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Friday, May 22, 2026

False claims of post-election unrest in Solomon Islands share fabricated images - Yahoo News Malaysia

Days after Solomon Islands elected a new prime minister who has been a critic of the South Pacific nation's closeness to China, social media users shared images of the National Provident Fund (NPF) building burning in the capital with a false claim it was set ablaze during a riot that had broken out. But the NPF told AFP that no fire had broken out and that the story was "entirely fabricated". Local police have also dismissed the claim and called on the public not to share the pictures.

"Big riot now happening in downtown. This time they are burning the NPF building at Point Cruz," read a Facebook post shared on May 17, 2026 written in Solomon Pijin language.

The post contained two images of a building with smoke billowing from its flaming roof before it was deleted.

The claim has circulated elsewhere on Facebook after the islands elected opposition leader Matthew Wale as prime minister on May 15 in a secret ballot of lawmakers -- about a week after his predecessor Jeremiah Manele was ousted in a no-confidence motion (archived link).

Wale, who leads the Solomon Islands Democratic Party, has been a critic of the South Pacific nation's closeness to Beijing -- a close partner in recent years after the Solomons switched in 2019 to recognising China over Taiwan, a democratic island that Beijing claims as its own (archived link).

Due to its ties with China, any change of leaders in the strategically located archipelago is closely watched by Western diplomats.

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