Friday, June 20, 2025
Home Blog Page 199

Lord Nuku’s son’s engagement to king’s niece revealed

It has been revealed that Hon Faka’osifono Valevale is expected to engage to Hon Sālote Maumautaimi Tuku’aho soon.

Hon Faka’osifono Valevale (L) and Hon Sālote Maumautaimi Tuku’aho

The news was confirmed to Kaniva News by Tongan Correspondent and former Editor Faka’osi Maama, who is also very close with Hon Valevale’s family.

The engagement “was expected to be held in September”, Maama said in Tongan.

Hon Valevale is the eldest son of Lord Nuku, an MP and one of the king’s nobility estate holders. His estate is Kolonga.

The revelation came eight years after Hon Valevale proposed to the king’s only daughter, Princess Angelika Tuku’aho in 2014.  

In 2017 Hon Valevale and his kāinga arrived at the royal palace in Nuku’alofa followed by a cultural presentation.

It was part of a normal procedure for the nobility and their kāinga to visit and meet the king in the new year.

Lord Nuku told Kaniva News at the time that part of the presentation was to check on his son’s proposal to the Princess.

He said the king’s herald responded and said he was not in a position to say “yes or no” on the proposal.

According to Lord Nuku this meant the king has yet to make decision on the wedding plan.

King’s niece

Hon Sālote is a niece of King Tupou VI. She is the only daughter of the late Lord Ma’atu and Samoan born Hon Alaileula Tuku’aho. Lord Ma’atu was an older brother of the king.

Lord Ma’atu was born Prince Fatafehi Alaivahamamao Tuku’aho.

The Prince was second in line to the throne, after the death of his father, the Late King Taufa’āhau Tupou IV in 2006.

However, Prince Fatafehi’s previous marriage to a commoner, Heimataura Seiloni resulted in him being stripped of his princely title, according to the constitution.  This meant, his children including Hon Sālote could not traditionally hold the princessly or princely titles.

However, the Late King George V bestowed the title Prince Tungī Mailefihi to Lord Ma’atu’s eldest son, Hon Sālote’s brother, Sitiveni Polu Le’uligana Tuku’aho.

Under the Tongan constitution, “It shall not be lawful for any member of the Royal Family who is likely to succeed to the throne to marry any person without the consent of the King. And if any person should thus marry the marriage shall not be considered legal and it shall be lawful for the King to cancel the right of such person and his heirs to succeed to the Crown of Tonga”.

Rugby: Ian Foster promises change after naming All Blacks squad

By RNZ.co.nz

All Blacks coach Ian Foster says he is working behind the scenes to achieve change in the All Blacks, but has still kept Sam Cane as captain for the Rugby Championship.

Ian Foster

Foster is contracted through until next year’s World Cup, but has come under increasing pressure to hold onto his job following the 2-1 series loss at home to Ireland.

But Sam Cane has retained the All Blacks captaincy, despite the historic series loss to Ireland.

Speculation had mounted through the week that Cane would be replaced by Sam Whitelock, but in naming his 36 strong squad for the upcoming Rugby Championship, Foster retained Cane as skipper.

“We have taken on board the lessons from the (Ireland) series and are excited about looking forward to the next phase of our Test season,” said Foster.

Speaking at today’s media conference, Foster said he was still the All Blacks head coach and in the past few days the team had developed a clear plan forward.

He said the All Blacks did not achieve what they should have in the series against Ireland and “robust conversations” have been held since with New Zealand Rugby management.

He said he had heard there needed to be change and he was working behind the scenes to achieve that, though he would not say what those changes will be.

“You can ask me a hundred times what that is and I won’t be able to give you an answer just yet. I’d like you to bear with me, but we’ve got things in place right now and as soon as I can let you know a couple changes I’ll let you know as soon as possible.”

Foster said he was proud of the accountability shown by All Blacks players, staff and management after their recent losses.

“We are never happy when we don’t achieve what we want to achieve, we understand the fans aren’t happy with that but we have a promise that we’re looking forward to getting stuck into our work when we get together and to go and play in this Rugby Championship,” Foster said.

