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Tonga’s border remains closed until July 8 as PM extends state of emergency

Tonga border is expected to remain closed to non-essential travel until next month.

The government has extended its Covid-19 state of emergency until the 8th of July subject to further review.

A nightly curfew now starts at 12am until 5am, while funeral gatherings shall be restricted to a total of 50 people indoors and 100 people outdoors with an authorised officer to be present throughout.

Social distancing restriction remains in place.

The Prime Minister said the new announcement for the Covid-19 measure was intended to “prevent or minimise risk and the loss of human life to Covid-19.”

“Therefore I hereby renew the declaration of State of Emergency that was made on 15 May.”

The statement from the Prime Minister’s office comes amidst calls from Tongans stranded overseas for the government to lift its border restrictions.

About more than 4,000 Tongans were currently stranded overseas.

This included a 29-strong squad who have been sleeping on the floor of an Auckland church in New Zealand and surviving off donated food.

The team from Ha’apai arrived in New Zealand on 3 March, intending to spend a month playing club rugby teams around the North Island, before heading home, the Guardian reports.

As Kaniva News reported last week Dr Collin Tukuitonga, who is Associate Dean Pacific at the University of Auckland Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences said Tonga should be a priority in re-opening quarantine free travel.

He said the risk of introducing Covid-19 into New Zealand from the islands was near-zero and when New Zealand had been Covid-19-free for 28 days, the risk to the islands was near zero.

The kingdom has no confirmed cases of covid-19 to date.

Tonga joins voices raised in support of besieged USP Vice Chancellor, Solomons calls for regional representatives to “wake up”

Tonga has joined calls by a number of Pacific nations in calling on USP’s pro-Vice Chancellor from pursuing an investigation of Vice Chancellor Pal  Ahluwalia.

The dispute between the two Vice Chancellors has torn the USP campus apart, with many staff and students supporting professor Ahluwalia.

Ahluwalia, a Canadian, uncovered serious governance and management anomalies which led to an external audit by accountants BDO.

As detailed in our accompanying story, this uncovered irregular governance and management issues that predated the current vice-chancellor’s appointment.

Writing in the Samoa Observer, Soli Wilson reported that Professor Ahluwalia was then told by the pro-Vice Chancellor Winston Thompson that he was now being investigated for misconduct.

Professor Ahluwalia has since been suspended.

More than 500 members at USP have signed a petition in support of Professor Ahluwalia, USP Student and Staff Association representative Elizabeth Reade Fong said.

“The biggest victims are the students,” Fong said.

“The council must intervene on students’ behalf and Thompson.”

Islands Business reported that Nauru’s President Lionel Aingimea has called for an end to the attempts to remove Professor Ahluwalia.

He said the moves had been  instigated by Fiji-based members of the university council.

“As the incoming Chancellor of the USP and one of the heads of state who own the University as well as being an alumnus, I am disturbed at the manner in which this matter is being played out,” President Aingimea wrote in a letter that was circulated to all USP  Council members.

Samoa’s Minister of Education has asked for the investigation of Professor Ahluwalia to be dropped.

And that country’s Deputy Prime Minister, Fiame Naomi Mata’afa  has urged the Member Countries of the USP, especially those in Council, to be more vigilant about their role on Council and take responsibilities for the saga in Fiji.

“Hopefully with this issue, the regional representation might wake up and pay some attention to what is happening at USP,” she said.

The main points

  • Tonga has joined calls by a number of Pacific nations in calling on USP’s pro-vice chancellor from pursuing an investigation of Vice Chancellor Pal
  • The dispute between the two Vice Chancellors has torn the USP campus part, with many staff and students supporting professor Ahluwalia.

For more information

USP students, staff call on council to drop ‘harassment’ of Ahluwalia

Nauru President calls for an end to USP saga

Deputy P.M. says decision of U.S.P. Executive Committee “nonsense”

Kaniva mediawatch: What media around the world are saying about Tonga this week

Tongan borders to open?

The Tongan government will announced its decision on whether to open its borders on Friday.

Tonga has remained free of Covid-29.

Tongans and others who work in Tonga stuck overseas are asking for special flights to take them back into the Kingdom. However, that has been delayed because government has stated it is not ready to cater for the influx of returning passengers.

Some Pacific countries have already started flying their own back into the countries, like Vanuatu, Solomons, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Cook Islands and Fiji.

