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Chinese foreign minister points to Solomons as 'model for mutual trust' at start of Pacific tour

China's ties with Solomon Islands should become "a model for mutual trust" and cooperation for its relations with the South Pacific, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said in Honiara at the start of a regional tour on Thursday.

The 10-day, eight-nation trip is aimed at expanding China's long-term military, economic and diplomatic ties and is seen as an effort to counter Washington's Indo-Pacific strategy.

It comes after Beijing signed a security pact with Solomon Islands in April that has raised fears in the region that China could get a military foothold in the Pacific island nation.

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Meeting the archipelago's acting governor general Patteson Oti, Wang praised Honiara's 2019 decision to end 36 years of official ties with Taipei and establish diplomatic relations with Beijing as "a historical inevitability", according to Chinese state news agency Xinhua.

Wang sought to play down concerns about a potential Chinese military presence in the Solomons, the report said, without giving further details. He said bilateral ties had achieved "tangible" results with stronger "all-round development" and "mutual political trust".

He also set the tone for the tour, which will include a stop in Fiji on Monday, where Beijing hopes to sign a wide-ranging agreement and five-year action plan with regional foreign ministers.

"China will continue to uphold the spirit of South-South cooperation of mutual support and mutual assistance, and help the people in the countries improve their living standards and accelerate development and revitalisation," he said.

Foreign Minister Wang Yi has begun a 10-day Pacific tour in Solomon Islands. Photo: AFP alt=Foreign Minister Wang Yi has begun a 10-day Pacific tour in Solomon Islands. Photo: AFP>

Wang also met his Solomon Islands counterpart Jeremiah Manele, with the two nations agreeing to jointly build a major project under Beijing's Belt and Road Initiative, and to cooperate in areas such as agriculture, fisheries, timber and pandemic prevention, according to China's foreign ministry.

The tour takes in seven countries Beijing hopes will endorse its "Common Development Vision" - the Solomons, Kiribati, Samoa, Fiji, Tonga, Vanuatu and Papua New Guinea. He will hold virtual talks with the other three potential signatories - the Cook Islands, Niue and the Federated States of Micronesia. Wang will also visit East Timor.