Tuesday, August 27, 2024

1) ULMWP rallying support at Pacific Islands Forum summit



2) Pacific faces worst impacts of accelerating sea level rises, warns UN’s Guterres
3) Can the Pacific Islands Forum Help Resolve the Conflict in New Caledonia?

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1) ULMWP rallying support at Pacific Islands Forum summit

Penulis KogoyaEditor: Aries Munandar
Last updated: August 27, 2024 6:21 am.



ULMWP Executive Vice President Octovianus Mote (second from right) speaks with Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) Secretary General Baron Waqa on the sidelines of the PIF Summit (second from left) in Tonga. - ULMWP doc.

ayapura, Jubi – The United Liberation Movement for West Papua will report to the leaders of Pacific countries regarding the Papuan people's struggle to demand self-determination. They hope that Pacific countries will show solidarity with the struggle.

Executive Vice President of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) Octovianus Mote said that they will present the report at the 53rd Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) Summit in Tonga. The conference will take place today until next Friday.

"ULMWP is present with the Church [delegation] [in the Pacific] [at the PIF Summit]. "We have the opportunity to deliver material about the ULMWP and the struggle of the West Papuan people in [demanding] self-determination," said Mote in a short message to Jubi.id, Monday (8/26/2024).
The ULMWP is scheduled to deliver their views on the third day of the conference or the day after tomorrow. Mote considered the opportunity very valuable for the struggle of the Papuan people.
"This is an opportunity to show the problems and struggles for self-determination [for Papua]. The issue of [sovereignty] of West Papua is supported not only by the government, but also by all Pacific Nations," said Mote.
He continued that the plan to deliver the ULMWP's views began with a morning prayer together. They will also pray for the struggle of the Kanaky Nation, the Tahitian Nation, and other nations that are still colonized.
Mote called on all Papuans to also hold morning prayers together on Wednesday the day after tomorrow. A similar appeal was conveyed by ULMWP Executive President Manase Tabuni

"I urge all Papuans to unite their hearts [in the struggle for self-determination]. Let us pray together and fast for the homeland and nation of West Papua," said Tabuni.
The FIP was formed in 1971 at the initiative of New Zealand. Its formation was to strengthen cooperation and unify policies in achieving economic growth, sustainable development, good governance, and regional security in the Pacific.
The PIF Secretariat is based in Suva, Fiji, and is headed by a Secretary-General. The current Secretary-General of the PIF is Baron Waqa.



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2) Pacific faces worst impacts of accelerating sea level rises, warns UN’s Guterres

Guterres met with Pacific leaders in Tonga to issue a “global SOS” on climate change.
Harry Pearl
2024.08.27
Nukuʿalofa, Tonga


Protestors call for climate action on the streets of Tonga’s capital Nuku’alofa as the U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres met with Pacific island leaders at the PIF meeting on Aug. 27, 2024.
icon-zoom.png Sue Ahearn/BenarNews






Sea levels around some Pacific islands were rising at nearly twice the global average, putting the “Pacific paradise in peril”, U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres said on Tuesday.

Guterres, who is in Tonga for the Pacific Islands Forum leaders meeting, said he was attending to issue a “global SOS” on rising sea levels overwhelmingly generated from burning fossil fuels. 

He warned the region was in “grave danger” from a triple whammy of threats, including ocean warming, acidification and rising seas.

The world’s 20 richest countries must cut emissions, he said, and step up financing for a “just transition” from fossil fuels.

“If that does not happen, we will be in a near irreversible situation with absolutely devastating consequences,” he told reporters.

Pacific island nations are being disproportionately affected by climate change despite contributing just 0.02% of global emissions, according to a new U.N. report released Tuesday. 

Low-lying islands are particularly vulnerable to rising sea levels and extreme weather events like cyclones, floods and marine heatwaves, which are projected to occur more frequently this century as a result of higher average global temperatures.

At the 2018 PIF in Nauru, the leaders’ Boe Declaration stated climate change is the “single greatest threat to livelihoods” in the Pacific. Guterres last attended the PIF meeting in 2019 in Fiji.

