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Nukuleka new community boat aims to help end overfishing

The Nukuleka community has launched a new boat authorities hope will help end the overfishing that has decimated the Hahake fish stocks.

The TP$30,000 worth 4.8 metre long boat which can carry up to eight people was funded by MEIDECC.

Nukuleka’s District Officer Sitiveni Fe’ao reportedly said the boat was brought in as part of a campaign to patrol and safeguard the Special Management Areas – which it enabled communities to have greater control over fishing activities in nearby waters

As Kaniva news reported recently, the Minister of Education whose constituency was part of Fanga’uta lagoon and Nukuleka seas claimed some fishermen have fished illegally in the area.

He said these fishermen used blast fishing.

The Minister said people in this area found few fish in the sea because of this type of dangerous fishing.

The new boat was launched by the Minister of Finance Dr Pōhiva Tui’onetoa.

The crew for the boat had been training before their campaign began.

Two men turn themselves into Police after Kolomotu‘a teen’s death

Two men aged 22 and 19 turned themselves in after a seriously injured man was found 20 kilometres away from where he lived.

The victim has been identified as 19-year-old Olikoni Tu’ihalangingie Lolohea of Kolomotu’a.

As Kaniva news reported yesterday, he was found on a road in Ha’atafu on Sunday before he died in Vaiola hospital the following day.

While Police are continuing their investigation into the incident, friends and family posted tributes to the “beautiful soul” on Facebook.

“If Tonga is supposed to [be] the paradise islands. then how does this happened? they …. dumped him in uta like it was nothing. his face wasn’t recognizable when he was found. The radio had to announce if any family was missing there son.he’s from my neck of the village old town kolomotua. my condolences to the family..R.I.P..Olikoni tuihalangingie lolohea,” one wrote.

“I love you so much  ‘Olikoni words can’t describe how lost I am to here that you are gone. Never in my wildest dreams would I ever have expected him to need a beautiful soul like you so early in your life you will be with us always,” another person wrote in Tongan.

A cousin posted: ” I don’t know who would be so heartless to beat someone near to death and leave them clinging for their life in the middle of nowhere ?

As a ‘Teacher’ your students becomes your children. As a ‘Mother’ your children are your heartbeat. Rest in God’s Eternal Love ‘Olikoni Lolohea.

I will always remember you as the young blonde boy whom the girls in the class secretly admired ? but you were always such a humble boy and regarded the girls as your sisters. You always smiled even when you were given a hiding for always coming late to class and to which you always have an explanation for haha…”

Biddings to delay Chinese loan payback is government’s job, PM’s Office says

The effort to persuade the Chinese government to defer Tonga’s loan repayments has been a government responsibility, the Prime Minister’s Office has said.

Tonga first asked for a deferment of the repayment was when Lord Tu’ivakanō and his government came into power in 2010.

Earlier this month the Minister of Finance Pōhiva Tu’i’onetoa has signed another agreement with the Chinese authority during APEC meeting in PNG to defer the repayments for another five years.

Tonga’s preference was to have the loan written off, but this had not been possible so far, the Prime Minister’s Spokesperson, Lōpeti Senituli, told Kaniva news.

Senituli said Tonga has already started repaying the interest of the concessional loans.

“The Chinese Government on its part has been magnanimous in deferring payment of the principal for another five years,” he said.

As Kaniva news reported,  the Tongan government and China have just signed the Belt and Road initiative.

When the signing was announced it was reported that China had delayed Tonga’s loan repayments.

Senituli said there had been no linkage of the signing to the quest for reprieve on the loan repayments.

“There was no conditionalities on our signing of the MOU on BRI,” he said.

Heated debates 

Senituli’s response came after the deferment of the loan became a topic of heated discussion on social media with the government’s critics attributing the move to the king.

The ascription was made as a part of an ongoing political feud on Facebook which saw the PM Pōhiva supporters and their critics quarrel from time to time.

The news of the loan repayments delay was first reported by international news media about a week ago.

Reuters and the Australian Broadcasting Corperation accompanied their stories with a photo of King Tupou VI and Chinese president Xi Jinping with a caption which said: “King Tupou VI, left, of Tonga shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping at The Great Hall of the People, in Beijing, March 1, 2018.”

Although there was nothing in those articles to say that the deferment was made because of  negotiations between the king and the Chinese authorities, the anti-government supporters insisted that it was the king, not Prime Minister Pohiva, who was responsible for the deferment.

Some government supporters said it did not make sense for the king to negotiate with the Chinese authorities about Tonga’s loan repayments because it was an executive matter that could only be dealt with by the government.

