News | National
17 Sep 2025 16:34
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    Pacific leaders reach agreement on big issues – but unity remains elusive

    Last week’s Pacific Islands Forum leaders meeting showed why true integration remains challenging while island nations are at different stages of independence.

    Sione Tekiteki, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Law, Auckland University of Technology, Marco de Jong, Lecturer, Law School, Auckland University of Technology
    The Conversation


    The Pacific Islands Forum wrapped up its annual leaders meeting last week with some significant agreements, including the launch of the region’s own climate financing facility, the endorsement of the Ocean of Peace declaration and policies on partnerships and broader aspirations for “deeper integration”.

    But integration remains a contested term. It implies unity but is shaped by the often uneven and unequal ways in which the region is tied together.

    An EU-style integration has never taken root in the Pacific, primarily because forum members are not equals. Some are newly independent, while others, such as New Caledonia and French Polynesia, remain colonised.

    Australia and New Zealand sit apart as larger, wealthier powers whose influence inevitably shapes the terms of integration. A closer look into the recent forum’s resolutions illustrates this fragile balance.

    Integrating peace, bilaterally

    Like many negotiated texts, the Ocean of Peace declaration is filled with ambiguities that allow for diverging interpretations and opportunities for it to be co-opted.

    For larger forum powers, peace cannot be separated from deterrence. Since the China-Solomon Islands pact in 2022 bilateral security deals have proliferated, now including reports of a landmark PNG-Australia defence treaty promising “total integration”.

    Security is therefore integrating bilaterally, with only thin reinforcement at the regional level.

    For many Pacific nations, peace looks different. It means little without confronting climate change, nuclear harms and human security. For them, integration takes shape through initiatives such as the Pacific Resilience Facility, a regional fund designed to unlock access to climate finance, or through joint efforts on labour mobility and human development.

    The Ocean of Peace declaration is light on ambition. It avoids any reference to demilitarisation, even as the Pacific sees unprecedented military build-up.

    On nuclear issues, the declaration focuses narrowly on testing and legacy, while sidestepping contemporary controversies, including Japan’s treated-nuclear water discharges or nuclear propulsion and stationing under AUKUS. That omission is deliberate – consensus was preserved, but only by avoiding the hardest questions.

    Colonial legacies

    This dynamic is also evident in the Review of the Regional Architecture (RRA), designed to respond to increasing interest in the region. The RRA is policy-speak for how the region should better “work together” under diverging pressures.

    It goes to the heart of Pacific regionalism, raising difficult questions about who sits at the table, how power is shared, and how much sovereignty members are willing to cede in the pursuit of deeper integration.

    But these questions expose a harder truth about the region’s dependence on Australia and New Zealand in particular, and the colonial roots of its institutions.

    Colonial powers sit as members of all major regional bodies and dominate the security architecture. Foreign policy jargon such as the “centrality of the Forum” and “family-first approach” are less about unity than limiting entry of non-traditional partners.

    A high-level political panel consulted and presented its findings to forum leaders. But Nauru’s rejection of the RRA in its entirety underscores the sensitivities, and comes despite former Nauruan President Baron Waqa now serving as secretary general.

    Taiwan and China

    In response to the surge in external interest, leaders endorsed a tiered partnerships policy. The real test will be in how it is applied and who falls to the lower tier. One partner, Taiwan, is used to this dynamic.

    The leaders’ reaffirmation of their 1992 decision on “development partners” (code for Taiwan) keeps it in a separate track altogether: invited to the forum but not part of the main partners’ dialogue.

    But Taiwan’s role is hard to ignore. In seeking to better integrate climate finance flows, its US$3 million pledge to the Pacific Resilience Facility sits alongside China’s US$500,000. Taiwan is excluded politically, yet contributes more than China.

    Another irony is that while much of the debate focused on how to deepen integration, West Papua and New Caledonia face the opposite. To the Indigenous population, regionalism is not integration, but the right to dis-integrate.