Addressing rumours around his coaching position, Foster defended his relationship with his players and his credentials.

“Let me tell you who I am, I’m strong, I’m resilient, I think I’ve proven that. I believe I’ve got a great feel and relationship with my players, I’m strategic and I’m also accountable.”

He said there was no doubt that his coaching position was under pressure, but it came as part and parcel with being the All Blacks coach.

Foster said he was excited to welcome back Highlanders duo Ethan De Groot and Shannon Frizell to the All Blacks fold for the upcoming Rugby Championship.

Tyrell Lomax, Josh Dixon and Brayden Ennor will also join the squad as injury cover, he said.

Ian Foster expected to stay as All Blacks coach

By RNZ.co.nz

Ian Foster is expected to be confirmed as coach of the All Blacks today.

All Blacks coach Ian Foster and captain Sam Cane.

Foster and Cane Photo: PHOTOSPORT

Foster is contracted through until next year’s World Cup, but has come under increasing pressure to hold onto his job following the series loss to Ireland.

Foster met with New Zealand Rugby officials this week and RNZ understands the board has backed him and that will be officially announced today.

The All Blacks squad for the Rugby Championship was due to be released this week.

The Otago Daily Times is reporting that former Ireland coach Joe Schmidt will have a greater role in the camp.

New Zealander Schmidt worked on a part time basis with the Blues this year and was set to replace Grant Fox as All Blacks selector.

That may result in a reshuffle of the assistant coaching staff which currently consists of John Plumtree (forwards), Greg Feek (scrum), Brad Mooar (attack) and Scott McLeod (defence).

The ODT is also reporting that Sam Cane could be dropped as captain to be replaced by Sam Whitelock.

Cane has captained the All Blacks 13 times and Whitelock 14 times.

The All Blacks first game in the Rugby Championship is against South Africa in on August 7th in Mbombela.

US President Joe Biden tests positive for Covid-19, has mild symptoms


‘Oku taupotu ‘i lalo ha fakamatala fakaTonga

Joe Biden, the oldest person ever to serve as president of the United States, has tested positive for Covid-19. He is experiencing mild symptoms and is taking the antiviral treatment Paxlovid. He will continue working but in isolation at the White House.

Biden’s illness forced cancellation of a trip to Pennsylvania where he intended to lay out plans to ask Congress for US$37 billion for crime prevention programs.

The president took to Twitter to thank people for their concern and to say that he is doing well. He also said that he had called several political allies to discuss his plans for the day.

The White House has provided an unusually detailed account of Biden’s morning activities, which include a series of phone calls and a meeting with his national security team.

The president is expected to continue working from the White House and to provide daily updates on his health.

According to a report by Reuters it said: “Multiple members of Biden’s administration and other senior figures in Washington have tested positive for the coronavirus in recent months, including Vice President Kamala Harris and House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, both of whom have since tested negative and resumed working”.

“Representative Bennie Thompson, the chairman of the congressional probe of the 6 January assault on the US Capitol, plans to run Thursday night’s hearing remotely as a result of testing positive.

“US stocks briefly headed lower following reports of the president’s diagnosis, with the S&P 500 dropping about 0.5 percent over the following 10 minutes. The index quickly retraced that loss and by mid-morning was back to near the unchanged mark on the day”.

FAKAMATALA FAKATONGA

Kuo tesi positive ‘i he Koviti 19  ‘a Joe Biden ko e palesiteni motu’a taha ‘eni ‘a ‘Amelika’.

‘Oku vaivai pe ‘a e faka’ilonga puke ‘o e palesiteni’ pea ‘oku ‘oange pe ‘a e antiviral ke ne ngāue’aki.

‘E hoko atu pe ia he ngāue ka ‘e fakamavahe’i ia ‘i he White House.