Attack on Kaniva news

Kaniva news republished the Reuters article, but instead of using the photo of the king and Chinese president it used a photo of Prime Minister ‘Akilisi Pohiva and the Chinese ambassador in Tonga.

Once our article was shared on Facebook it was attacked by some anti-goverment supporters.

They alleged that we were lying, implying that they believed the photo of the king and Chinese president used by Reuters and other international news media meant it was the king who made the deal to defer the loan.

However Senituli said: “The quest for a reprieve had been ongoing from Prime Minister Tu’ivakano’s  time and now to the current Prime Minister.”

The Minister of Finance Hon Tu’i’onetoa said: “I signed at Port Moresby, PNG, the deferment of the repayment of the principal of the above loan with the representative of the Exim Bank of China, as Minister of Finance on behalf of Government of Tonga, during our visit with the Prime Minister, Samuela Akilisi Pohiva, to PNG for the APEC meeting.”

Editor’s comments:

Our readers should note that our information came from the Prime Minister’s office. No one who has attacked Kaniva and claimed it was the king who made the deal to defer the loan has provided evidence or a reliable source to prove their claim.

It is understood, the king was in China for about a week in February. He was invited by President Xi to mark 20 years since the two countries established diplomatic ties.

The main points

  • The effort to persuade the Chinese government to defer Tonga’s loan repayments has been a government’s responsibiliy, the Prime Minister’s Office has said.
  • The first time Tonga asked for a deferement of the repayment was when Lord Tu’ivakano and his government came into power in 2010.

For more information

Tonga gets five years’ grace on Chinese loan as Pacific nation joins Belt and Road initiative

An enormous steer in Western Australia is making headlines

by Liam Croy, Perth Now


Knickers the steer is a bit on the shy side, but the bovine behemoth tends to stick out from the herd.

As you might have guessed, that is Knickers at the back of the photo — the black and white one with a couple of normal-sized cows sheltering under its belly.

Standing 194cm tall and weighing 1.4 tonnes, the seven-year-old Holstein Friesian is unofficially Australia’s biggest steer.

While all that bulk makes it hard for Knickers to blend in, being heavier than a family sedan does have its advantages.

Third generation Myalup cattle farmer Geoff Pearson said Knickers’ startling size had saved him a trip to the abattoir.

“It was too heavy. I wouldn’t be able to put it through a processing facility,”

“So I think it will just live happily ever after.”

Knickers cost his owners $400. They bought him as a “coach” — an animal that could take charge of the herd and show them the ropes of life on the farm.

According to Guinness World Records, the tallest steer on the planet can be found in Italy — a 202cm Chianina ox named Bellino.

China’s plan to develop Samoan port a regional security concern

THE AUSTRALIAN – China is negotiating to fund the redevelopment of a coral-choked port in Samoa, in a move seen to have major economic and strategic implications for Australia and the United States in the South Pacific.

Samoa’s Agriculture Minister confirmed that discussions were under way with China to bankroll the redevelopment and expansion of the Asau Port, which already boasts a concrete wharf and is sited next to an airstrip on Savai’i, the nation’s largest island.

A Chinese hydrographic surveyor was discreetly brought in earlier this year to map the port, which is unable to be used by large vessels because of coral and sediment choking the access channel, The Australian learned.

China’s involvement has raised red flags with military analysts, who warned that the port could lead to a “salient right through the heart” of America’s defences in the South Pacific or threaten Australia’s east-coast trade routes to the US.

The port, originally developed for timber exports on the island in the 1960s, has been described as “well-protected from the east and south by the island itself and from the north and west by fringing coral reefs”, according to a New Zealand survey done last year.

But over the past few decades the entrance channel has become obstructed and it has never been subjected to planned dredging, which would have seen it cleared out to a depth of about 10m and width of about 68m, the survey said.

Due to the blockages and the shallow channel, the harbour is currently only used by recrea­tion­al and charter fishing boats and for the occasional visit by the Australian-supplied Samoan pat­rol boat the Nafanua.

Samoan Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi revealed the port’s redevelopment in April, saying “funding has been secured” to clear the channel, but he did not specify the source of the money.

But Agriculture and Fisheries Minister Lopaoo Natanielu Mua confirmed to The Australian that discussions were under way with the Chinese about funding the port. He declined to answer furthe­r questions about specifics.

“I think China is one of the donor­s that the government is talking to but nothing has been confirmed or finalised,’’ he said.

The funding of ports in developing nations has been controversial, with some nations such as Sri Lanka ending up handing over control of the installations to Chinese government interests after being unable to pay off development loans.