Tongan workers head for warmer climes

Tongan seasonal workers in Australia have begun migrating to farms in the warmer parts of Australia as the winter season reduces harvests and working hours.

A seasonal worker in Tasmania told Matangi Tonga that more than 30 Tongans were set to migrate to Queensland this weekend.

The Australian government changed the rules governing seasonal workers during the Coronavirus pandemic to accommodate seasonal workers who were unable to return home because of the border closure.

The National Secretary of The Australian Workers’ Union, Daniel Walton said that during the coronavirus lockdown some Tongan workers were completely unemployed and relied on local assistance.

Chinese doctor honoured

A Chinese doctor is being inducted into the ‘Atenisi Institute’s Hall of Critics at a ceremony in Nuku’alofa tonight.

Ai Fen, the head of Emergency Services at Wuhan Central Hospital, was reportedly prevented by authorities from alerting the world about the severity of the Covid-19 outbreak as early as December.

The university dean at ‘Atenisi, Michael Horowitz, said the institute was the first in the world to award Dr Fen.

Dr Horowitz said Dr Fen was regarded as a national hero in China because of her courage and bravery to hold the government to account.

Prizewinning photo taken in Tonga

Brisbane underwater photographer Jasmine Carey has won the grand prize of $172,140 in the Hamdan International Photography award with her image of a humpback whale and its two-week old calf off the coast of Tonga.

The photograph was taken Vava’u in Tonga on July 30, 2019.

The calf was thought to be about two weeks old.

Nurses’ choir praised

World Health Organisation Assembly Director General Tedros Ghebreyesus has  praised nurses from Vaiola Hospital in Nuku’alofa who were due to sing at a WHO event in Switzerland.

“When we originally planned this year’s World Health Assembly, we invited that choir from Tonga — a choir of nurses and midwives — to perform and to mark the International Year of the Nurse and the Midwife.”

“COVID-19 has deprived us of that privilege,” the Director General said.

The nurses group had sung for the WHO leader during his visit to Pacific last year, sparking the invitation.

The nurses choir had prepared a special song for the Director General, but it’s keeping the details under wraps until they can perform it.

“We are keeping on to the song and waiting on a good time to release it,” she said.

Author “could have done better”

The Dutch historian and author Rutger Bregman has responded to backlash from the Pacific Islander community about his re-telling of a Tongan story, saying that he “could have done better”.

As reported in Kaniva News, Bregman’s latest book, Humankind: A Hopeful History, contains the story of six Tongan boys who were shipwrecked on ‘Ata Island for 15 months, before being rescued by an Australian sea captain in 1966.

An extract of the story garnered millions of readers when it was published by The Guardian and result in a film deal for the story.

Mr Bregman said criticisms of him not including the spirituality, culture, and the background of the boys as reasons why they survived so long on the island were fair.

Great Britain’s motives for Treaty of Friendship were far from pure and had far more to do with Germany than Tonga

This week Tongans enjoyed a public holiday to mark Emancipation Day.

The event marks the abolition of serfdom by King George Tupou I on June 4, 1862. It also marks the day the series of Treaties of Friendship with Britain expired on June 4, 1970.

The original Treaty – and the Constitution that preceded it – have  been regarded by many historians as being key to protecting  the kingdom’s sovereignty.

The reality was far more complex and while Tonga and the United Kingdom would retain close ties, Tonga’s first Treaty was actually signed with Germany.

Britain’s motives for befriending the tiny island kingdom were not exactly pure. The British had been reluctant to become involved  in the Pacific and had resisted calls for protection  by the Hawai’ian royal family, which feared – correctly – that their kingdom would  be overrun  by the Americans.

They had also held out for as long as possible against entreaties by Cakobau, who ruled the eastern confederacy of Viti Levu, from any involvement in Fiji. Instead, the British government spent a lot of time batting away demands by the Australian colonies (and later New Zealand) to be allowed to seize this or that island. Indeed historian David McIntyre has argued that the Treaty of Friendship kept “Tonga from the clutches of New Zealand.”

What finally drove the British to act in the Pacific was the arrival of the Germans. By the end of the 19th century, Germany had influence in Tonga and had colonies in Samoa, German New Guinea and Micronesia, all linked by sea lanes to Germany’s colony in Tsingtao, China. The Germans were politically astute and worked hard to establish good relationships with King George Tupou I.

In 1875 Tupou I promulgated  a constitution influenced to a degree  by the Methodist missionary (and later Prime Minister) Shirley Baker which established Tonga as an independent state and brought an end to 30 years of civil war.

