Provinces of Solomon Islands

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Provinces of Solomon Islands in 1989.
Provinces of Solomon Islands, numbered in alphabetical order.

Solomon Islands is divided into nine provinces. The national capital, Honiara, on the island of Guadalcanal, is separately governed as the islands' Capital Territory.

History[]

Under the British Solomon Islands Protectorate, there were initially 12 administrative districts: Choiseul, Eastern Solomons, Gizo, Guadalcanal, Lord Howe, Malaita, Nggela and Savo, Rennell and Bellona Islands, Santa Cruz, Shortlands, Sikaiana (Stewart), and Ysabel and Cape Marsh. The administrative centre was in Tulagi.

After World War II, the protectorate was reorganised into four districts, namely Central, Western, Eastern, and Malaita, which were then further subdivided into councils. The administrative centre was moved from Tulagi to Honiara.

At its independence in 1978, the protectorate became the sovereign state of Solomon Islands. Honiara continued to function as the capital of the sovereign nation, and the inherited districts and councils remained until 1981, when the nation was reorganised into seven provinces by splitting some of the districts into provinces: the Central District was split into Central, Guadalcanal, and Isabel provinces, while the Eastern District was split into Makira-Ulawa and Temotu provinces. The other two districts, Western and Malaita, were also designated as provinces. These new provinces corresponded to the councils of the districts before 1981.

In 1983, the 22 square-kilometer Honiara was split from Guadalcanal Province and became a separately-governed capital territory. The city remains as the capital of Guadalcanal Province.

In 1995, Choiseul Province was split from Western Province, and Rennell and Bellona Province was split from Central Province, resulting in the nine provinces of today.

Population[]

The population census data is from the 1999 census; the 2009 population estimates are those provided by the Solomon Islands National Statistics Office. They show that the population has increased in the past decade for most of the provinces, especially the more urban ones, as urbanisation increases.

The figures for Guadalcanal Province do not include the separately-administered Capital Territory of Honiara; if included, that province would have had a total population of 109,382 in 1999, when it was the second largest province by population; by 2009, the combined estimate for Guadalcanal and the Capital Territory would be 157,745, which would make it the most populous province.

Provinces[]

# Province Capital Premier Area
(km2)
Population
census 1999
Population
per km2 (2009)
Population
census 2009
1 Central Province Tulagi 615 21,577 42.4 26,051
2 Choiseul Province Taro Island 3,837 20,008 6.9 26,371
3 Guadalcanal Province[1] Honiara Anthony Veke 5,336 60,275 17.5 93,613
4 Isabel Province Buala 4,136 20,421 6.3 26,158
5 Makira-Ulawa Province Kirakira 3,188 31,006 12.7 40,419
6 Malaita Province Auki 4,225 122,620 32.6 137,596
7 Rennell and Bellona Province Tigoa Collin Suatai Singamoana 671 2,377 4.5 3,041
8 Temotu Province Lata David Maina 895 18,912 23.9 21,362
9 Western Province Gizo 5,475 62,739 14.0 76,649
- Capital Territory Honiara Mua (Mayor) 22 49,107 2,936.8 64,609
  Solomon Islands Honiara - 28,400 409,042 14.7 515,870

[1] excluding the Capital Territory of Honiara

See also[]

References[]

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