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Pacific news in brief for 18 June

Pacific news in brief for 18 June

RNZ News11 hours ago

Last year, the late Kiingi Tuheitia and Cook Islands Kaumaiti Nui Toa Ariki signed a treaty that seeks to grant more protections for whales.
Photo:
Supplied: Operation Cetaces
Tonga's princess Angelika Latufuipeka Tuku'aho is backing other Pacific leaders to grant whales legal personhood.
Last year, the late Kiingi Tuheitia and Cook Islands Kaumaiti Nui Toa Ariki signed He Whakaputanga Moana, a treaty that seeks to grant more protections for whales.
The University of Auckland's Dr Justin Sorbion said the treaty is a win for the Pacific.
However, he told
Pacific Waves
it would not stop harmful activity against whales.
"So just the fact that you are saying that whales have a legal personality, that's not going to stop the problem," he said.
"But especially for the present generations - and the future generations - it shows that they have legal standing."
Photo:
RNZ / Nick Monro
Australia's bid to host the COP31 climate summit came up during Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's visit to Fiji.
During the trip, Albanese and Fijian PM Sitiveni Rabuka reaffirmed their commitment to the advancement of the Vuvale Partnership.
Albanese said the pair discussed the significant impact of climate change internationally and particularly in the Pacific region, and Australia's COP31 bid in partnership with the Pacific.
This year's COP30 will be hosted by Belem, Brazil.
Two executives of a Papua New Guinea Government-owned company are being sought by police for allegedly paying 2.4 million kina in unauthorised security arrangements.
NBC
reported that NiuSky Pacific Limited's acting managing director Graham Blythe and the board chair, Robin Kawat, are wanted by police.
Police assistant commissioner, Benjamin Turi, said both men have evaded police efforts to bring them in for questioning over alleged payments made to 23 regular police officers and 13 police impersonators in 2023 and 2024.
He told
NBC News
the warrant of arrest is already out, and they expect both men to comply and come forward to police, or they will use force to bring them in.
Police say the two NiuSky executives authorised the payments for security services to the state-owned air navigation service provider without legal clearance or proper engagement procedures.
Community leaders and civil society organisations are urging Solomon Islands citizens to get involved in public consultations on the Mineral Resources Bill.
The
Solomon Islands Broadcasting Corporation
said the bill could significantly reshape how mining operations are approved, monitored, and enforced.
The legislation would give the national government broader authority over mineral resources, impacting land rights, the environment, and the community's role in decision-making.
Organisations such as the Development Services Exchange, Apunepara Ha'amwa'ora Natural Resources Association, and the International Center for Advocates Against Discrimination, want everyone to join in the public submission process.
They say the bill would conflict with the Constitution and the international obligations the Solomons has.
The Chiefs of Army of New Zealand and Australia have combined for a joint visit to Timor-Leste.
Topics of discussion included shared security priorities, a number of upcoming exercises and planned cooperation.
There were also 'positive discussions' around assisting Timor Leste's defence forces to be able to realise a key ambition - to further contribute to United Nations peacekeeping missions around the world.
Australia's Chief of Army lieutenant-general Simon Stuart said Timor-Leste is an important security partner to both Australia and New Zealand.

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'By Seymour, for Māori?' - Tama Potaka defends Māori targeted funding cut
'By Seymour, for Māori?' - Tama Potaka defends Māori targeted funding cut