It has been argued that the constitution helped prevent Tonga being colonised  because neither the European powers  or the United States could justify invading the kingdom on the grounds of saving the locals from oppression. After all, the constitution guaranteed the right to life, property, equality and freedom of expression. However, Britain was initially reluctant to recognise Tonga’s status, but the Germans were keen to establish a foothold  and treated the kingdom, diplomatically at least, as an equal.

In 1876, a year after the Constitution was issued, Tonga signed a treaty of friendship with Germany. As New Zealand historian James Baade writes, Baker saw the German treaty as pivotal:

“ ‘Should the German Empire make such a treaty with Tonga,’ he wrote, ‘it will be a stepping stone of the acknowledgement of Tonga by other great Powers.’ . . . . at the 1877 ratification ceremony for the German treaty [the king said]: ‘in consequence of the ratification of the Treaty Tonga has become a nation amongst the family of nations […] So it is a full country today . . . .it has lifted up Tonga to the standard of the other countries.”

When Crown Prince Tevita ‘Unga, died in New Zealand in May 1880, his body was returned to Tonga on the German frigate SMS Nautilus. German marines acted as pallbearers and the Nautilus fired a salute during the funeral.

Britain therefore began to engage with Tonga and signed the first of a series of “treaties of friendship” between the two kingdoms in 1897. The last would not be signed until 1968, only two years before Tonga fully regained its independence.  The treaties gave Great Britain control of many government (or, in reality, royal) decision making on issues such as the kingdom’s relations with other countries. The 1879 Treaty, declared that:

“there shall be perpetual peace and friendship between Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, her heirs and successors, and His Majesty the King of Tonga, his heirs and successors, and between their respective dominions and subjects.”

It also gave Great Britain jurisdiction over British subjects in Tonga, in exchange for the granting of ‘rights, privileges and immunities’ for Tongan subjects in British territories as ‘subjects of the most favoured nation.’

The 1900 Treaty of Friendship, signed by King George Tupou II, clearly reflected the British concern with Germany.

The British were deeply worried about Tongan harbours being used as German naval bases which could threaten Fiji. The 1900 treaty gave the British access to Tongan harbours in return for British protection from ‘any hostile attacks.’ Further, it stated:

“Her Majesty [Queen Victoria] will at all times to the utmost of her power take whatever steps may be necessary to protect the Government and territory of Tonga from any external hostile attacks; and territory of Tonga from any external hostile attacks; and for this or similar purposes Her Majesty’s officers shall at all times have free access to the waters and harbours of Tonga; and the King of Tonga hereby agrees to lease to Her Majesty a suitable site or sites in any harbour or harbours in Tonga for the purposes of establishing a station or stations for the coaling and repair of Her Majesty’s ships, and for the erection of any military works for fortification which may be necessary or desirable for the protection of such stations, and will at all times to the utmost of His power co-operate with and aid Her Majesty’s naval or military forces in defence of such station or stations.”

In the end there was never any military threat to Fiji or Tonga  by the Germans, although when war broke out in 1914, the British agent in Tonga was alarmed by the level of pro-German sentiment in the kingdom. The royal palace had  been built by the German company Goddefroy and German goods predominated in the shops. It was clear that while Britain had been concerned to secure favourable terms to assert her military presence in the Islands, she had not worked quite as hard at ensuring her commercial dominance in some places.

The German navy had virtually no presence in the Pacific, except when it was sailing to and from its base in China. An unarmed exploration vessel and a small warship were assigned to what was grandly called the Australian station, but which actually covered the entire central Pacific. Neither ship arrived before the war  began.

The main points

  • This week Tongans enjoyed a public holiday to mark Emancipation Day.
  • The event marks the abolition of serfdom by King George Tupou I on June 4, 1862. It also marks the day the Treaty of Friendship with Britain expired on June 4, 1970.

For more information

David McIntyre. Winding up the British Empire in the Pacific Islands. Oxford University Press, 2014.

James Baade. Germans in Tonga 1855-1960.

Amanda Lee (2019) Tau: A brief history of the Tongan military from the late nineteenth century to the present. MA thesis. University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, 2019.

Heather Devere, Simon Mark & Jane Verbitsky. ‘The language of friendship in international treaties.’ Paper presented to the IXth Congress of the French Association of Political Science, Toulouse, 2007.

