PM Calls For Calm As Government Resolves Political Turmoil
Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare called for calm as his Grand Coalition for Change Government works strategically to
address the political crisis affecting Solomon Islands.
Mr Sogavare made the plea yesterday following the swearing in of three new government ministers.
The three were former government backbenchers who defected to the Opposition Group last weekend along with nine other
government MPs.
The trio returned to the government after realizing their desertion was based on fabricated and misleading statements.
The three include the MP for North Guadalcanal, Martin Sopaghe who is now the Minister for Infrastructure Development,
the MP for Temotu/Pele, Martin Magga, the Minister for Justice and Legal Affairs and the MP for South Vella La Vella,
Trevor Olavae, the Minister for Development Planning and Aid Coordination.
The ringleaders of the defected government MPs and the Opposition Group are calling for the resignation of Prime
Minister Sogavare.
But Mr Sogavare rejected that call saying he had done nothing wrong that would warrant his resignation.
The Prime Minister said Solomon Islanders must take heart that they were in the safe hands of the government.
He said as a responsible government, the Grand Coalition for Change Government would work strategically to resolve the
confusion-stemmed political crisis.
The Prime Minister said the resignation call was based on misleading statements about his housing loan with the ANZ Bank
and non attendance of this year's Pacific Islands' forum summit.
He said some of the defected government MPs alluded their desertion of the government to the loan.
Mr Sogavare said his lawyers were suing the National Express for publishing the fabricated statements about the loan as
well as those responsible for making the statements.
The Prime Minister said his absence at the forum leaders' summit in Tonga last month was based on a cabinet decision to
protest the forum's endorsement of the Pacific Island forum eminent persons review report on the Regional Assistance
Mission to Solomon Islands.
He said the report did not address the review's key term of reference requiring that the new review of the Facilitation
of the International Assistance Act which allowed RAMSI into the country be based on the six-point plan of the Solomon
Islands government.
The Prime Minister said the forum actually endorsed the report before the Pacific leaders' summit and it was no use
attending when the he could not contribute to the approval of the document.
The Prime Minister expressed optimism that the defected government MPs would realize having being misled as the days go
by and the government door was open for their return.
Meanwhile the Governor General Sir Nathaniel Waena yesterday rejected a petition by the new coalition of defected
government MPs and the Opposition Group for him to intervene in the political crisis by calling an immediate parliament
sitting to test if Prime Minister Sogavare still enjoyed the majority support of the house to remain in power.
Sir Nathaniel said unless the current political situation developed into a constitutional crisis it would be
unconstitutional for him to recall parliament for the tabling of a motion of no-confidence against the Prime Minister.
Under the Solomon Islands constitution only the Prime Minister or Cabinet can advise the Governor General to call
parliament. The Governor General only can unilaterally call parliament to sit in the event of a constitutional crisis.
ENDS