
Luxon And Peters To Miss Cook Islands' 60th Constitution Day Celebrations
New Zealand will not send top government representation to the Cook Islands for its 60th Constitution Day celebrations in three weeks' time.
Instead, Governor-General Dame Cindy Kiro will represent Aotearoa in Raorotonga.
On 4 August, Cook Islands will mark 60 years of self-governance in free association with New Zealand.
It comes at a turbulent time in the relationship
New Zealand paused $18.2m in development assistance funding to the Cook Islands in June after its government signed several agreements with China in February.
At the time, a spokesperson for Foreign Minister Winston Peters said the pause was because the Cook Islands did not consult with Aotearoa over the China deals and failed to ensure shared interests were not put at risk.
Peters and New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon will not attend the celebrations.
Ten years ago, former Prime Minister Sir John Key attended the celebrations that marked 50 years of Cook Islands being in free association with New Zealand.
Officials from the Cook Islands and New Zealand have been meeting to try and restore the relationship.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scoop
5 hours ago
- Scoop
'We need to be involved': Pasifika candidates running in Auckland local election
Grace Tinetali-Fiavaai, RNZ Pacific journalist There are former Pacific candidates and new faces putting their names forward for this year's Auckland local government election in Aotearoa. The final confirmed list of candidates is out. In the Manukau ward, Councillor Lotu Fuli, one of three current Auckland councillors of Pacific descent, has also served on the local board and is seeking re-election. "Currently, we only have three Pasifika councillors at the governing body table, the mayor and 20 councillors. Out of 21, only myself, Councillor Bartley and Councillor Filipaina, who's half Samoan, sit around that very important decision-making table," Fuli said. She said she feels the weight of responsibility of her role. "I know that I'm here in this space to speak up and advocate for them, because with all due respect to the mayor and to our other councillors from other areas, they don't know what it's like for a Pasifika person growing up in Aotearoa New Zealand - in Manukau, in Otara, in Papatoe, in Magele [Māngere], or Otahuhu or Maungakiekie, Glen Innes. They don't know because they haven't lived that experience. "They haven't lived that struggle, and so they can't really, truly relate to it." Twelve individuals have put their names forward for the mayoralty, including current mayor Wayne Brown. Ted Johnston is the only mayoral candidate with Pasifika links. Each Auckland ward has a set number of council seats. For example, in Manukau, there are only two seats, currently held by incumbents Alf Filipaina and Lotu Fuli. In the Manurewa-Papakura ward, there are two seats, and in Maungakiekie-Tāmaki there is one, held by Josephine Bartley. For local board nominations, the number of seats varies. Those elected make decisions about things like community funding, sports events, water quality, and even dog walking regulations. Vi Hausia, one of the youngest Pacific candidates this year, is running for the Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board (Papatoetoe subdivision. He said he was born and raised in south Auckland. "Growing up I've always had the sense of, 'oh, it is what it is. It's always been like that'. And then you get a bit older and you realise that actually things isn't 'is what it is'. It's been as a result of people who make decisions in important forums, like local board." Safety and strengthening youth engagement are issues for him. "Ensuring that when kids come out of high school there's a strong pathway for them to get into work or into training, whether that's a vocational training like builder apprenticeship or university, because that's the link to ensure that our people, particularly our Pacific people, are engaged within our society, and are able to to find who they are and to be able to contribute back to society." He said Māori and Pasifika youth are overrepresented in the statistics of high school leavers who come out of high school and there's quite a high number of people who go straight onto welfare. "So we've got a responsibility on the local board as well as central government, to be able to understand what the issues are, and to ensure that young people are having the opportunity to be able to be the best versions of themselves." Another current Auckland Councillor Josephine Bartley said it iss vital that Pasifika are at the table. "It's important because if you look at the make-up of the city, we have a large percentage of Pasifika, and we need to be active. We need to be involved in the decision-making that affects us, so at a local board level and at a city council, at a governing body level." She said she is hopeful voter registrations will go up. "It's always difficult for people to prioritise voting because they have a lot on their plate. "But hopefully people can see the relevance of local government to their daily lives and make sure they're enrolled to vote and then actually vote." 