Close Menu
TMC PalauTMC Palau
  • Home
  • Palau News
  • Pacific Islands
  • Regional Politics
  • Regional Sports
  • Development & Policy

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Relief hopes as Minister delivers key budget – FBC News

June 25, 2026

Ba FC ready to take on defending champs – FBC News

June 25, 2026

Reading PALM numbers with care — pay, deductions and hours edition

June 25, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TMC PalauTMC Palau
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Palau News
  • Pacific Islands
  • Regional Politics
  • Regional Sports
  • Development & Policy
TMC PalauTMC Palau
Home»Regional Politics»PIFS leans on ASEAN model as it retools for a changing region
Regional Politics

PIFS leans on ASEAN model as it retools for a changing region

TMC PalauBy TMC PalauJune 25, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Overview:

Pacific Islands Forum leaders are considering major reforms to strengthen regional unity, improve security coordination and better manage geopolitical pressures. Drawing lessons from ASEAN’s governance and disaster response models, the Forum is reviewing its institutional architecture to support the 2050 Strategy for the Blue Pacific Continent and ensure it remains effective amid growing regional challenges.

SUVA, 19 JUNE 2026 (ISLANDS BUSINESS)—Pacific Islands Forum (PIFS) leaders are trying to redesign the region’s political and security machinery to better protect unity, manage outside pressure and give the 2050 Strategy the institutional backing it needs to work. 

Esala Nayasi, the Forum’s Deputy Secretary-General – Strategic Policy & Programming, said the long-term strategy was not meant to be a slogan, but a framework for defining Pacific regionalism in values-based and practical terms.  

The objective, he suggested, was to create a regional vision that is “values-based,” “people-centred” and anchored in “unity and solidarity.” 

He said the strategy emerged from a difficult moment for the Forum. In 2019, Fiji rejoined after its suspension, and leaders used that moment to agree on a new direction. 

But the following year brought political strain, with five members withdrawing from the Forum. That sequence, Nayasi said, underscored why the region needed not only a long-term strategy, but a stronger architecture to deliver it. 

“It is in response to some of these issues that we as a region not only need to reflect but also respond to particularly challenges that we face,” he said.  

The 2050 Strategy, he added, was designed to define “regionalism” at a moment when Pacific leaders had to decide what it meant to us as a region and as a people. 

A central part of the current review is partnerships. Nayasi said the Forum is learning from ASEAN’s tiered model of engagement, under which partners are divided into three layers.  

The Pacific, by contrast, is moving toward a simpler two-tier system: strategic partners and development partners. The idea, he said, is to give leaders more control over how the region manages relationships and expectations. 

“We have decided through the leaders that we only have two tiers: strategic partners and development partners,” he said, describing the change as one way to manage geopolitics to our own intent and purpose. 

The decision is expected to come before leaders in Palau this year, along with possible moves to centralise partnerships under a more unified regional approach. 

That review reflects a broader concern. Nayasi said the Pacific must operate carefully in a complex geopolitical environment, one in which member states have different capacities, governance arrangements and economic interests.  

The region includes territories, developed countries, developing states and least developed states, he noted, so there is no single template for handling pressure from partners or responding to regional challenges. 

The security architecture is also under scrutiny. 

The Pacific has nine regional organisations and more than 21 agencies in the security space, yet no ministerial convening dedicated to peace and security. 

 “The issue now is, how do we redesign some of these different convenings and capabilities so that we are unified in our approach?” Nayasi asked.  

Leaders are expected to confront that gap this year. 

He said the Forum is looking at ASEAN again for a second lesson: disaster response. The ASEAN model, centred on the AHA Centre in Jakarta, coordinates civilian and defence capabilities across borders, including transport, logistics and personnel.  

“Pacific leaders are now considering whether the region needs a treaty and a comparable mechanism to improve disaster response. 

“The same logic is driving interest in inter-parliamentary cooperation. The Pacific Islands parliamentary group held its first inaugural meeting last year. It established an assembly, but leaders are still deciding how that body should sit within the wider regional architecture.” 

Here, too, Nayasi said the Pacific is looking at ASEAN’s arrangement for guidance. The point of all this, he suggested, is not to copy other regions, but to learn from them. 

The Pacific is also preparing to formalise its relationship with the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) through an MOU that is close to finalisation.  

“We are learning, we are growing,” he said, adding that peer learning across regions is now part of the work. 

Nayasi said that since leaders last met two years ago, the region has seen about 13 or 14 new leaders, with two more elections due this year. Such churn, he said, makes it harder to sustain commitments, manage ambition and keep regional projects on track. 

The architecture review for the Forum is an attempt to preserve trust, unity and a shared regional purpose in a period when geopolitics, leadership turnover and institutional fragmentation all threaten to pull the Pacific in different directions. …PACNEWS

Related



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
TMC Palau

Related Posts

Cybercrime now a growing threat for Fiji and the Pacific, INTERPOL warns

June 25, 2026

SB64 ends in delay and division as Pacific now looks to a crowded agenda at COP31

June 25, 2026

Generators gone as Northern Mariana Islands continues recovery post Sinlaku

June 25, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Our Picks

Putin Says Western Sanctions are Akin to Declaration of War

January 9, 2020

Investors Jump into Commodities While Keeping Eye on Recession Risk

January 8, 2020

Marquez Explains Lack of Confidence During Qatar GP Race

January 7, 2020

There’s No Bigger Prospect in World Football Than Pedri

January 6, 2020
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss

Relief hopes as Minister delivers key budget – FBC News

Pacific Islands June 25, 2026

[Photo: FILE] High public debt and limited fiscal space are shaping today’s 2026–2027 National Budget,…

Ba FC ready to take on defending champs – FBC News

June 25, 2026

Reading PALM numbers with care — pay, deductions and hours edition

June 25, 2026

PIFS leans on ASEAN model as it retools for a changing region

June 25, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
© 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.