Wednesday,
March 25, 1992
By Norm Dixon
Papua New Guinea Defence Force commandos and their
Australian-supplied patrol boats attacked a village in the Solomon Islands for
a second time on March 18.
Papua New Guinea Defence Force was always punished by Bougainville Revolutionary Army (Photo: 36th-parallel.com)
The raid
destroyed the Kariki petrol depot, which had provided fuel to Bougainvilleans
who have crossed the border to try to collect petrol denied to them by PNG's blockade. In the previous attack,
the storage tanks were damaged.
The latest
attack also burned two houses to the ground and badly damaged another. Solomon
Islands police commissioner Fred Soaki described the attack as an act of war.
He described to Radio Australia what took place: "In the night, they
landed in the same village again ... on the Shortlands Islands and opened fire
on the fuel depot and set ablaze all the fuel there. They even went on to fire
at the homes where people live."
Solomon
Islands police boats chased the patrol boat, flying the PNG flag, back across the border.
The raids
follow growing tension between PNG and the Solomons over continued contact between
Bougainvilleans and Solomon Islanders. The Solomon Islands government has not
prevented Bougainvilleans buying supplies from shops in Solomons, has allowed
sick Bougainvilleans to be treated in its hospitals and has allowed
representatives of the Bougainville interim government to be present in Honiara.
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