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Fiji rethinks its China security ties as Pacific tensions rise: ‘our values differ’

  • The Pacific island nation’s leader said it was reviewing a contentious police cooperation agreement it signed with China in 2011
  • He even appeared to go a step further at one point during a news conference on Wednesday, by referring to the agreement’s ‘discontinuation’

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Fiji’s Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka (left) shakes hands with his New Zealand counterpart Chris Hipkins before a bilateral meeting in Wellington on Wednesday. Photo: AFP
Fiji’s leader indicated on Wednesday that his nation is reconsidering its security ties with China at a time that geopolitical tensions in the Pacific are rising.
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Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka said Fiji was reviewing a contentious police cooperation agreement it signed with China in 2011 that has allowed Chinese police officers to be stationed in the Pacific island nation.

At one point during a news conference in Wellington with his New Zealand counterpart Chris Hipkins, Rabuka appeared to go one step further by referring to Fiji’s “discontinuation” of the agreement.

“If our systems and our values differ, what cooperation can we get from them?” Rabuka said, referring to China.

If our systems and our values differ, what cooperation can we get from them?
Fiji’s Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka, referring to China

“We need to look at that again before we decide whether we go back to it, or if we continue the way that we have in the past by cooperating with those who have similar democratic values and systems.”

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