    It was also stressed last week that there cannot be genuine regionalism without addressing unfinished decolonisation. Pacific nations generally support self-determination but manage relations with France and Indonesia.

    The forum’s communique reflects this balancing act. On West Papua, it once again reaffirmed Indonesia’s sovereignty, while the long-promised UN Human Rights Commissioner’s mission is no closer to happening.

    On New Caledonia, leaders simply “noted” the High-Level Troika Plus mission report from October 2023, signalling reluctance to be drawn too deeply into France’s unfinished process.

    A region of people-centred integration

    The freer movement of Pacific people is one of the clearest examples of deepening integration. Like security, it is driven through bilateral agreements, then elevated to principle at the regional level, such as the endorsement of the Labour Mobility Principles. Australia and New Zealand schemes provide vital jobs and remittances.

    Pacific communities are interwoven with Australia, New Zealand and the United States through geography, legacy and large diasporas, and with France through its territories. But this form of integration carries economic and social impacts and actively shapes political futures.

    If sovereignty is to be preserved, integration must advance Pacific agency rather than entrench dependency. If it does the latter, it edges towards neo-colonialism in disguise.

    Integration can empower Pacific nations and people through shared opportunities and connections. But it can also constrain when shaped by unequal power. The joint Pacific-Australian bid to host next year’s UN climate summit in Adelaide is a clear example of the imbalance: the Pacific lends its moral voice, but Australia holds the gavel.

    The Conversation

    Marco de Jong is affiliated with the independent foreign policy group Te Kuaka.

    Sione Tekiteki does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     17 Sep: Early adversity for the Breakers ahead of their Australian NBL season-opener against the Brisbane Bullets in Auckland on Friday
     17 Sep: A person's been flown to Christchurch Hospital, in a moderate condition, after strong winds blew a small truck over onto an oncoming car, west of Ashburton, just after 1pm
     17 Sep: Heavy rain and strong wind's made landfall in the South Island - causing power outages and a road closure
     17 Sep: A 24-year-old man will face court today after a man was injured outside a supermarket in Auckland's Hobsonville yesterday afternoon
     17 Sep: One person has been critically injured, in a collision between a car and truck in Auckland's Silverdale
     17 Sep: From batteries to EV chargers, Australia and NZ need these 3 fixes to hit net-zero at less cost
     17 Sep: A legal issue has cut short the trial of a Christchurch police officer, accused of stealing money handed in by members of the public
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    The return of Cam Roigard from a foot fracture headlines the 13 players released by the All Blacks to NPC duty for this weekend More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    New Zealand's current account deficit has narrowed to its smallest point in four years More...



     Today's News

    Entertainment:
    Kelsea Ballerini and Chase Stokes have reportedly split 16:31

    Rugby:
    The return of Cam Roigard from a foot fracture headlines the 13 players released by the All Blacks to NPC duty for this weekend 16:27

    Rugby League:
    The Melbourne Storm's hopes of advancing to the NRL grand final have been given a major boost, with halfback Jahrome Hughes returning to training following a fractured forearm 16:17

    Basketball:
    Early adversity for the Breakers ahead of their Australian NBL season-opener against the Brisbane Bullets in Auckland on Friday 16:17

    Law and Order:
    Man admits he claimed to be Charlie Kirk gunman so real suspect could flee 16:07

    Entertainment:
    Derek Hough "can't wait" to become a dad 16:01

    Entertainment:
    The Studio made history at this year's Emmy Awards with an astonishing 13 wins 15:31

    Christchurch:
    A person's been flown to Christchurch Hospital, in a moderate condition, after strong winds blew a small truck over onto an oncoming car, west of Ashburton, just after 1pm 15:27

    Entertainment:
    Robert Redford's most notable movies with Jane Fonda, Barbra Streisand and Paul Newman 15:17

    Entertainment:
    The Pitt took the coveted Best Drama Series honour at the Primetime Emmy Awards on Sunday (14.09.25) 15:01


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd