| Citizens warned against traveling to Solomon Islands (Reuters)
 Updated: 2006-04-24 21:17
 China is warning its citizens against traveling to the 
Solomon Islands, where looting and rioting following the election of a new prime 
minister has mainly targeted Chinese. 
 
 
 
 
 |  A Chinese woman 
 and her child prepare to board a chartered flight provided by Beijing out 
 of the troubled Solomon Islands after losing all their possessions in the 
 recent violence in Honiara April 23, 2006. Australia is sending additional 
 troops to the Solomon Islands, as more Chinese fled the country on Sunday 
 amid rising tensions before parliament opens for the first time since 
 post-election rioting. [Reuters]
 |  "The situation remains tense and the possibility of further rioting still 
exists," according to a travel advisory posted Sunday on the Foreign Ministry's 
Web site. 
 Violence erupted in the Solomons Islands' capital, Honiara, last Tuesday, a 
day after lawmakers elected Snyder Rini as prime minister. 
 China sent diplomats to the Solomon Islands last week to help ensure the 
safety of Chinese targeted in the rioting. 
 Some 300 Chinese evacuees from Honiara were expected to arrive in Guangzhou, 
the capital of China's southern province of Guangdong, on Monday night on a 
government charter flight, the Xinhua News Agency reported. 
 Local government officials said they would help the evacuees, many of whom 
emigrated from Guangdong or who have relatives there, get in contact with family 
members, Xinhua said. 
 On Sunday, about 150 Chinese whose livelihoods were destroyed returned to 
China. |