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Peace returns to Solomons: `video warfare' found wanting.

There is now hope that Bishop Patteson Theological College, the main Anglican school on the island of Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands Solomon Islands, independent Commonwealth nation (2005 est. pop. 538,000), c.15,500 sq mi (40,150 sq km), SW Pacific, E of New Guinea. The islands that constitute the nation of the Solomon Islands—Guadalcanal, Malaita, New Georgia, the Santa Cruz Islands, , may reopen soon.

The college, in the town of Kohimarama, did not open this fall because the violent and volatile political situation in the Solomon Islands made life too dangerous for students at the isolated school.

But as suddenly as the political situation deteriorated following a coup in the Solomons last June, it seems to have ameliorated, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Anglican Bishop An Anglican Bishop is a bishop in the Anglican church, either in the British Isles or beyond. Anglican Bishops
  • Archbishop Desmond Tutu (South Africa)
  • Archbishop Robin Eames (Ireland)
 Terry Brown of the diocese of Malaita on a neighboring neigh·bor  
n.
1. One who lives near or next to another.

2. A person, place, or thing adjacent to or located near another.

3. A fellow human.

4. Used as a form of familiar address.

v.
 island.

"Following signing of a peace agreement, the rank and file of the two militant groups
For the Trotskyist entrist group active in the 1970s and 1980s, see the Militant tendency.


The Militant Group was an early British Trotskyist group, formed in 1935 by Denzil Dean Harber, former leader of the Marxist Group, as an entrist group
 took peace into their own hands and all came into Honiara (the national capital) for peace celebrations which lasted two days and nights," Bishop Brown, a former Partnerships mission coordinator, wrote in a recent letter.

"The video version of war has been found wanting and now everyone is for peace," Bishop Brown wrote.

Lorna Reevely, a Canadian Volunteer in Mission librarian, who left Bishop Patteson when the college closed and who has been with Bishop Brown on Malaita since then, is now set to return to her posting. After the college's closing, Ms Reevely taught home economics at the Airahu Agricultural Training Centre near Auki, the capital of Malaita.

Last summer's coup in the Solomons followed months of "ethnic tension" between two major groups of militants, one from Malaita and the other from Guadalcanal.

In a series of letters to Canadian friends written over the summer, Bishop Brown described a shattered shat·ter  
v. shat·tered, shat·ter·ing, shat·ters

v.tr.
1. To cause to break or burst suddenly into pieces, as with a violent blow.

2.
a.
 economy and increasing hardships as staple products ran out and became unavailable or prohibitively pro·hib·i·tive   also pro·hib·i·to·ry
adj.
1. Prohibiting; forbidding: took prohibitive measures.

2.
 expensive.

"Now," he wrote in his most recent letter, "the bunkers have come down and there is free movement. Guadalcanal people have flooded Honiara and the central market is full again -- great abundance, cheap prices."

At the time Bishop Brown wrote his letter a reconciliation service was planned at the Anglican Cathedral, which was to be attended by the former warring factions as well as members of the public.

Bishop Brown said he is not surprised at the sudden turn of events. "Melanesians are good fighters, but much better reconcilers," he wrote.
COPYRIGHT 2000 General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Article Details
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Author:Carriere, Vianney
Publication:Anglican Journal
Date:Dec 1, 2000
Words:366
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