Residents of a small island nation are getting a taste of China’s pervasive surveillance state after the country opened its doors to Beijing, The New York Times reported.
The surveillance began when Chinese police arrived in the small Solomon Islands community of Fighter One after residents requested help dealing with unruly teenagers, the Times reported. The nation signed a security pact with China in 2022 after supporting Beijing’s development proposal in 2019.
The island nation serves as another example of China’s efforts to spread its influence across the globe through economic and security initiatives. China’s influence in the Solomon Islands has drawn concern from Australia, a key AUKUS ally.
“Solomon Islands is a textbook example of the way China first corrupts a society, then captures it, and finally controls it,” China policy analyst Gordon Chang told the Daily Caller News Foundation.
The U.S. State Department did not respond in time for publication, while the Pentagon, the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force and the Chinese Embassy in the Solomon Islands did not return any inquiries for comment.
The policing tactics Chinese authorities imposed on the community have roots in the Mao-era Fengqiao Experience, a system that encourages neighbors to monitor and report on each other to officials regarding dissident behavior, the Times reported.
Soon after the policing began, community members objected when Chinese authorities attempted to harvest biometric data, the Times reported. The opposition ended the Chinese policing experiment.
China’s overbearing influence may have contributed to the election of its new prime minister, Matthew Wale, Reuters reported. Wale has strong anti-China views, according to the outlet.
China has an official Belt and Road Initiative strategy where it pays for the infrastructure of developing nations to expand Beijing’s influence. One example of this can be seen in China’s recent investments in Latin American countries like Panama, Peru and Brazil.
The Chinese surveillance program in Fighter One was suspended after backlash from local critics, who argued the Chinese had no right to collect biometric data or conduct neighborhood surveillance. Solomon Islands police denied the program was about surveillance or coercion and said no data would be transferred to a “foreign authority,” the Times reported.
“China is attempting to export its totalitarian system to the entire world,” Chang told the DCNF. “The Solomon Islands is just a way station, an intermediary step. Every other nation is on Xi Jinping’s target list. He has been pushing the ludicrous imperial-era notion that all in the world owes obedience to China’s ruler.”
Solomon Islands signed a security pact with China in 2022 after a riot in Honiara’s Chinese community near Fighter One killed four people, Reuters reported.
“I have also noticed that, according to reports, the US Embassy in Solomon Islands has been closed for 29 years,” Wang said during the press conference. “The most recent visit to Fiji made by a US Secretary of State was 37 years ago. Several senior US officials now fancy a visit to some PICs all of a sudden after all these years. Are they doing so out of care for PICs or ulterior motives?”
Fighter One gets its name from a World War II airstrip that was constructed near the current location of the community to support American warplanes fighting Japan. The Fighter One airstrip was constructed to support the primary airstrip in the area, Henderson Field, according to National Park Service history.
“Americans died in the Solomons during the Second World War freeing the islands from tyranny,” Chang told the DCNF. “Now, a totalitarian China took over the country without firing a shot.”
Henderson Field still exists today and is currently known as Honiara International Airport, according to flysolomons.com.
China embedded police inside the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force in 2022 and donated about $1.5 million in riot gear, including bulletproof vests, shields, helmets and stab-resistant suits and gloves, according to the Times report. Chinese officers have also trained local police in the use of batons and the anti-riot fork, a tool commonly used in China to pin down suspects.
All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].















Continue with Google