In the western Pacific, sea level rise is occurring at nearly twice the global rate, increasing approximately 10-15 cm between 1993-2023, the U.N. report said. In the central tropical Pacific, the sea level has risen approximately 5–10 cm over the same period. 

Extreme weather events – particularly cyclones or floods – are becoming more common in the region. Last year, some 200 people died and more than 25 million people were impacted by weather-related disasters in the region, the U.N. said. 

Pacific islands are also having to contend with more intense heat waves and ocean acidification, which threaten fish stocks and coral reefs. 

Pacific climate finance

On Tuesday morning, Guterres promised leaders that he would do his best to mobilize resources for the Pacific Resilience Facility, a locally led climate financing fund to support projects across the region.


Tuvalu Prime Minister Feleti Teo welcomed Guterres’ commitments, saying it was very difficult for small island states like his to obtain climate finance – including the U.N’s Green Climate Fund.

“The whole objective of this new facility is because the Pacific countries have waited far too long to access the global loss and damage facility that the Pacific has been fighting for in the context of the conference of parties under the United Nation framework,” he told BenarNews.

Tuvalu, a low-lying Pacific atoll nation less than a meter above high spring tide levels, has become emblematic of the plight faced by low-lying islands from projected sea level rise over the coming century. 

His nation announced an agreement with Australia at PIF in 2023 that created a special visa category for Tuvaluans to live and work in Australia, which was described as a response to projected sea-level rise.

The Falepili Union in exchange requires Tuvalu to have Australia’s agreement for “any partnership, arrangement or engagement with any other state or entity on security and defense-related matters.”

Teo said he and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese would announce the deal’s ratification in Tonga this week.

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3) Can the Pacific Islands Forum Help Resolve the Conflict in New Caledonia?
After months of violence, New Caledonia independence groups will turn to the PIF in hopes of buoying their case for self-determination from France.
By Pierre-Christophe Pantz August 26, 2024

Since the outbreak of violence and unrest on May 13, New Caledonia has been ravagedIts situation speaks to one of the central issues at the heart of the Pacific Islands Forum, an organization with decolonization in its DNA, which is now wrestling with a growing struggle for independence in New Caledonia, decades in the making.

The root of this outbreak was a growing protest from the pro-independence camp against a constitutional bill to modify the electorate.

New Caledonia is a sui generis overseas collectivity, a semi-autonomous region in the process of decolonizing itself from France. This started with the Nouméa Accord in 1998 and culminated in three successive New Caledonian referendums on self-determination from France in 2018, 2020, and 2021, in which the “No” vote won each time.

But that third referendum, in 2021, was the catalyst for the chaos of today. Coming amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the pro-independence camp called on the French government to postpone the vote. The independence group, the Kanak and Socialist National Liberation Front (Front de libération nationale kanak et socialiste or FLNKS), argued that the health and safety risks of proceeding with the vote and the indigenous Kanak population’s mourning rituals precluded them from properly campaigning.

With the vote proceeding in these circumstances, FLNKS and other pro-independence groups considered the result illegitimate. Since that December 2021 referendum, dialogue between the French government and New Caledonian independence groups has remained at a standstill, despite several attempts by the former. 

During this period, FLNKS has sought to amplify its claim on the world stage, in particular with the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF).

New Caledonia and PIF

Since the Nouméa Accord, the French State and New Caledonia have shared sovereignty over foreign relations, but the archipelago has benefited from gradual integration into its regional environment, particularly within the PIF, where it became a full member in 2016. 

But the journey to get here took a long time, stemming as far back as the PIF’s previous incarnation, the South Pacific Forum, which was created in 1971 with the imperative to form a regional organization completely detached from the former colonial powers. This made the relationship between France and the forum fraught from the outset, particularly in the 1980s when New Caledonia was in the throes of civil war. It was then, on the forum’s initiative, that New Caledonia was reinstated on the U.N. list of Non-Self-Governing Territories in 1986.