 

Banned Utah-based lawyer wants sitting MPs replaced by women, says kingdom’s democracy reforms a “laughing matter”

A US-based Tongan lawyer who was banned from entering the kingdom in 1992, claims sitting MPs should be replaced by women because they might have  better ideas.

Filia Uipi, who lives in Salt Lake City, told an online conference hosted by Kele’a Voice that Tonga’s democracy was unbalanced and new people needed to be elected to Parliament before voters could expect any changes.

Uipi said people complained about politics, but they kept electing the same MPs.

“Let’s try women,” he said.

He said MPs should have the ability to help reduce the economic disparity between the lower and the upper echelons.

He said there were huge financial troubles in Tonga which recalled the importance of having in the leadership people who lived with Christian core values.

He said the Late ‘Akilisi Pohiva advocated this.

Uipi said Tonga’s 2010 democratic reform was a “laughing matter” and that democracy never happened.

“Stupid”

He said the democratic reforms were “stupid” in the eyes of the world.

He said the system allowed nine noble members to represent 33 members of the king’s nobility while only 17 people were elected to represent about 100,000 people.

He wanted the people to change their minds about what was regarded as normal.

“It has been said ‘blessed are the humbles for they shall inherit the land’,” Uipi said.

“It’s no longer that. It is now ‘Blessed are the humbles for they shall be stamped on.’ ”

He said the late president of the Free Wesleyan Church, Dr ‘Amanaki Havea and the Late Bishop Patelesio Finau of the Catholic Church as well as Rev Siupeli Taliai were advocates of political change in Tonga. They were people who have core values.

Uipi said the American Constitution was based on human rights principles and said people should be free and happy.

He said this should be the basis of Tonga’s democracy in the future.

When people were oppressed they tried to change their situation.

“We cannot stay in the status quo,” Uipi said.

“The conservatives tried to hold on to the culture and traditions, but our youth and children need change.

“It is the survival of the fittest

“Let’s look at the French Revolution. Destroyed.

“The Tsar of Russia. Same thing.

“Look at the Shah of Iran. Where are they? They have gone.

“Tonga needs to move with the chariot of time.

“If not than the business people’s saying will be true. The worst is set to come. I hope not.”

Uipi was not allowed to disembark from his aircraft when he arrived in Tonga in 1992 to speak at the first ever meeting organised by the Late ‘Akilisi Pohiva and the Democrats.

The meeting was known as the Convention on Democracy and Constitution.

Papers read during the convention are regarded as the basis of the later push for democracy in Tonga which came to fruition in the 2010 political reforms.

The main points

  • A US-based Tongan lawyer who was banned from entering the kingdom in 1992, claims sitting MPs should be replaced by women because they might have better ideas.
  • Filia Uipi, who lives in in Salt Lake City, told an online conference hosted by Kele’a Voice that Tonga’s democracy was unbalanced and new people needed to be elected to Parliament before voters could expect any changes.

King refused to meet with late Pōhiva because he did not follow through on agreements – PM

King Tupou VI refused to meet with former Prime Minister ‘Akilisi Pōhiva because he did not do things he had agreed to do, it has been claimed.

King Tupou VI shakes hands with Speaker Lord Fakafanua and PM ‘Akilisi Pōhiva. Photo/Tonga Parliament

Prime Minister Pōhiva Tu’i’onetoa also said he had been told the late Hon. Pōhiva gave inaccurate reports to the media about his meetings with the monarch.

“The king told me in our first audience there was a lot of things which they discussed and agreed with ‘Akilisi Pōhiva, but ‘Akilisi did not do most of them,” Hon. Tu’i’onetoa told Kaniva News.

“The king said ‘Akilisi also told media things different from what they met about.

“This was the reason why he did not want to meet with ‘Akilisi again.”

The constitution requires them to meet.

Clause 50A (3) of the constitution says: “The Prime Minister shall regularly and as required report to the King upon matters that have arisen with the government and upon the state of the country.”

READ MORE:

In April last year we reported that King Tupou VI had rejected requests for an audience by Prime Minister  Pōhiva.

Hon. Pōhiva told Kaniva News  in an interview he had sent a number of requests but he was told the king was busy. He said he wanted to know why the king refused to meet him.

It was understood the Prime Minister and the king had not met for the 18 months prior to our story.

A source told us the king may have received wrong information about government matters because he had refused to meet with the Prime Minister.

The source said king Tupou VI had been unavailable for meetings with Hon. Pōhiva since he dissolved Parliament in 2017. The government was re-elected in a snap election.