Kuo hoko ‘ene puke’ ke kaniseli ai ha’ane tulipi ki Pennsylvania ne taumu’a ke ne tuku atu ai ha palani ke kole ki he Congress ha $37 piliona ma’a e polokalama tau’i e faihia’.

Ne hū hake foki ‘a e palesiteni ki he Tuita ‘o fakamālō ki he kakai ‘i he’enau tokonga ange ki he’ene tengetange’ pea ‘oku ne sai pe.

Ne ne pehē kuo’ ne kole ki hono ngaahi kaungā politiki’ ke nau alea’i atu pe ‘ene palani’.

Ne fokotu’utu’u foki ‘e he White House ha fakataha mo e telefoni ‘ikai angamaheni mo e kau sekiulitī ‘a e palesiteni’.

E hokohoko atu pe ‘a e palesiteni ‘i he ngaue.

Faktatau ki ha lipooti ‘a e Reuters ne ‘i ai ‘eni mo e kau ma’olunga he pule’anga ‘o Baiden kuo nau ma’u ‘a e kolonamailasi’ kau ai ‘a e Vice President Kamala Harris mo e House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, ka kuo’ na sai pe kuo na foki ‘o ngāue.

New Zealand gangsters forging global networks – Customs warns

By Ruth Hill of RNZ.co.nz and is republished with permission.

A security expert warns New Zealand authorities should pay heed to a warning by Australia’s top cop that hostile foreign governments are working with organised crime groups.

Some of the cash that was seized during the searches

Cash, drugs and weapons seized during police searches. File photo. Photo: RNZ / Ana Tovey

New Zealand Customs says many traditional New Zealand gangs increasingly have global connections and it’s changed the way it works to stay ahead.

At a meeting of the Five Eyes Law Enforcement Group last month, its chair Australian Federal Police Commissioner Reece Kershaw made a startling claim that “the long shadow of organised crime and state aggression” is fuelling an increase in serious crimes.

Speaking to top figures from the New Zealand Police and crime-fighting agencies in Britain, the United States and Canada, Commissioner Reece Kershaw said transnational criminals were joining forces with unnamed hostile states to carry out espionage, fraud, child exploitation and other lucrative business.

Security analyst Dr Paul Buchanan from 36th Parallel Assessments said there was “a long-standing nexus” of organised crime and state actors, more recently in cyber-space.

“And the leaders of this are Russia and China but Israel does this, Iran does this. There are a number of countries that use the blackmarket operatives if you will, in order to achieve their mutual goals.”

Dr Buchanan, former intelligence and defense analyst and consultant to US government agencies, said the exponential increase in drugs, weapons and other illicit goods coming into New Zealand over the last decade was a completely foreseeable consequence of the Free Trade Agreement with China.

“It was the short-sightedness of trying to grab that FTA without having the law enforcement capability to interdict the vast shipments of drug precursor and weapons has led to the spate of gun violence we are seeing now,” Dr Buchanan said.

“These turf wars are about drugs.”

The number of drug interceptions of all types fluctuate from year to year but have trended up overall from a low of 452 in the first quarter of 2011 to regularly peaking at more than a 1000 in a three-month period from 2016 onward.

Between 2014 and September 2020, there were 5887 firearms, 11,265 firearms parts and 220,063 other weapons picked up at the border.

Meanwhile, Customs staff numbers remained relatively stable at about 1200 between 2008 and 2020, when they jumped to 1500 due to the new Maritime Border Order to manage the risk of Covid-19.

Security analyst Paul Buchanan of 36th Parallel Assessments

Security analyst Paul Buchanan of 36th Parallel Assessments. File photo Photo: SUPPLIED

Dr Buchanan said the lucrative drug trade had spawned some unlikely alliances.

For instance the Triads imported drugs, which were distributed by the traditional motorcycle gangs to the retail trade, which in the South Island was controlled by skin-heads who were white supremacists.

“So it’s a really nasty marriage of convenience between these actors and the goal is the same. The goal is to undermine from within the targeted society.”

However, the head of intelligence for Customs, Bruce Berry, said international best practice was to inspect between 2 and 5 percent of goods and New Zealand was “consistent with that”.

