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Kiribati quits key Pacific island bloc


SUVA, Fiji — Kiribati has quit the premier bloc of Pacific island nations, fracturing the group just as its leaders launch a summit to grapple with rising seas and China's security ambitions in the region.

The central Pacific nation of 120,000 people said it had taken "the sovereign decision" to withdraw from the 51-year-old, Fiji-based Pacific Islands Forum "with immediate effect."

In a July 9 letter obtained by AFP, Kiribati President Taneti Maamau cited the forum's failure to honor a "gentlemen's agreement" to appoint a Micronesian candidate to head the secretariat.

The spat had led to a threat by Micronesian countries to leave the bloc but it was patched up with a deal last month to rotate the top job, set to be discussed at this week's summit.

The Kiribati leader cited his country's national day celebrations on July 12 as another reason for not attending the summit.

Leaders from more than a dozen forum nations are meeting in Fiji's capital Suva from July 12-14—the first such in-person summit since the COVID-19 pandemic began almost three years ago.

It comes at a pivotal time when China is seeking to expand its diplomatic and security engagements in the region.

"Your meeting today is taking place in a rapidly evolving regional and international context," Secretary General Henry Puna told leaders at a related event Monday.

"The development and security challenges that we face today, from COVID-19 to climate change and ocean pollution highlight the critical importance of regional and multilateral cooperation."

Beijing's increasing influence in the region—notably a secretive security pact with Solomon Islands in April—has fed concern in the United States and its allies about its intentions.

Regional powers Australia and New Zealand—both members of the Pacific Island Forum—have stressed the bloc's importance in deciding the security strategy of the region.

Strategic position

Australia is working with Fiji to encourage Kiribati "not to go through with their formal decision to leave," said Pat Conroy, minister for the Pacific.

The island forum "is the central architecture for our region and losing Kiribati would obviously not be a good thing, and that is why we are working hard to avoid that," he told Australian national broadcaster ABC.

Conroy stressed that Kiribati's stated concerns were about the leadership of the forum, not China.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi visited Kiribati during a whistle-stop tour of the Pacific in May, signing 10 agreements in areas such as the climate and the economy, but not security.

Low-lying Kiribati, at risk of sinking from rising seas in a changing climate, has a strategic position 3,000 kilometers (1,800) miles southwest of Hawaii with one of the largest exclusive economic zones in the world.

China's South Pacific ambitions suffered a setback in late May when 10 Pacific island nations rebuffed its push for a wide-ranging regional security pact.

Behind the scenes, Pacific leaders expressed misgivings about being pulled into Beijing's orbit. — Agence France-Presse