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NZ pushing to create

Thomas Manch thomas.manch@stuff.co.nz

The Pacific Island Forum may transform into a centre of power, as the region contends with Uschina rivalry, and the interests of European and Asian powers.

Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta has been speaking with Pacific Island countries about developing the regional forum into something akin to Asean – a long-standing group of southeast Asian countries that sets the course for their region’s security – with a focus on getting support for climate change efforts. The forum was at risk of fracturing in 2021, when five Micronesia states threatened to withdraw over a dispute about the forum’s leadership.

But, after some intense diplomacy and an attempt by China to persuade 10 members to sign a region-wide deal, the forum has a new sense of unity. The Government has, alongside Australia, been emphasising the importance of Pacific ‘‘regionalism’’ in recent months. Fijian Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka, in Wellington yesterday, said the region needed to ‘‘collectively create our own stability’’ so Pacific countries would not ‘‘succumb to the temptation of . . . who offers better and who offers more’’.

‘‘New Zealand has done a lot and the rest of the region will have to co-operate as we collectively pursue a stable region.’’

Mahuta attended a meeting of

Pacific countries and South Korea in Seoul last week, intent on talking to her counterparts about seeking ‘‘alignment’’ of the interest being expressed in the region by South Korea, Japan, France, Germany, the US and India.

This week, she said there was a ‘‘consolidation’’ among leaders that the interest of external countries should be channelled into the forum’s 2050 Blue Pacific strategy. This, agreed to by the forum’s 18 members, sets out the region’s goals and commitments

National News

en-nz

2023-06-08T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-06-08T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://fairfaxmedia.pressreader.com/article/281569475124530

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