Customs had to walk a fine line between protecting the community and allowing legitimate trade, he said.

“As soon as we start clamping down on one particular risk pathway, it’s like squeezing a balloon – it pops out somewhere else. It pops out in another type of concealment or pathway.

“And so for us, it’s not the volume, obviously that presents challenges, but it’s not the volume that’s the biggest thing for us.

“It’s about using the right intelligence to put our resources in the right place.”

Berry admitted Customs’ success in catching foreign criminals in New Zealand actually accelerated the development of global crime networks.

“So we were arresting what we call ‘shore parties’, people sent to New Zealand to facilitate drug importations for example, and putting them in jail, right next to the people who were doing the distribution for them.”

Customs head of intelligence Bruce Berry. File photo Photo: RNZ / Dan Cook

As a result, Customs’ focus was now on working with overseas agencies to cut off global supply chains, he said.

It was not just foreign criminals looking to do business in New Zealand, but local gangsters were also forming global syndicates.

“We’re seeing traditional motorcycle gang members relocating themselves globally and they’re not doing it for a holiday.

“We got them in Mexico, the States, Turkey, the Arab Emirates, we’ve got them in China, we’ve got them all over the world.”

Berry said the 501 deportees from Australia involved in gangs had had a huge influence, far in excess of their small numbers, approximately 1.5 percent of the adult gang population.

“Now we’d be naive to say that some of the trade craft they have brought to New Zealand wasn’t here already.

“But they have accelerated the pace, the connectivity and the violence.”

University of Canterbury sociologist Jarrod Gilbert, who has studied gang culture extensively, said the black-market worked like the legitimate economy: where there’s demand, supply will always meet it.

The National-led government’s bid in 2011 to stop local meth manufacture (by banning cold medicines containing pseudoephedrine) had backfired, he said.

“Organised criminals didn’t just say ‘oh well we’ll pack up shop’. They looked internationally. So inadvertently we hastened this shift of introducing local criminals to large internationally organised crime syndicates.

“So there’s an argument there that that was a massive own goal.”

Customs figures show the amount of methamphetamine, ephidedrine and pseudoephidrine intercepted at the border increased from less than 455,000 grams in 2012 to more than 1.6 million grams in 2019.

In the first three months of this year, more than 823,272 grams of meth alone had already been intercepted.

New Zealand Police declined an interview.

However, in a written statement a spokesperson said transnational organised crime and cybercrime were “persistent threats, which can cause widespread harm and compromise critical parts of the economy and public sector”.

Strengthening international partnerships was a priority under New Zealand’s Transnational Organised Crime Strategy, which targeted illicit drug crime, tax evasion, flora and fauna trafficking, illegal fishing and migrant exploitation, as well as cracking down on corruption, money laundering, computer crime and identity fraud, which made these crimes possible.

Tongan community online tributes mark former Australian missionary Howard Secomb’s 100th birthday

Tributes have been pouring in on social media today in celebration of a former Australian missionary to Tonga’s 100th birthday.

Mr Howard Secomb (L) and wife Janet. Photo/Crosslight Magazine

Mr Howard Secomb was born on July 20, 1922 and had served in the kingdom in the 1950s.

The Talanoa ‘O Tonga news webpage had shared a tribute video on Facebook this morning to celebrate the birthday.

The video clip had since been shared more than 250 times and garnered more than 167 reactions.

“Happy 100th Birthday Howard Secomb. You did a great job in Tonga. God bless”, a commenter wrote under the clip.

“Happy Birthday Howard. God bless you and Janet”, another wrote.

As a Methodist minister Mr Secomb served for 14 years in Tonga, where he was president of the Free Wesleyan Church.

He was also principal of the Tupou College for boys from 1951 to 1963, reported the Crosslight magazine.

Mr Secomb’s wife Janet was born in Tonga and is the daughter of revered Methodist minister Dr Alfred Harold Wood, who was the founding principal of Tupou College.

