Australia is sending additional troops to the Solomon Islands, as more 
Chinese nationals fled the country on Sunday amid rising tensions before 
parliament opens for the first time since post-election rioting. 
 
 
 |  Chinese people wait to be escorted to Honiara airport in the wake of 
 recent violence against the Chinese community April 23, 2006.  
 [Reuters]
 | 
The election of new Prime Minister Snyder Rini sparked two days of rioting 
last week in the capital Honiara, where a curfew has been imposed. A 
peacekeeping force from Australia, New Zealand and Fiji is patrolling the 
capital. 
About 50 soldiers from New Zealand arrived on Sunday. 
Australia's Defence Minister Brendan Nelson said on Sunday another platoon of 
25 soldiers would be sent to the Solomons to guard the airport, joining 300 
military personnel in Honiara. Two patrol boats would arrive this week, he told 
ABC television. 
About 150¡¡Chinese people were airlifted out of Honiara on Sunday, travelling 
to the airport under heavy security in the back of three small trucks. They will 
join 90 Chinese who were flown to Papua New Guinea on Saturday on a Beijing 
chartered aircraft and will eventually be repatriated to China. 
PARLIAMENT LOCKED DOWN 
The military will lock down the Solomons parliament on Monday when MPs meet 
for the first time since an election earlier this month. That poll was the first 
since Australian-led peacekeepers restored law and order in 2003 after violent 
ethnic unrest. 
Opposition parties have already moved a no-confidence motion against Rini, 
which is due to go to a vote on Wednesday. Both sides claim they have the 
numbers to be successful. 
Church leaders appealed to congregations on Sunday for calm and asked looters 
to return what they had stolen. 
"As soon as the Chinese have the courage to open their doors again, they 
should go in and shake their hands and say sorry," Catholic Archbishop Adrian 
Smith told Honiara's packed Holy Cross church. 
Honiara's Chinatown was destroyed in the rioting and looting, with buildings 
burnt to the ground, forcing some Chinese to jump from windows and flee across a 
nearby river. The Chinese number just a few thousand in the Solomons' 
550,000-strong population. 
"I hope there no more violence this week, because it will make the whole 
country's economy a lot worse," said Moon Pinkwan, 55, whose shop was burnt 
down.