Fijian Police remove two Chinese defence attaches from Pacific Islands Forum meeting
Fiji: The Fijian police recently removed two Chinese defence attaches from a Pacific Islands Forum meeting where US Vice President Kamala Harris was about to address virtually.
The men were sitting in on a session of the forum’s fisheries agency at which Harris announced the step-up of US engagement in the region, believed to be in response to China’s growing influence, reports The Guardian.
They were sitting with the media contingent, but one was identified as a Chinese embassy official by Lice Movono, a Fijian journalist who is covering the forum for the Guardian.
Movono said she “recognised him because I’ve interacted with him at least three times already”, including during the visit of the Chinese foreign minister, Wang Yi, to Suva last month, at which journalists were removed from events and blocked from asking questions.
“He was one of the people that was removing us from places and directing other people to remove us,” she said. “So I went over to him and asked: ‘are you here as a Chinese embassy official or for Xinhua [Chinese news agency], because this is the media space. And he shook his head as if to indicate that he didn’t speak English.”
Movono alerted Fijian protocol officers, who told her to inform Fijian police, who then escorted the two men from the room. They did not answer questions from the media.
Diplomatic sources later confirmed to the newspaper that the men were a defence attache and a deputy defence attache from China, and part of the embassy in Fiji.
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