Solomon Islands

Country at a glance

Solomon Islands, State Media Monitor 2026

Geography
Archipelago of 6 major and ~900 smaller islands, ~28,900 km² land area
Population
Around 0.8 million (2025-2026 estimates)
Capital
Honiara
Official language
English (Constitution of Solomon Islands)
Lingua franca
Pijin
Ethnic composition
Predominantly Melanesian (~95%), with Polynesian, Micronesian and other minorities
Government
Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy
Voting system
First-past-the-post (50 single-seat constituencies, National Parliament)
Term length
4 years
Constitution
Constitution of Solomon Islands (in force from independence, 7 July 1978)
Independence
7 July 1978 (from the United Kingdom)
Head of state
King Charles III
Governor-General
Sir David Tiva Kapu (in office since 7 July 2024)
Head of government
Prime Minister Matthew Wale (Solomon Islands Democratic Party, since 15 May 2026; elected by 26 votes to 22)
Deputy Prime Minister
Francis Sade (Minister for Public Service, since May 2026)
Preceding government
Jeremiah Manele (OUR Party, 2 May 2024 to 7 May 2026, ousted by no-confidence vote 26-22 with two abstentions)
Last general election
April 2024
Next general election
By 2028
Currency
Solomon Islands dollar (SBD)
GDP (World Bank/IMF range)
Between roughly US$1.6 billion and US$1.8 billion nominal
GDP per capita
Around US$1,900 to US$2,300 nominal
Aid dependency
Major donors include Australia, New Zealand, EU, Japan, China
RSF 2026 ranking
Not included in Index (RSF Pacific coverage: AU, FJ, NZ, PG, SM, TO)
RSF dedicated 2026 analysis
March 2026 article on Chinese media influence and SIBC restructuring
Major media
SIBC (state, reclassified SC for 2026); Solomon Star and Island Sun (private dailies, both reported by RSF to have received Chinese funding)
Key cycle event
SIBC reclassified ISFM→SC for 2026; Wale government from 15 May 2026 following 7 May 2026 no-confidence ouster of Manele

Solomon Islands, State Media Monitor 2026

Key indicators for the 2026 cycle

1
SMM-tracked public-media organisation in 2026: SIBC, the national broadcaster operating radio and television
1
State Media Matrix typology covering the country: State-Controlled (SC)
ISFM→SC
Classification change for 2026 cycle: SIBC reclassified from Independent State-Funded and State-Managed to State-Controlled
Not ranked
Solomon Islands not included in the RSF 2026 World Press Freedom Index; RSF published a dedicated March 2026 analysis on Chinese media influence and SIBC restructuring

Sources: SMM 2026 country file; RSF March 2026 Solomon Islands analysis; IFJ August 2022 SIBC press release; SIBC institutional documentation.

Solomon Islands is a Melanesian archipelagic state in the south-west Pacific, comprising six major islands and more than 900 smaller islands across approximately 28,900 square kilometres of land area and a much larger maritime exclusive economic zone, with a population of around 0.8 million. Recent World Bank and IMF figures place nominal GDP between roughly US$1.6 billion and US$1.8 billion, depending on year and source, with GDP per capita around US$1,900 to US$2,300. The country gained independence from the United Kingdom on 7 July 1978 and operates as a unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy under a Constitution that came into force at independence. The currency is the Solomon Islands dollar (SBD), and the country remains structurally dependent on foreign aid, with major donors including Australia, New Zealand, the European Union, Japan and China. English is the sole official language under the Constitution, while Pijin functions as the principal lingua franca across the country’s more than seventy indigenous languages.

