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RAMSi failed
us!
By John Roughan
May 22, 2006 -(Scoop Independent News) Whether the Solomons was
a failed state or not, there is no doubt that in the hour of our
greatest need, the Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands
(RAMSI) failed us. The heroics of police personnel, ordinary citizens,
both men and women, fortunately spared the nation the agony of mourning
its dead. Startling as it was, during the whole two-day riot--Black
Tuesday and Black Wednesday--not a single person died although some
experienced narrow escapes. But the bottom line remains: the rowdy
crowd that surrounded Parliament Building spun out of control and
became an uncontained, rock throwing mob. What happened?
In last week's Star, Thursday edition, Solomon Islands Police Commissioner--Shane
Castles--presented a spirited defense of his force's actions during
the riot days. He set about getting the record straight, at least
from the police's point of view. But so many unasked and unclear
answers still hang in the air awaiting explanation.
The Commissioner refused to accept that any police action--tear
gas use, police overreaction and protective shields only for Australian
Police members but not for Solomons' police--should be faulted.
If the police crowd-control procedures of that day were so faultless,
what then sparked the riot off? Was it mostly, as the Commissioner
states, the work of shadowy figures who worked out a "level
of prior planning and coordination" and pre-planned the whole
ugly episode?
Was the burning, looting and near mayhem primarily a case of faulty
intelligence or were other factors at play? During the critical
moments of keeping a restless crowd at Parliament Building under
control, no megaphone was at hand for Solomon Island leaders--Sir
Peter Kenilorea, Bart Ulufa'alu, etc.--to address the increasingly
agitated crowd from growing into a howling mob?
Black Tuesday caught the police flat footed! Can the no-intelligence
excuse be trotted out to justify Black Wednesday's events, more
than 14 hours after Chinatown was gutted? Burnt out police vehicles
should not stop security forces from commandeering taxis, trucks
and buses from the public during a time of emergency!
I was hoping that the Police Commissioner would have been the first
official voice to call for a Commission of Inquiry not only to verify
the police version of events but more importantly to undermine the
'coconut wireless', rumor and 'tok stori' that now circulate among
ordinary citizens. An official inquiry could nail down the actual
events as they happened. Part of this fact-finding exercise would
be to review and study the more than one and a half hours of TV
footage shot during the crucial period around Parliament House before
things exploded.
A review of the TV footage of that day would show that the thin
blue line of police were made up mostly of new, untested officers,
women included, with not an aged veteran to be seen. Such crowd-control
tactics would certainly raise the Commission of Inquiry's members'
eyebrows at least! Although this valuable TV footage was offered
to Australia's Four Corners program as part of its recent documentary
on what happened during those critical two hours, it never bothered
getting back to us.
During the nation's most critical time to strengthen democracy and
deepen good governance habits, RAMSI's law and order regime failed
us spectacularly. Its assertion that it was essentially an intelligence
failure hardly reflects the Solomons reality. UNIFEM'S December
2005 report: Monitoring Peace and Conflict in the Solomon Islands
actually predicted that "corruption in government has the highest
risk score"--88% is the mark given. This insightful study continues:
"Corruption often features among the issues which trigger conflict".
Other factors like lack of participation in government decision-making,
weak women's participation in governing processes and distrust among
political groups all score high in trigging conflict. All these
factors were clearly in abundance before and during the riot period.
These written columns also have, over the past months in the Solomon
Star, been ringing alarm bells. The first election for MPs (5 April)
is not as important as the second election, that of the PM (28 February;
6 March, 4 April), How much advanced intelligence is enough for
authorities to take notice?
If a quarter of Canberra, Wellington, Suva, etc. had burnt to the
ground, it would have taken much less than a week for their respective
governments to mount a Royal Commission, a Select Body, a Commission
of Inquiry to find out the sequence of events, who did what and
who did nothing, etc. A Commission is not an exercise in finger
pointing but to assure the nation that there's not going to be a
next time.
April's riots didn't set the country back a few months but more
like back to the 'bad old days' of 1998-2003! Military convoys visiting
Honiara's outlying settlements, throwing lollies to the kids and
the showing of gun power doesn't come to grip with the problem.
Canberra should be informed of its failure in trying to micro-manage
the Solomons scene. Place an embargo on all 'experts' jetting in
from all over Australia but set up a local reference group--pastors,
elders, women's groups, youth reps--to help re-direct RAMSI in its
work. This is not an opening wedge to get rid of RAMSI but a plea
for it to re-order itself to nation building with the majority of
Solomon Islanders.
From: http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0605/S00326.htm
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