The Palace Office could not be reached for comment.

Our report drew a strong response from PTOA supporters who took it further on social media and criticised the king.

However, until now  there has been no concrete evidence on why the king did not want to meet Hon. Pōhiva.

The main points

  • King Tupou VI refused to meet with former Prime Minister ‘Akilisi Pohiva because he did not do things he had agreed to do, it has been claimed.
  • Prime Minister Pohiva Tu’i’onetoa also said he had been told the late Hon. Pohiva gave inaccurate reports to the media about his meetings with the monarch.

Tongan scholars overseas succeeding despite Covid-19 restrictions

Tongan scholars overseas continue to succeed with their studies despite the obstacles faced due to COVID-19 restrictions.

About eighty Tongan students under the Australia Awards Scholarships are studying in Fiji, Samoa, Vanuatu and Australia. Each has faced challenges, overcoming them with support and perseverance.

Students at USP, Laucala Campus in Suva have had to cope with inconsistent internet, extra assignments to replace class activities, and sharing laptops with their own children, which led to delayed communications with lecturers and courses coordinators. Nevertheless, they have adapted and found ways to succeed.

Lupe Vaka’uta who is studying for her Bachelor of Engineering at the USP Campus in Suva, has struggled to complete group assignments due to curfews and social distancing restrictions. But she is finding ways around these obstacles with the help of technology and her fellow students.

“Having friends helps me, personally, cope,” Lupe says. “We encourage each other to keep us motivated, because now that we no longer have classes to attend, we tend to relax a bit but we are mindful of due dates and tests and exams.”

Hehea Tukuafu Vaioleti juggles studying at the University of Adelaide with caring for her two young children with the help of her husband. She has faced challenges including slow internet connections, her laptop crashing prior to an assignment falling due, and her young children “distracting me every 5 minutes.”

“Regardless of the challenges faced through COVID-19, there has been an amazing support system,” says Hehea, who has received mentoring through the Australian Government’s Women’s Leadership Initiative, as well as support from the University of Adelaide including food vouchers, family support, internet, computer, and rent assistance.

“[This] has helped me realize that success requires collaboration and a positive mindset to achieve anything regardless of the situation.”

Other students also acknowledged the support from their families and the Australian Government for helping them overcome these challenges. Mele Inu Filise from the University of Technology, Sydney said COVID-19 was a lesson to be learned and that students should appreciate what they had, because they did not know what would happen tomorrow.

“We just have to have faith and persistence just as our studies.  There will never be a NO, there will always be a way for circumstances to work but we just have to sit, think, evaluate, and put forward a strategy,” Meleinu said.

“Almost nothing works on the first try, but we just have to keep reflecting and focus, then try again.”

New navigation charts bring economic and maritime safety benefits to Tonga

Navy disaster relief vessels and other large ships will no longer rely on old fashioned plumb lines and charts measuring in fathoms to enter some of Tonga’s waters, as they have done since the 1800s.

 

A partnership between Land Information New Zealand (LINZ), the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, and Pacific governments is coming to fruition with the publication of new electronic navigational charts for the Kingdom of Tonga.

The new charts, created using hydrographic surveys of the undersea world around Tonga, will be vital if large ships are to navigate the reefs and hidden rocks safely. They also ensure compliance with international maritime regulations.

Ms Kelela Tonga, Director of the Marine and Ports Division at Tonga’s Ministry of Infrastructure, says the charts are of great importance for the safety of navigation of all vessels.

“The production of these charts is a milestone for the future of safe shipping within Tongan waters,” she said.

As well as opening up economic benefits for Tonga, the new ENCs will greatly assist New Zealand’s Pacific aid efforts. For the Royal New Zealand Navy (which surveyed Nuku’alofa in 2015 for the project), the ability to assist Pacific Island neighbours in a natural disaster requires significant pre-planning and an up to date knowledge of harbour approaches, port facilities and other potential landing sites.

“Transporting humanitarian aid, personnel and equipment from New Zealand across the expanse of the South West Pacific to the Islands is the easy part,” said Maritime Component Commander, Commodore Mat Williams.

“It is often the last few miles that pose the greatest challenges. To deliver assistance from the sea to those in need means we need complete trust in all the navigational tools at our disposal.

He said getting disaster relief to the right people, at the right time is a key role of the New Zealand Navy in the Pacific.

“If the worst was to happen, the new ENCs now give us increased confidence in accessing other locations around Tonga for the delivery and distribution of aid.”