The Head of State is King Charles III, represented in Solomon Islands by the Governor-General, Sir David Tiva Kapu, in office since 7 July 2024. Politics during the 2025/26 cycle were defined by exceptional instability. Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele of the OUR Party, who took office on 2 May 2024 following the April 2024 general election, survived a first motion of no confidence in April 2025. A second crisis began in March 2026 when more than a dozen ministers and MPs defected from Manele’s Government of National Unity and Transformation coalition. After an Appeal Court ruling required Manele to convene Parliament, a no-confidence motion succeeded on 7 May 2026 by 26 votes to 22 with two abstentions. Matthew Wale of the Solomon Islands Democratic Party was elected Prime Minister by the National Parliament on 15 May 2026, defeating Peter Shanel Agovaka by 26 votes to 22, and was sworn in the same day. Francis Sade was appointed Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Public Service shortly afterwards.

The State Media Monitor 2026 dataset includes one Solomon Islands public-media organisation, the Solomon Islands Broadcasting Corporation (SIBC), reclassified from Independent State-Funded and State-Managed (ISFM) to State-Controlled (SC) for the 2026 cycle. SIBC operates the country’s principal national radio service across four stations: Radio Happy Isles and Wantok FM, both with nationwide reach, and the regional services Radio Happy Lagoon in Western Province and Radio Temotu in Temotu Province. It also operates the SIBC TV Service, launched on 17 November 2023, with full free-to-air expansion targeted for 2028.

The reclassification reflects the cumulative weight of SIBC’s removal from the State-Owned Enterprise list on 27 June 2022 and placement under the Office of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, the central role of the SBD 5 million annual OPMC subvention in its funding model, and credible press-freedom reporting by the International Federation of Journalists and Reporters Without Borders that the restructuring was accompanied by instructions to avoid or censor content critical of government. Although the government has denied that the restructuring was designed to censor SIBC and has maintained that the broadcaster remains governed by the Broadcasting Act 1976, the institutional direction of travel has been toward direct executive control rather than arm’s-length public-service governance.

Solomon Islands is not currently included in the Reporters Without Borders World Press Freedom Index. RSF nevertheless published a dedicated March 2026 analysis of the country’s media environment, characterising the 2022 SIBC restructuring as placing the broadcaster under the direct authority of the Prime Minister’s Office. RSF also reported that Solomon Star and Island Sun, the country’s two principal privately owned daily newspapers, had received Chinese funding. The broader media landscape includes those two dailies alongside SIBC, with structural economic weakness creating persistent vulnerability to external editorial influence.

The 15 May 2026 change of government to the Wale administration occurred only weeks before the close of this review period, leaving the new government’s approach to SIBC governance and to the broader OPMC media arrangement not yet established. A credible reform of the OPMC governance arrangement, including restoration of arm’s-length appointment processes and removal of any formal or informal censorship instructions, could support a future return to ISFM classification. Continuation of the current institutional arrangement would consolidate the SC classification.

2026 state media typology distribution

Solomon Islands, one SMM-tracked outlet, reclassified from ISFM to SC for the 2026 cycle

1 outlet · State-Controlled (SC) · 100%

The Solomon Islands’ single SMM-tracked public-media organisation is classified as State-Controlled (SC) for 2026. The country has no Independent Public (IP), Independent State-Managed (ISM), Independent State-Funded (ISF), Independent State-Funded and State-Managed (ISFM) or Captured Public/Private (CaPu, CaPr) outlets in the 2026 dataset. The single SC outlet was reclassified from ISFM in this cycle, marking the first formal classification change in the 2026 Oceania cycle.

State-Controlled · SIBC · reclassified from ISFM
Solomon Islands Broadcasting Corporation
National broadcaster under the Office of the Prime Minister and Cabinet since 27 June 2022. Four radio stations (Radio Happy Isles, Wantok FM, Radio Happy Lagoon, Radio Temotu) plus SIBC TV Service (launched 17 November 2023). Reclassified ISFM→SC for 2026 on the basis of 2022 restructuring, central OPMC funding, and IFJ 2022 and RSF March 2026 reports of government censorship instructions.

ISFM = Independent State-Funded and State-Managed. SC = State-Controlled. See the State Media Matrix typology for category definitions.


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