CANBERRA, Nov 26 (Reuters) - A night curfew will be re-imposed in the Solomon Islands capital Honiara after witnesses said Australian police began taking control of hotspots following three days of violent protests in the South Pacific island nation.
The Ministry of Health said in a statement that city clinics were closed and urged "all Honiara residents involved in arson, rioting, looting to please stop immediately" after its ambulances were stoned.
Tear gas was deployed in Chinatown where looting and the burning of buildings had continued on Friday morning, a resident told Reuters.
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A night curfew will begin at 7 p.m., the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force said in a statement.
Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare, who requested help from Australia, on Friday blamed foreign countries for stoking the violent protests, but did not name any.
Many of the protesters come from the most populous province Malaita and feel overlooked by the government in Guadalcanal province and oppose its 2019 decision to end diplomatic ties with Taiwan and establish formal links with China.
Malaita premier Daniel Suidani said in a statement this week that Sogavare had "elevated the interest of foreigners above those of Solomon Islanders" and should resign.
"I feel sorry for my people in Malaita because they are fed with false and deliberate lies about the switch," Sogavare told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
"These very countries that are now influencing Malaita are the countries that don't want ties with the People's Republic of China."
China and Taiwan have been rivals in the South Pacific for decades with some island nations switching allegiances.
China views Taiwan as a wayward province with no right to state-to-state ties, which the government in Taipei hotly disputes. Only 15 countries maintain formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan. The last two to ditch Taipei in favour of Beijing were the Solomon Islands and Kiribati in September 2019.
Taiwan Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Joanne Ou said in a statement to Reuters: “We have nothing to do with the unrest”.
China is concerned about the developments in the Solomon Islands, Zhao Lijiang, a spokesman at the Chinese foreign ministry, told a regular news conference.
"Facts have proven that the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and the Solomon Islands is in line with the fundamental and long-term development of the Solomon Islands," Zhao said. "Any attempt to undermine the normal development of China-Solomon Islands relations would be futile."
'CHAOTIC'
Solomon Island resident Transform Aqorau said more than a hundred people were on Friday looting shops, before Australian Federal Police officers arrived.
"The scenes here are really chaotic. It is like a war zone,” Aqorau told Reuters by telephone on Friday morning.
"There is no public transport and it is a struggle with the heat and the smoke. Buildings are still burning."
He said later Australian police were "taking control of Chinatown".
Neighbouring Papua New Guinea also sent 35 police and security officers to Honiara on Friday.
Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne said Australia was sending 100 police personnel and was "clearly focused on stability in our region".
Australian police were previously deployed to the Solomon Islands in 2003 under a peace keeping mission authorised by a Pacific Island Forum declaration and stayed for a decade.
Severe internal unrest and armed conflict from 1998 to 2003 involved militant groups from Guadalcanal and the neighbouring island of Malaita, and fighting on the outskirts of Honiara.
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Reporting by Colin Packham in Canberra, Kirsty Needham in Sydney, Ben Blanchard in Taipei and Ryan Woo in Beijing; Editing by Michael Perry and Timothy Heritage
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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