'Stop blaming' Pasifika Reflecting on Pacific representation in mayoral races, Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board chairperson Apulu Reece said the 2022 race, where Fa'anana Efeso Collins came second to now-mayor Wayne Brown, could have had a different outcome. Apulu said it is time to stop blaming communities for low turnout and instead question the structure. "There's probably some value or truth in the fact that we needed to get more people out voting for Efeso and Māori and Pacific people often too busy to worry about the voting paper that they've left on the fridge. "But I want to twist that and and ask: why didn't the white people vote for Efeso? Why is it always put on us Pacific people and say 'oh, it's your fault?' when, actually, he was one of the best candidates out there. "In fact, one of the candidates, the palagi [Pākeha] lady, dropped out so that her supporters could vote for Wayne Brown. "So no one talks about the tactics that the palagis (Pākeha) did to not get Efeso in. "That's his legacy is us actually looking at the processes, looking at how voting works and and actually dissecting it, and not always blaming the brown people, but saying, 'hey, this system was built by Pākeha for Pākeha." There is a total of 12 mayoral candidates, 80 council ward candidates, 386 local board canddiates and 80 licensing trust candidates. Voting papers will be posted in early September.

RNZ News
5 hours ago
- RNZ News
World plastic pollution treaty talks collapse with no deal
By Robin Millard , AFP Photo: RNZ Pacific / Sally Round Talks aimed at striking a landmark global treaty on plastic pollution fell apart Friday without agreement, as countries failed to find consensus on how the world should tackle the ever-growing scourge. Negotiators from 185 nations worked beyond Thursday's deadline and through the night in an ultimately futile search for common ground between nations wanting bold action such as curbing plastic production, and oil-producing states preferring to focus more narrowly on waste management. Several countries voiced bitter disappointment as the talks unravelled, but said they were prepared for future negotiations - despite six rounds of talks over three years now having failed to find agreement. "We have missed a historic opportunity but we have to keep going and act urgently. The planet and present and future generations need this treaty," said Cuba. Colombia added: "The negotiations were consistently blocked by a small number of states who simply don't want an agreement." Tuvalu, speaking for 14 Pacific small island developing states, said they were once again leaving empty-handed. "For our islands this means that without global cooperation and state action, millions of tonnes of plastic waste will continue to be dumped in our oceans, affecting our ecosystem, food security, livelihood and culture," the Polynesian archipelago said. The High Ambition Coalition, which includes the European Union, Britain and Canada, and many African and Latin American countries, wanted to see language on reducing plastic production and the phasing out of toxic chemicals used in plastics. A cluster of mostly oil-producing states calling themselves the Like-Minded Group - including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Russia, Iran, and Malaysia - want the treaty to have a much narrower remit. "Our views were not reflected... without an agreed scope, this process cannot remain on the right track and risks sliding down a slippery slope," said Kuwait. Bahrain said it wanted a treaty that "does not penalise developing countries for exploiting their own resources". France's Ecological Transition Minister Agnes Pannier-Runacher said: "I am disappointed, and I am angry," saying a handful of countries, "guided by short-term financial interests", had blocked the adoption of an ambitious treaty. "Oil-producing countries and their allies have chosen to look the other way." The future of the negotiations was not immediately clear. Some countries called for a seventh round of talks in future, with the EU saying the latest draft was a "good basis for a resumed session", and South Africa insisting: "It