Solomon Islands refuses to allow US Coast Guard ship to make routine port call
- The Solomons government ‘did not respond to the US government’s request for diplomatic clearance for the vessel to refuel and provision’, the coastguard said
- The Solomon Islands recently signed a secretive security pact with Beijing and has threatened to ban or deport foreign journalists for ‘disrespectful’ coverage

The Solomon Islands has refused to allow a US Coast Guard cutter to make a routine port call – a further sign of the deteriorating relations between Washington and the Pacific nation, which is pursuing deeper ties with China.
The USCGC Oliver Henry had been expected to make a “routine logistics port call” in Honiara, the coastguard said on Friday in a statement.
But the Solomons government “did not respond to the US government’s request for diplomatic clearance for the vessel to refuel and provision” in the capital city, the coastguard said.
The US State Department has contacted the Solomons government and expects “all future clearances will be provided to US ships”, concluded the brief statement.
The coastguard did not say when the expected port call was rejected, but it published a photo of the Oliver Henry arriving in Papua New Guinea on August 14.
It said the cutter was “part of a patrol headed south to assist partner nations in upholding and asserting their sovereignty while protecting US national interests”.
The Solomon Islands recently signed a secretive security pact with Beijing and has threatened to ban or deport foreign journalists for “disrespectful and demeaning” coverage.