Janet, 97, is the sister of the former Uniting Church President Rev Dr D’Arcy Wood, who was also born in Tonga and returned to the islands in 2015 to perform the coronation of the current king.

Howard Secomb was a familiar name to many Tongans today since one of the dormitories at Tupou College was named after him.

The Secombs returned to Australia at the end of 1963.

It is believed Mr Secomb was the first Palagi Free Wesleyan church missionary who had served in the kingdom in recent decades to have reached his 100th birthday.

Onus must go on businesses to lift pay of Pacific workers – commissioner

By RNZ.co.nz

Research that exposes inferior pay rates for Pacific people confirms years of complaints about inequity, the Equal Employment Opportunities commissioner says.

The majority of the Pacific Pay Gap can’t be explained and is likely due to racism or unconscious bias by employers, the study has found.

The Equal Employment Opportunities Commissioner, Saunoamaali'i  Dr Karanina Sumeo

Saunoamaali’i Karanina Sumeo hopes businesses and the government will use the data to bring about meaningful change. Photo: supplied

The Auckland University of Technology research, released today by the Human Rights Commission, analysed the job characteristics, education levels, number of household dependants, and regions where people lived.

For Pasifika men, those factors accounted for only 27 percent of the pay gap, meaning almost three-quarters of the pay gap couldn’t be explained.

For Pasifika women, 61 percent of the pay gap couldn’t be explained.

The Equal Employment Opportunities commissioner, Saunoamaali’i Karanina Sumeo, said the research provided numbers for years of inequity that Pacific people have complained of.

“It is horrifying and it’s the sort of numbers we would really like business to pay attention to in terms of how we go forward and it’s also the sort of data we would like government to pay attention to…

“We are talking about people’s livelihoods; the hardship facing their children.”

She said under the Human Rights Act it was unlawful for employers or anyone acting on their behalf to offer less favourable pay and conditions to some job candidates.

It was a basic human right to be paid in a fair manner, she told Morning Report.

From interviews and surveys Sumeo said Pacific people had made clear they were prepared to complete more training or upskill but despite becoming more productive in their roles they did not receive pay rises.

“You become more expert at your task but the pay doesn’t come with it so we need to align those things together.”

Sumeo said not many Pacific people had the time to network because often they were working two jobs or they were needed at home.

There was also a low union membership rate among Pacific people and this needed to change so they weren’t trying to improve their job situation by themselves.

She was also in favour of legislation for pay transparency so workplaces would be required to collect ethnicity data.

“To take the onus off Pacific people to stand up for themselves and put the duty on our businesses, our employers to do the right thing.”

With Auckland having the bulk of Pacific workers (71 percent) the city’s businesses should have managers who possessed “culture competence”.

She said one example was that a Pacific person found it intimidating to be interviewed by a panel of four people.

Family sought shelter in basement after shots fired at Grey Lynn house

By RNZ.co.nz and is republished with permission

Hearing bursts of gunfire on a quiet suburban street was terrifying for residents, a Grey Lynn man says.

Grey Lynn incident - man shoots at house before being shot by police

Police at the scene in Grey Lynn this morning. Photo: RNZ / Felix Walton

Auckland police will be making inquiries in Grey Lynn today to make sense of how a man came to be shooting at his own house which was empty.

Armed police swarmed Wallingford Street shortly after 5pm yesterday after being told a man in an agitated state was standing on the street with a gun.

They shot and critically injured the man, who they say pointed his gun at officers when they arrived.

Superintendent Karyn Malthus said the man ignored the police’s instructions.

“Police went forward towards the man and called upon him several times to put down his firearm, however, he raised it towards police staff and was shot at that time. He was shot once.

“We understand that this will be an incredible shock to the community and residents of the Grey Lynn community on what would have seemed like an ordinary Monday night.

“We also want to reassure them that there is no ongoing risk.”

The 32-year-old man is now in hospital.

The man’s neighbour, Graeme Gunthorp, said he and his family huddled in the basement until the shooting stopped.