RNZ News

time4 hours ago

  • RNZ News

'By Seymour, for Māori?' - Tama Potaka defends Māori targeted funding cut

Māori Development Minister Tama Potaka says the government has serious fiscal issues and most agencies have had to cut back. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone The Māori Development Minister has defended attacks by the opposition arguing he allowed targeted Māori funding to disappear under his watch. Speaking in the Māori Affairs select committee for scrutiny week, Labour MP and former Māori development minister Willie Jackson said specific funding for Māori initiatives had fallen significantly since Tama Potaka took over. He also questioned whether Potaka was being influenced by Deputy Prime Minister David Seymour , who disagrees with targeted funds based on race. Jackson said while he did not doubt "for one second" that Potaka was committed to pushing kaupapa Māori, he was "failing" in terms of Māori-specific funding. "You've had this decrease in terms of Māori funding, targeted funding, across the portfolio, and you have a deputy prime minister who believes funding us is racist... so how are you dealing with that?" Jackson asked. Potaka said he did not share that view and encouraged others in the room to "amplify" that. "What often happens is that certain views are given some really enhanced coverage, and others that I think are just as legitimate are not." "We have a very important series of commitments emanating out of Te Tiriti o Waitangi and the Treaty of Waitangi... good kāwanatanga or rangatiratanga or ōritetanga, however many tangas we might want to refer to and that provides a very constitutional bedrock for our existence as a country. It amplifies and reflects some things that were already existing," Potaka said. Potaka said funding allocated to the Māori Women's Welfare League was an example of the government's commitment to Māori funding. Pushed again by Jackson on what "confidence" Potaka could give that Māori initiatives would be prioritised, Potaka said some of those initiatives "did not sync" with the government's current direction. "This government, and I as the minister, are in a space where we've got serious fiscal issues, and I don't need to belabour that, but taking the debt up from $5 billion to $100 billion did not help, over five or six years, prior to us coming in. "All agencies have basically cut back, except for Health, Education, Defence and Police, all agencies have had to take a haircut. That includes my agencies... the view that 'we don't have confidence because your agency has less money than last year', I think is misplaced given the fiscal context." The government was focused on tilting the support towards economic development, rather than bits and bobs all over the place, Potaka said. Budget 2025 saw the end of the Whai Kāinga , Whai Oranga housing fund which saw the government allocate over $700 million to help iwi build thousands of homes in 2021. That money has been redirected to the government's broader Flexible Housing fund, a move which Jackson said "betrayed" the kaupapa. "[Māori] can't get their heads around it, that you would betray a kaupapa and open up competition, now that Māori providers have to compete with mainstream providers, very unfair. Former Māori development minister Willie Jackson said said specific funding for Māori initiatives had fallen significantly since Tama Potaka took over. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone "You're the minister responsible for the biggest transfer of money from Māori to mainstream in the history of ministers," Jackson said. Potaka gave a mihi to the "architects" of the scheme and said their work was "absolutely outstanding". "In terms of the Whai Kāinga, Whai Oranga budget that has effectively been centralised and reallocated," Potaka said. "Some of that was the $200 million announced for 400 or more new homes, I announced in Waitangi week, that includes the 150 homes that are being built right now... in Gisborne, and a whole range of other homes. A whole range of other homes and sites across the motu, including up in Kaitaia and Rotorua and central North Island and other places." Jackson said that figure showed how Potaka had "failed miserably" in the housing area. "That's a far cry from what we talked about when we set Whai Kāinga, Whai Oranga up. "So basically, it's 'By Seymour, for Māori' now, isn't it? Not 'By Māori, for Māori'," Jackson said. "I reject that opinion presented as a question," Potaka said. "What has happened is that the commitment over Whai Kāinga, Whai Oranga, a lot of that was consumed in the 1000 homes [built] through the Labour-led government and the 1000 homes that have been approved in 18 months - by the way, we didn't take five years - through this government. "Those homes are on the go. Some have been delivered, and some are yet to be delivered, and actually, the capacity of Māori housing developers to deliver massively is evolving," Potaka said. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Fiji Police investigating Commission of Inquiry report into appointment of sacked anti-corruption commissioner Barbara Malimali
Fiji Police investigating Commission of Inquiry report into appointment of sacked anti-corruption commissioner Barbara Malimali

RNZ News

time4 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Fiji Police investigating Commission of Inquiry report into appointment of sacked anti-corruption commissioner Barbara Malimali

Barbara Malimali says she wants to be able to protect Fiji from corrupt public officials. (X: Fiji Women) Photo: X/Fiji Women Fiji Police have commenced investigations into a Commission of Inquiry report on the appointment of the country's now sacked head of the anti-corruption office. Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka stood down Fiji Independent Commission Against Corruption (FICAC) commissioner Barbara Malimali last month after a months-long inquiry was completed. Malimali was appointed as FICAC chief in September last year despite being under investigation by the anti-corruption office. Opposition figures at the time slammed it as "unbelievable" but the government backed her appointment. The 648-page inquiry report, prepared by the Commissioner of Inquiry and Supreme Court Judge David Ashton-Lewis, has rocked Rabuka's coalition government in recent weeks, with one political expert calling it a "full-blown crisis" . The report, which has now been leaked online, includes allegations not only against Malimali, but senior government officials and lawyers, including the nation's highest judicial officer and the head of the Law Society. Local media are reporting that the inquiry found a "systematic failure of integrity" across Fiji's governance and justice systems. They report that the inquiry states the appointment process for Malimali was "legally invalid" and "ethically reprehensible". Read more: Police Commissioner Rusiate Tudravu confirmed via a statement on Wednesday that investigations into the Commission of Inquiry Report findings commenced after the police received a formal letter of referral from President Ratu Naiqama Lalabalau. "A formal letter of referral was sent to the Fiji Police Force and the Fiji Independent Commission Against Corruption, to investigate the Final Report of the Commission of Inquiry and persons of interests, and where warranted, prosecution," he said. Tudravu said he has met with the FICAC acting Commissioner Lavi Rokoika, alongside senior Fiji Police officers "to discuss the specific areas of investigation to be undertaken by our respective institutions, to avoid duplication, and ensure efficiency of the investigation process". He has given his assurance for a thorough independent investigation by the team of senior investigators from the Criminal Investigations Department. "A Commission of Inquiry report into the appointment of Barbara Malimali as head of the Fiji Independent Commission against Corruption has cost the country's Attorney-General Graham Leung his job, embroiled Fiji's Law Society in an acrimonious feud and exacerbated tensions in the governing coalition," Victoria University of Wellington's political science professor John Fraenkel wrote for the DevpolicyBlog on Tuesday. "The country's Chief Justice Salesi Temo is allegedly among those accused by the COI (though, at the time of writing, the report has not been publicly released). "Worryingly, given Fiji's history of coups in 1987, 2000 and 2006, military chief Jone Kalouniwai has visited the Prime Minister's office reminding the nation of his constitutionally-bequeathed responsibility for the 'wellbeing of Fiji and its people'." According to Fraenkel, the inquiry controversy comes at a critical juncture, with the Supreme Court due to rule on the legal status of the country's 2013 Constitution in August and with Fiji drawing closer to the next election, scheduled for 2026 or, at the very latest, February 2027.

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