cannot end here." The talks in Geneva - called after the collapse of the fifth and supposedly final round of talks in South Korea late last year - opened on 5 August. With countries far apart, talks chair Luis Vayas Valdivieso produced a draft text Wednesday based on the limited areas of convergence. But it was immediately shredded by all sides, plunging the talks into disarray, with the high ambition group finding it shorn of all impact, and the Like-Minded Group saying it crossed their red lines and lacked scope. Vayas spend Thursday in a frantic round of negotiations with regional groups, and produced a new version after midnight. Lead negotiators then held a meeting behind closed doors to thrash out whether there was enough in the text to keep talking. But shortly before sunrise, the game was up. More than 400 million tonnes of plastic are produced globally each year, half of which is for single-use items. While 15 percent of plastic waste is collected for recycling, only nine percent is actually recycled. Nearly half, or 46 percent, ends up in landfills, while 17 percent is incinerated and 22 percent is mismanaged and becomes litter. The plastic pollution problem is so ubiquitous that microplastics have been found on the highest mountain peaks, in the deepest ocean trench and scattered throughout almost every part of the human body. On current trends, annual production of fossil-fuel-based plastics will nearly triple by 2060 to 1.2 billion tonnes, while waste will exceed one billion tonnes, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. - AFP

RNZ News
3 days ago
- RNZ News
Samoa backs Solomon Islands' move to defer partner talks at Pacific Islands Forum
Prime Minister Fiame Naomi Mata'afa at the 99th USP Council Meeting in Auckland. 21 May 2025 Photo: RNZ Pacific / Lydia Lewis Samoa's caretaker Prime Minister Fiame Naomi Mata'afa backs the Solomon Islands' plan to essentially block at least twenty countries from participating at a key Pacific meeting in just over three weeks' time. "Samoa supports [the] proposal to defer dialogue meetings to next year," Fiame Naomi Mata'afa told RNZ Pacific. This comes just one week after ABC reported Fiamē threatened to boycott the meeting if Solomon Islands blocks Taiwan from attending the 54th Pacific Islands Forum Leaders Meeting in Honiara. She has since told RNZ Pacific that a deferral would allow Forum leaders to focus on organisational issues, including receiving reports from a review of external partners and the regional architecture review. The changes are the leaders' response to increasing interest from nations that want a seat - and a say - at the regional decision-making table. If the Solomon Islands Prime Minister's plan is endorsed at this week's Foreign Ministers' Meeting in Fiji, China, the US, and 19 other partners would not be invited to the Honiara summit scheduled from 8-12 September. "What we are saying here is, let's give some more time for the region to put the process a new process in place so that we can effectively engage with our partners going forward, not now, but the later stage, once we are ready," Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele told local reporters in a news conference on Friday. In May, Fiamē told RNZ Pacific that with "every man and his dog coming into the Pacific", it is difficult for small Pacific Island administrations to navigate evolving geopolitical interests. "The geopolitical situation [in the] Pacific is becoming very contested. It is becoming very congested." "But their basic question is: Is Pacific unity still there? Do we still want it? If we do, what do we want it to look like?" Asked if Pacific unity was still there, she said: "We say it is. But in practice, I personally think that there is fragmentation. "There is always that conflict between the collective and national interests and so forth. We really do have to be thinking about what is it, in regionalism, that we want to make sure stays?" Pacific Island's Forum Leader's retreat 2024 Vava'u. Photo: RNZ Pacific/ Lydia Lewis Pacific foreign ministers are meeting in Suva on Thursday for the final high-level meeting in a suite of gatherings ahead of the Pacific Islands Forum Leaders' Meeting. They will consider the region's ongoing efforts to strengthen and deepen Pacific regionalism in the face of intensifying geopolitical competition in the region, the PIF Secretariat said. The Crown Prince of Tonga Tupoutoʻa ʻUlukalala - who is also the Kingdom's Foreign Affairs Minister - will chair this year's Foreign Ministers Meeting. Hu'akavameiliku Siaosi Sovaleni, right, and Crown Prince of Tonga Tupoutoʻa ʻUlukalala in Nuku'alofa. August 2024 Photo: RNZ Pacific / Lydia Lewis