Concerns have also been raised by the International Moneta­ry Fund about Samoa’s level of indebtedness to China.

Military experts expressed fears yesterday that a similar fate may await the Samoan port, which could see China gaining control of the harbour and a strategi­c foothold in the Pacific.

Australian Strategic Policy Institut­e analyst Malcolm Davis said that if the Chinese were able to access a Samoan port, then the risk would be that it could lead to a military base.

He said the other issue was that a base in the southwest Pacifi­c would be well positioned to sit astride trade routes from the east coast of Australia to the US.

“They could potentially coerce Australia in that regard and project power to the north up to Micronesia, Guam and potentially Hawaii,” Dr Davis said.

Former US diplomat and retire­d marine colonel Grant Newsham, who is a senior ­research fellow at the Japan Forum for Strategic Studies, warned that the Chinese could use the same tactics by which they obtain a military base in Djibout­i, on the Horn of Africa.

“It’s the Chinese modus operandi,” Colonel Newsham said. “You can see how it played out in Djibouti, where they got the governmen­t to toss out the Dubai ports company that controlled the port.”

Colonel Newsham said any sort of port type access for China could lead to a “salient right through the heart” of the US, Japane­se and Australian defences. “It’s getting in behind the American, Japanese and Australian defence,” he said.

Foreign Minister Marise Payne did not comment on the revelations, but a spokesman for the Foreign Affairs Department said Australia wanted “to see infrastr­ucture investment that is transparent, delivers long-term benefits and avoids unsustainable debt burdens”.

Efforts to contact Chinese officia­ls in Samoa for comment were unsuccessful.

This story appears on PACNEWS. Kaniva and PACNEWS has content sharing arrangement.

Injured man dumped on road in Tongatapu dies

A man believed to be in his 20s who was found dumped on a road in the outskirts of Hihifo has died in hospital.

Local media have reported a man was found with serious injuries in Ha’atafu on Sunday.

He was rushed to hospital, but authorities could not be able to immediately identify him, the reports said.

Facebook users have identified the deceased and his mother and shared his photos on Facebook this morning.

We chose not to release that identification at this stage until we could be able to make contact with authorities.

Community awaits investigation results after soldiers alleged brutality

The community is waiting to see what the results of an army investigation into an alleged act of soldiers brutality in Tongatapu will produce.

The investigation was launched after photos have emerged on social media which purported to show members of His Majesty’s Armed forces allegedly attacking a shirtless man as he lay injured on the ground early this month.

One photo shows a soldier appears to have stomped on the man’s head with his boot-clad foot. The incident occurred at a road in Vainī.

Many commenters on Facebook have condemned the attack and said soldiers were trained to have better judgement and patience in such situation.

Reports on social media showed the public was looking forward to the results of the investigation.

Many applauded the person who took the photos and shared online saying they helped authorities in their endeavour to hold those officers accountable for their actions.

His Majesty’s Armed Forces (HMAF) has confirmed an investigation has been launched.

It said it “regretted all allegations due to a photographic evidence against HMAF of abusive conduct and physical attack of a public member during an incident on 4th November 2018.”

“While HMAF is investigating the allege incident, the HMAF will not tolerate any form of physical abuse by HMAF members against any public members.

“HMAF hereby expresses our full support to the rule of law and if any allegation against HMAF member from the public to be dealt with accordingly in the civil court.”

Is a feud with Kate why Meghan and Harry are leaving Kensington Palace?

They were the closest of brothers, with the loss of their mother only solidifying the fraternal bond between Prince William and Prince Harry as they grew up.

But, now, as married men with responsibilities, cracks appear to be showing in their relationship – and it could be their wives who are pulling them apart.

It emerged yesterday that Harry and his wife Meghan are to move out of Kensington Palace next month to set up home at Frogmore Cottage on the Windsor estate.

News of the move comes after reports that the princes, who both have homes at the Palace, may be ready to set up separate courts.

The developments could reignite speculation of a rift between the Royal siblings – but a close friend of the Cambridges last night suggested any unease was between their wives.

“Kate and Meghan are very different people,” the source said, adding: “They don’t really get on.”

Harry and mother-to-be Meghan have been given Frogmore Cottage by the Queen, and it will become their official residence.

On the face of it, there are good logistical reasons for the move.

Frogmore has ten bedrooms compared to just two at Nottingham Cottage, the Kensington Palace property where they currently reside.