Gunthorp, who is on the Waitematā Local Board, lives next door to the man who was shot by police and called them after hearing some gun shots.

Once he realised that there were gun shots they bundled their children up and did not want to be anywhere near what was happening outside, he told Morning Report.

His children are aged one and three and the first 10 minutes of being in hiding were shocking, he said, with the children just wanting to be hugged but he needed to stay on the phone to the police.

He heard two clusters of gunshots – an initial burst of six shots and about 10 minutes later, the police warned him there might be further shots and he heard another two.

“I’ve been to a shooting range, I’ve fired guns on a farm but to hear it on a quiet suburban street was pretty shocking.”

Early on in the incident he could hear yelling from the assailant and he was worried abuse was being directed at the neighbour on the other side. He managed to ring all the nearby residents and ensure they were OK.

There have been incidents with the person before but none involving gunfire. He was well known to neighbours and the police, Gunthorp said.

“We’re happy that the police have resolved this, we feel a lot better about the situation and we’ve got to recognise that Auckland is still incredibly safe and Grey Lynn is a fantastic place to live.”

“We’re happy that the police have resolved this” – Neighbour Graeme Gunthorp duration3′ :47″ 

from Morning Report

Add to playlist 

Download

“We’re happy that the police have resolved this” – Neighbour Graeme Gunthorp

Police intend on talking to locals about what happened.

The scene has been guarded overnight.

A police officer at a cordon on the corner of Murdoch Road and Dickens Street, Grey Lynn, on Tuesday 19 July 2022. Police had shot and critically injured a man who they say pointed a gun at officers on Wallingford St on Monday evening.

An officer at a cordon in Grey Lynn, near where a man was shot and injured by police. Photo: RNZ / Felix Walton

Adding mouthpiece on conch shell new height in reviving extinct Tongan musical instruments

Blowing a conch shell could now be easier than ever for Tongans and could produce more powerful sounds because it can be done through a side attached mouthpiece.

Tu’ifonualava Kaivelata with his attached mouthpiece conch shell. Photo/Kalino Lātū

The accessory was installed on the whorl of the shell close to its end. Traditionally, blowing the conch in Tonga was made through a hole opened at its end point or by the side of the conch but there was no mouth piece attached.

The new attachment had been described as a new height in an attempt to bring back Tongan musical instruments which are either extinct or dying out.

The creator of the accessory, Tu’ifonualava Kaivelata, said the mouthpiece played an important role in the conch blowing performance.

Tu’ikaiveleta’s conch shell with a new mouthpiece. Photo/Kalino Lātū

“It enabled the blower to place the conch shell in a way in which its mouth faced their listeners from the opposite direction”, Kaivelata said.

Normally, the hole for blowing at the end point of the conch means the blower faced the shell’s  mouth either up or down or on the left or right hand side of the blower.

“In other words the listeners could not directly see the mouth of the conch in that way and the sound wave will not travel towards listeners if they are at the opposite direction”. Kaivelata told Kaniva News.

He said the mouth of the conch shell should always face listeners who normally stood or sat opposite the blower.

“It is the same idea with what we see in the brass instruments like the trumpet. The mouth is at the front facing listeners from the opposite direction”.

The new mouthpiece also allowed the blower to adjust their lips in a way that could let them release a huge amount of air into the shell, causing it to sound louder, Kaivelata said.

“You can see it is attractive and it makes the conch shell looks fancy”.

Māori conch shell with its mouthpiece on its end point. Photo/Museum of New Zealand

Kaivelata, who was currently running training programmein South Auckland for young people who are  interested in old Tongan musical instruments, said the mouthpiece was his own creation.

“I have looked at other ethnicities and the way they blow the conch and they were the same as the original Tongan method of blowing it through a hole at the end point,” he said.

Extinct traditional musical instruments

Other dying and extinct traditional musical instruments Kaivelata was working on were the fangufangu (panpipe), tuki pitu, mimiha and ‘utete.

