Three killed in Solomon Islands unrest | ABS-CBN

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Three killed in Solomon Islands unrest

Three killed in Solomon Islands unrest

Agence France-Presse

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A police vehicle stands outside a burnt out building where the bodies of three people were found in Chinatown in Honiara on November 27, 2021 after three days of rioting in the Solomon Islands capital. Charley Piringi, AFP
A police vehicle stands outside a burnt out building where the bodies of three people were found in Chinatown in Honiara on November 27, 2021 after three days of rioting in the Solomon Islands capital. Charley Piringi, AFP

The bodies of three people have been discovered in a burnt-out building in the Solomon Islands capital Honiara, police said Saturday, the first reported deaths after days of rioting.

The charred bodies were discovered in a store in the Chinatown district of Honiara, with a security guard telling AFP he found the bodies in two rooms late Friday.

Police said forensic teams had launched an investigation and were still on the scene but that the cause of the deaths was unclear.

The streets of the capital remained relatively quiet on Saturday morning as locals begin to assess the damage left by days of rioting.

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A curfew had been imposed on the restive capital overnight after a third day of violence that saw the prime minister's home come under attack and swathes of the city reduced to smouldering ruins.

Australian peacekeepers, who arrived in the country late Thursday, also joined police on the streets to restore order and protect critical infrastructure.

The explosion of violence is partly a result of frustrations with Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare's government and chronic unemployment— made worse by the pandemic.

Experts say the crisis has also been fuelled by long-standing animosity between residents of the most populous island Malaita and the central government based on the island of Guadalcanal.

The archipelago nation of around 700,000 people has for decades endured ethnic and political tensions.

Malaita residents have long complained that their island is neglected by the central government, and divisions intensified when Sogavare recognized Beijing in 2019.

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