For a long time, being an independent state was a necessity for membership of the forum. Despite the fact the forum has accepted the principle of membership for associate states that are not U.N. members (such as the Cook Islands and Niue), it still requires applicant territories to have a sufficiently high degree of self-government.

Since the Nouméa Accord of 1998 and the Organic Law, passed in France in 1999, external relations have been a shared responsibility between France and New Caledonia. Benefiting from increased autonomy within the French Constitution and a stronger investment in the Oceania region, New Caledonia became a Pacific Islands Forum observer member in 1999, an associate member in 2006, and a full member in 2016.

For both France and New Caledonia, regional development is perceived as a “win-win” situation: for France, the integration of New Caledonia is seen as an opportunity to relay its French influence, while the New Caledonian archipelago discovers a coveted status as a pivotal intermediary between the small Pacific islands and the Western powers, notably France and Europe.

The PIF now comprises 18 states and territories in Oceania, including New Caledonia and French Polynesia.

Despite some friction between Paris and Nouméa on how this competence is shared, the regional integration of New Caledonia (but also of the other French collectivities in Oceania) has helped to legitimize France’s status as a regional partner in Oceania.

Fallout From the May 13 Riots 

The regional integration of New Caledonia has not extinguished its neighbors’ support for the Kanak independence movement.

The Melanesian Spearhead Group, an intergovernmental group including Fiji, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu, also counts the FLNKS as a member. A 2022 PIF ministerial missionbrought global attention to the stalemate and breakdown in dialogue — according to them — since the third referendum in 2021.

This regional support became important in 2024, as the New Caledonian government pushed to amend the constitution to modify who was eligible to vote. The proposed change, which passed through French Parliament, would allow around 25,000 new voters, something they’d previously been prevented from doing. Such a change could destabilize the balance of power to the detriment of pro-independence voters, which is essentially the indigenous Kanak vote, a political divide along ethnic lines that has crystallized in New Caledonia over 30 years.

Opposition in New Caledonia to the constitutional amendment was fierce: in demonstrations across April and May, tens of thousands of people poured into the streets of Nouméa to protest. Then, on May 13, violence flared and a state of emergency was declared two days later. 

As dissent erupted, the PIF was quick to react. PIF General-Secretary Henry Puna said he was “not surprised,” as the situation had been “boiling over” since the 2021 referendum. PIF President Mark Brown said that “unrest is grounds for recognizing greater autonomy and independence for the people of these islands.”

Vanuatu Prime Minister Charlot Salwai — currently the president of the Melanesian Spearhead Group — declared the group’s support for FLNKS in its fight against the constitutional bill. Salwai argued the unrest in New Caledonia “could have been avoided if the French Government had listened and not proceeded to bulldoze the Constitutional Bill.”

On the sidelines of the 10th triennial Pacific Islands Leaders’ Summit in Japan in July, and at the request of FLNKS, the PIF’s response to the situation was a proposal for a mission to New Caledonia by three prime ministers to promote a “lasting resolution” to the political crisis in the archipelago.

This proposal was accepted a few days later by the French government. Initially scheduled to take place before the PIF’s leaders meeting in Tonga, the mission will now take place “when conditions permit, in liaison with the local authorities.”

Following the destruction in New Caledonia, France is playing the transparency card with the forum by agreeing to host a fact-finding mission to New Caledonia. But it seems clear that this mission will have political and diplomatic repercussions.

While France has sought to enhance its image in Oceania since the beginning of the 21st century, as demonstrated by the accession of two of its collectivities as full members of PIF in 2016, the crisis in New Caledonia is amplifying regional support for the demand for independence and risks permanently tarnishing France’s image in the region.

For PIF members and for France, the priority remains the political and security appeasement of the situation in New Caledonia. Above all, France will seek to ensure that the PIF does not become a prelude to a much larger international resonance chamber for the Kanak demand for independence.

Originally published under Creative Commons by 360info

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