The documents say there was concern that Western Province might organize a breakaway government before London could grant Solomon Islands independence in July of that year. They were released after 30 years of secrecy.
The British were worried about breakaway meetings in Gizo in the run-up to independence. Attention focused on the Western Council, which was threatening a unilateral declaration of independence
It planned to seize shipping and sabotage airfields, and send a secret delegation to Tuvalu – to find out how a single British colony could become two independent countries.
Arrangements were made to meet lawyers in Australia. The British were watching. They noted the protagonists in Western Province, and examined their plane tickets and their foreign contacts.
The British then noted that some people in Western Province failed to realize the adverse long-term effects of breaking away from Solomon Islands. Agitation for statehood went on, but the documents speak of relief, that the independence celebrations in July 1978 successfully overshadowed minor protest elsewhere.


