A company backed by Pacific microstate Nauru told AFP it was planning to scale up ocean mining operations as early as 2026.

Other forum members such as Palau have called for a moratorium, believing lingering questions about environmental harms need to be addressed first.

- French press -

Friday's forum committed to hold an official "talanoa" -- or dialogue -- on the divisive topic this year.

Pacific leaders scored a small win on the issue of New Caledonia, where proposed electoral reforms this year stoked deadly unrest.

A Pacific delegation is expected to embark soon on a fact-finding mission to the riot-struck French territory, with the date yet to be set.

The French government was repeatedly chided during the forum for its handling of the ongoing crisis.

"We've seen lots of nice press about the French delegation throughout this week," French ambassador Veronique Roger-Lacan would later wryly remark.

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)