Asia | Not waving but plodding

China and Australia are beefing up their Pacific policing

In the competition to police the waves, who will win?

Students holding the national flags of China and Kiribati at a welcoming ceremony in Beijing
Too close for comfortPhotograph: Reuters
|Sydney

A SMALL team of Chinese police has been stationed in Honiara, the Solomon Islands’ capital, since 2022, when the two countries signed a security agreement that shocked America and its allies. The cops train local officers in riot control and shooting, and give their families lessons in kung fu. Since their arrival, China’s law-and-order footprint in the Pacific region has grown. Last year it sent police advisers to Vanuatu, north-east of Australia. In February officials in Kiribati, a neighbour of Hawaii, said that Chinese police were now embedded with its forces. China’s attempts to establish police stations abroad were part of “transnational repression efforts”, said an American official.

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This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Not waving but plodding”

From the September 21st 2024 edition

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