In 2019, New Zealand’s High Commissioner to Tonga Her Excellency Ms Tiffany Babington delivered thirty thousand gigabytes of data from the survey work to the Tongan government. The data featured never-before seen images of the sea floor, previously uncharted rocks and reefs along with a number of interesting geological features including a small underwater volcano.

New Zealand, through LINZ, is responsible for the production and maintenance of nautical charts for the Kingdom of Tonga, Niue, Tokelau, Cook Islands and Samoa through the Pacific Regional Navigation Initiative (PRNI), which helps these nations to meet their international maritime obligations.

Lavulavus killing whale watching industry claims Sika, as experienced operator says new licenses put extra pressure on whales

Leader of the Opposition, Semisi Sika, has accused the current and former Ministers of Tourism of killing the whale watching industry in Vava’u.

Tourism MInister ‘Akosita Lavulavu, Former Tourism Minister ‘Etuate Lavulavu, Another Former Tourism Minister and Opposition Leader Sēmisi Sika

Hon. Sika said the former Minister of Tourism, Etuate Lavulavu, approved more than 20 whale watching licenses before he was removed from office.

He said when he replaced Hon. Lavulavu he stopped his license policy and restricted the number of operators.

He said that when Akosita Lavulavu was appointed to the Tourism Ministry she revived the previous policy.

“But suddenly Akosita stopped it early this year and restricted the licensing again,” Hon. Sika said.

He claimed the sudden reversal of policy was because of the king’s concern about the situation.

READ MORE:

As Kaniva News reported last night, the whale watching industry has been in turmoil  since the government revoked a number of licenses earlier this year.

The Tourism Ministry said the action was designed to protect the country’s humpback whales by reducing the number of people in contact with the animals each year.

Vava’u Tourism Association secretary Brenda Cox, whose company lost its license, said Akosita Lavulavu had pulled the licenses of six experienced operators and gave them to  inexperienced new operators.

“If the Ministry of Tourism is concerned for conservation and sustainability, then why does the Minister state that her actions were based on the conservation of whales by reducing boat numbers?” Cox asked.

“She has revoked six license holders operating nine boats and replaced them with six new operators to operating 12 boats.

“This actually increases pressure on the whales.”

“I was on the board which helped draft the 2013 Whale Watch Regulations now in place.”

Vava’u’s whale watching industry is suffering from cancellations for the whale watching season which runs from June to October.

Neiafu town office Vava Lapota told Kaniva News the whale businesses had told him most of their customers had cancelled.

It has been estimated that Pacific Island economies have lost nearly $2 billion as the result of the Covid-19 pandemic. Tourist industries have been particularly badly hit.

Kaniva News has contacted the Lavulavus for comment.

The main points

  • Leader of the Opposition, Semisi Sika, has accused the current and former Ministers of Tourism of killing the whale watching industry in Vava’u.
  • Sika said the former Minister of Tourism, Etuate Lavulavu, approved more than 20 whale watching licenses before he was removed from office

Drugs found hidden in nappy during raid lead to conviction for possessing methamphetamine

A woman who tried to hide drugs in a nappy has been convicted in the Supreme Court of possessing methamphetamine and trying to bribe a police officer.

Ma’ata Pouono was found guilty of possession of methamphetamine and trying to bribe a member a policeman to take her home rather than take her to the Central Police Station to process her arrest.

Pouono  pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Constable Kalosi Tapueluelu told the court that on May 15 2018 he had received information that Pouono was selling methamphetamine at her home at Lapaha and that she was hiding the drug in a nappy which she kept in a rubbish bag.

A police raid on the Pouono’s house found the nappy with two packets of methamphetamine in it.

Cash totaling TP$1366 was also found.

At the time of the raid five of the accused’s eight  children were in the house. The youngest child was about two years old.

The court was told that while being escorted to Nuku’alofa, the accused said to the officers in the police vehicle: “Guys, what if you go with the money and I go back home to my children?”

Officer Tu’utafaiva replied: “No, we will finish our work on you.”

In her evidence, Pouono, who was eight months’ pregnant at the time of the arrest, said she had made TP$1000 by selling tapa cloth.

She said the drugs belonged to her husband, who was in jail. She claimed he had brought back TP$5000 from Australia and that the TP$366 was left over from that.

In his summing up, Judge Niu said he was satisfied beyond reasonable doubt, that the accused was knowingly in possession of methamphetamine.

She was found guilty on both charges.