Dr Tēvita Ka’ili, a Tongan Professor of Anthropology & Cultural Sustainability at Brigham Young University, Hawai’i, said he and other academic colleagues supported works in progress to revive some of the Tongan musical instruments.

Dr Ka’ili said he knew about Kaivelata’s works to revive the old Tongan instruments and he supported him.

Japanese conch shell with its mouthpiece on its end point. Photo/Wikipedia

“Things are evolving and mostly changing from time to time”, Dr Ka’ili told Kaniva News in Tongan.

He said the good thing about Kaivelata’s works was that it could lead to more innovations and creativities to better the old Tongan instruments.

The conch shell blowing

Will Carleton McKern, an academic researcher of Tongan culture, described the blowing of conch shells by Tongans as “a purely recreational activity”.

‘The shells are of three sizes, each producing a distinct tone, and are usually blown three at a time, producing a minor chord corresponding to the lowest, second and fourth note in the Tongan scale,” he said.

Professor Richard Michael Moyle of Auckland University, who has researched several aspects of Tongan music and cultures, described the conch shell used in the kingdom as “a non-musical device functioning to attract attention to a non-musical phenomenon”.

Moyle said the conch was used nationally as a signalling device on return from successful fishing trips especially for shark and bonito and for announcing various meetings in the village.

“Its use as a musical instrument appears to be confined to cricket matches, where groups of them are blown, always by males, to announce the game and to create and sustain general excitement during the match”.

The Japanese conch shell known as Horagai and Maori known as Putatara used mouthpieces attached through the end point.

Tongan journalist found courage when facing the King’s fury

This story was first published by Te Waha Nui.

A new book is expected to share the experiences of a Tongan journalist ordered to attend a royal audience after a story he published infuriated the King.

Sione Tu’itahi. Photo/Supplied

Former Tonga Chronicle reporter Sione Tu’itahi had published a story about the late King Taufa’āhau Tupou IV’s planned international tour, revealing details of flights, destinations and schedules – things the King would not expect to be made public.

Tu’itahi said he felt overwhelmed when he received a message telling him to come to the palace, but he found the courage knowing he had not done anything wrong.

The new book, which is still at the outline stage, will also feature his encounter with the King’s secretary before they entered the palace to meet the king.

Tu’itahi said when he arrived at the palace office, the secretary appeared to have blamed him for releasing the information, making the King angry.

But when the King asked Tu’itahi why he printed the details of the tour, Tu’itahi told him they had been given to him by his royal secretary for publication.

“The king appeared to be angry with me at first but when I told him what had actually happened, he looked at his secretary”, Tu’itahi said in Tongan.

Tu’itahi said the King warned them it was dangerous to publicise such information because some people might use it to target his flight.

Tu’itahi, who was also the former freedom officer for the Pacific Islands News Association (PINA), said while he was working as a journalist, journalism codes of ethics and media freedom were taken seriously.

King Taufa’āhau Tupou IV. Photo/Wikipedia

He said some people did not like him because of his exercising the right to freedom of expression and truthfulness.

“I told them: ‘Kautama kapau te tau toe pikoua kitautolu ‘e pikoua ai pe fonua. (“Guys if we do not do our duty seriously the country will be in danger.)

“We have to wake our leaders up.”

Tu’itahi, a former lecturer at Auckland’s Massey University said he and other former journalists agreed to put their experiences into the book.

The Tongan-based New Zealand health promoter, who was recently appointed the new President of the International Union for Health Promotion and Education (IUHPE), told Te Waha Nui he wished there was a journal in place for retired journalists to share their experiences.

“There were some issues that were in the interest of the journalists. But when time passes and more of such issues happened they became a matter of public interest and we need to share them,” Tu’itahi said in Tongan.

Limapō Hopoate, a Tongan journalist at the Queensland’s 4EP ethnic community radio, said she could not wait to read Tu’itahi’s story in the new book.

“It is always interesting to read about the experiences of our Tongan former journalists because we learn from it. There are not many recorded items which can show such experience from our own Tongan reporters.”