Pacific news in brief for 11 July
Photo:
Facebook / Ministry of itaukei Affairs
China's Ambassador to Fiji Zhou Jian has handed over a FJ$100,000 (approximately US$44,600) donation to the newly installed chief of the Lau group.
Ratu Tevita Mara received the chiefly title of
Tui Nayau
on Tuesday, and on Thursday the
Sau ni Vanua o Lau
,
Na Tui Lau
titles.
Solar street lights, household solar facilities, and a mini bus for the people of Lau have also been donated by China.
Zhou said with the strong relationship that Fiji has with China, China will continue to provide support and assistance to the best of its ability for Fiji's rural development.
He said China will continue to assist Fiji in responding to climate change through both bilateral and multilateral channels.
A 37-year-old man has been sentenced to three years in prison for reckless driving that caused the deaths of his two children.
Matangi Tonga
reported the court heard that on 22 January of this year, in an attempt to overtake a vehicle at excessive speed, he lost control of the vehicle which had defective tyres and veered off the road.
The crash caused the deaths of his two children who were in the car - the youngest was nine years old.
Justice Tupou sentenced him on 8 July at the Supreme Court in Nuku'alofa, after he pleaded guilty to the charge in May.
A prominent Samoan businessman and former Samoa National Provident Fund chairman has died.
Local media reported Papali'i Panoa Moala died on Wednesday night.
He was a long-serving board member of the Fund, and also served as its chair from 2021 until earlier this year.
Papali'i was previously the Fund's chief executive and remained on the board following his resignation as chair.
Family, friends, and community leaders have been sharing tributes online.
Cook Islands is projected to achieve record visitor arrivals in 2025, surpassing pre-pandemic levels.
The latest ANZ Research Pacific Insight report forecasts 180,000 tourists.
Cook Islands News
reported this being due to increased air connectivity.
However there are still challenges ahead in the balance of growth with environmental and workforce sustainability.
The Cook Islands marine resources ministry is exploring solutions to revive a shrinking pearl farming industry.
Local media reported that discussions around new cultivation methods and international partnerships are still underway.
Marine resources minister Tingika Elikana said there are just a few farmers on the island of Manihiki.
Opposition leader Tina Browne added that the Manihiki lagoon can no longer support the growth of pearl shells.
Because of this, she proposes a hatchery be set up to cultivate the shells before transferring them to Manihiki.
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The methamphetamine parcel came through the east coast of Africa, he said, and had a connection to Nigeria. "What it shows is that these smaller criminal entities within the Pacific themselves have started to reach out and create their own lines of trafficking to feed the local markets. "And that is a whole new dimension which is very troubling for the Pacific." Sousa-Santos added that while the local methamphetamine markets in places like Fiji were too small to appeal to international drug cartels, they were being maintained by smaller Pacific criminal entities that had established themselves in the region. "[Pacific criminal entities] realise that the markets are large enough for them to be profitable enough, and they're reaching out to new players, small players to import methamphetamines into Pacific Island countries." Deportees from the US, Australia and New Zealand were part of that dynamic. Sousa-Santos said while it was just a small number of deportees involved in criminal activity, the circumstances of the methamphetamine and drug trade across the region had resulted in a "perfect storm". "A small number of these criminal deportees [have] not been able to reintegrate back into society, especially ones with criminal backgrounds that are not able to understand the culture, the languages, [and had] no opportunities of work. "[They have] started to reach back to the criminal counterparts from the countries which they were deported. These deportees brought a new set of tactics ... which Pacific law enforcement was not used to dealing with, and they added aspects and an evolution to drug smuggling activities and criminal enterprise in the region which previously didn't exist." Any solutions to the ongoing crisis had to be holistic, Sousa-Santos said. 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