The United States has designated the Senate President of Palau and a former mayor in the Marshall Islands for what it described as “significant corruption”, in a move that underscores Washington’s intensifying focus on Chinese influence in the Pacific.
In a statement, the US State Department announced that Hokkons Baules, Palau’s Senate President, had been publicly designated for his alleged involvement in corruption on behalf of China-based actors. The action renders Mr Baules and his immediate family members generally ineligible for entry into the United States.
According to Washington, Mr Baules abused his public office by accepting bribes in exchange for advocating and providing support for Chinese government, business and criminal interests. US officials said his actions adversely affected American interests in Palau, a strategically located island nation that maintains close ties with Washington under a Compact of Free Association.
The designation comes amid growing concern in the United States and among its allies about Beijing’s expanding footprint in the Pacific, where small island states have become arenas of strategic competition between China and the West.
In a parallel move, the State Department designated Anderson Jibas, the former mayor of the Kili/Bikini/Ejit community in the Marshall Islands, accusing him of orchestrating multiple schemes to misappropriate US-provided funds during his time in office.
American officials alleged that Mr Jibas financially benefited from the theft, misuse and abuse of money from the Bikini Resettlement Trust, a fund established to assist survivors and descendants of those displaced by US nuclear testing in the 1940s and 1950s.
The Bikini Atoll was the site of 23 American nuclear tests between 1946 and 1958, leaving long-lasting environmental and health consequences. The trust was intended to support the resettlement and welfare of affected communities, many of whom were relocated to the island of Kili and other areas.
According to the State Department, the alleged misappropriation resulted in most of the funds being diverted from the intended beneficiaries. US officials said the loss of resources contributed to job losses, food insecurity, unreliable electricity and increased migration to the United States among members of the Kili/Bikini/Ejit community.
Washington further warned that the lack of accountability in the Marshall Islands had eroded public trust and created openings for “malign foreign influence” from China and others in a region of growing geopolitical importance.
The designations were made under US authorities that allow the government to impose visa restrictions on foreign officials implicated in significant corruption or gross violations of human rights. While the measures do not amount to criminal charges, they carry reputational and diplomatic weight.
In its statement, the State Department said the actions reaffirmed America’s commitment to countering global corruption that affects US interests and undermines democratic governance. “The United States will continue to promote accountability for those who abuse public power for personal gain,” it said.
The move signals Washington’s determination to scrutinise governance standards among its Pacific partners at a time when the region has become an increasingly contested strategic frontier between the United States and China.
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