UK move towards Pacific Islands to have limited impact: Professor Fraenkel Featured
26 April, 2018. An academic says he expects the move by the United Kingdom towards a closer relationship with the Pacific Islands to have limited impact.
The British government has linked its new foreign policy outreach to the Pacific to its need to take up opportunities in other regions as it proceeds with a planned exit from the European Union.
Professor of Comparitive Politics at Victoria University of Wellington Jon Fraenkel said Britain had historic links especially with Tonga and Vanuatu but it pulled away from the Pacific in the late 1990s as it drew closer to Europe.
He said while the planned opening of the diplomatic posts in Samoa, Tonga and Vanuatu signalled a renewed interest in the Pacific, he did not expect the move to be hugely significant.
"It's an attempt to ramp up a diplomatic presence which is I suppose a good thing after an era where Britain has withdrawn. But I don't really see the connections with the Island States figuring in a major way in British foreign policy in the future. It's too far away and its interests aren't there."
Professor Fraenkel said trade, in particular protections on Fiji's sugar industry, may be affected by Brexit which is due in a year's time.
-RNZI
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Isn't the sorry plight of the so-called Pacific Islands or better Moana Oceania at the mercy of geopolitics? With the move of the UK towards the Pacific Islands, a number of key questions do arise. Is this move managed through the spirit, say, of the Commonwealth Sports, which is envisaged more in ceremonial ways, as in the fostering of the common spirit of sportsmanship / sportswomanship or is it envisioned in real terms, as in more economic, political, intellectual and cultural benefits?
Given the depth of dependency, across the whole of the facets of life, mainly through foreign aid and diplomacy and remittances, Pacific Islands as a region will find it a real struggle to free itself from this seemingly eternal bondage, which is kind of well into perpetuity. Unless the Pacific Islands learn it in the hard way to largely stand on their own two feet by efficiently and effectively utilising its rich natural and material and human resources, as in their overly abounding intellectual and cultural and biological property heritage, then there can't be a better way out of this curse in the foreseeable future!