22 January – Police launch search operations to find nine people from a capsized boat near Isabel Province. Five men, two women and two children were on board.[1]
31 January – The Royal Solomon Islands Police Force stop searching for nine people who disappeared at sea on 15 January when their boat capsized. Five men, two women and two children are now presumed dead.[2]
3 April – Twenty-seven people died in the country after their boat capsized during the Cyclone Harold.[3]
33 April – Despite having no cases, the government stepped up checks on incoming visitors and introduced restrictions on visitors who have visited countries deemed high risk.[4]
14 March – The country banned all travelers from China, South Korea and Japan. Health minister Dickson Mua also said that the country had suspended flights to Brisbane, Australia, and banned all civil servants from overseas travel to contain COVID-19.[5]
25 March – The country declared a state of emergency due to COVID-19.[6]
27 March – Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare suspended all flights into the country, and declared a precautionary state of emergency in Honiara, by which most entertainment venues would be closed (churches are exempt from the order).[7]
7 September – The government of Solomon Islands says that a proposed independence referendum in Malaita Province is illegal. Daniel Suidani, the provincial premier of Malaita, proposed the referendum in protest to the decision by the central government to switch recognition from Taiwan to China last year.[11]