Frogmore House (pictured) has ten bedrooms compared to just two at Nottingham Cottage, the Kensington Palace property where Harry and Meghan currently reside. Photo / Getty Images
Frogmore House (pictured) has ten bedrooms compared to just two at Nottingham Cottage, the Kensington Palace property where Harry and Meghan currently reside. Photo / Getty Images

Grade II listed Frogmore is said to be undergoing a multi-million pound refit, paid for by the taxpayer, in preparation for the birth, which is expected next spring.

Palace sources said there was “nothing available as an official residence in London”. One said: “They are expecting a baby early next year and obviously need a bit more space. It is not like this has just come up.”

The couple chose Windsor because “it means a huge amount to them – it is where they got married.”

Rumours of tensions between the Sussexes and Cambridges have been bubbling away for months.

They were the closest of young brothers, with the loss of their mother only solidifying the fraternal bond as Prince William and Prince Harry grew up together. Photo / Getty Images
They were the closest of young brothers, with the loss of their mother only solidifying the fraternal bond as Prince William and Prince Harry grew up together. Photo / Getty Images

In contrast to Meghan and Harry’s cottage at Kensington Palace, Kate and William have a 22-room home recently refurbished at a cost of £4.5 million.

The Sussexes wanted to move into a Palace apartment currently used by the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester.

But sources claimed the apartment “needs to undergo considerable lengthy refurbishments’ meaning that no one else could move in “for the foreseeable future”.

In fact, they said, the Gloucesters were happy to downsize into a smaller property.

The pair will move to the Old Stables in a different part of the palace grounds in the new year.

Meghan has shaken up the Royal Family and earned a reputation among courtiers for a direct approach.

Earlier this month, there were even claims that the Queen had felt compelled to speak to Prince Harry about Meghan’s attitude in the run-up to their wedding, following a disagreement over which tiara she would wear.

Earlier this year, it emerged that Harry and William were considering a formal division of their joint household at Kensington Palace.

It was reported that separate courts would “better reflect their very different duties and needs” following Harry’s marriage to Meghan.

READ MORE: • Queen’s pre-wedding row with Meghan

In the past, Harry has said he expects the world’s interest in him to fade as the Cambridges’ children grow older. William, meanwhile, is set to see his workload increase as he prepares to one day become King.

Kensington Palace declined to comment last night.

China’s mighty orbit in South Pacific threatens to leave Australia in spin

By Mark Saunokonoko, 9 NEWS. This story appears on PACNEWS


The South Pacific has become an increasingly important geopolitical chessboard with the United States, China and Australia racing to secure ports, cyber infrastructure and potential military bases in a number of small but strategic island nations.

Over the past 12 months, the governments of Vanuatu, Fiji, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands have all been wooed and seduced by Canberra, Washington and Beijing to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars.

Adam Ni, a policy researcher at Australian National University’s Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, said it is inevitable that these Pacific nations, whose allegiance has long been taken for granted, will be sucked into China’s mighty orbit from out of Australia’s backyard.

Ni predicts Australia’s international diplomacy will be strained and put to the test in this new era of South Pacific posturing, as Canberra attempts to delicately balance vital strategic, military and trade ties to superpowers, the US and China.

“As China expands outward, with a military presence and economically, the Pacific will acquire a never-before seen importance,” Ni told nine.com.au.

“If you look at Chinese investment … you see a trend where China is increasingly becoming more influential in the Pacific.”

Ni said China’s economic footholds in the Pacific and investment in massive infrastructure projects, such as ports, can over time evolve into a military outpost.

Last year China opened its first foreign military base in Djibouti, the small African country situated on the Horn of Africa.

The military base grew out of a joint Djibouti-China commercial port, launched only two months earlier.

A large Sri Lankan port, big enough to hold huge warships, has also come under Chinese control. Both Djibouti and Sri Lanka had fallen into heavy financial debt to China. Earlier this year China denied it was seeking to establish a military base in Vanuatu.

Strategic Move

Global maritime dominance is vital for China. Djibouti sits right on a crucial shipping lane choke point, the Bab el-Mandeb Strait. Sri Lanka’s giant Hambantota port, now operated by China on a 99-year lease, offers strategic access to India, the Middle East, Africa, Asia and Australia’s west and northern coast. The US is known to be rattled by such developments.

Ahead of last week’s APEC conference in Papua New Guinea, Zheng Zeguang, vice-minister of the Chinese foreign ministry, made Beijing’s position and outlook in the South Pacific clear.

“The cooperation and aids we provide in the island nations are not targeting any third parties,” Zheng told reporters, before issuing a further proclamation.

“Any country should not stop China’s friendly cooperation and communication with island nations – and of course they could not stop such cooperation and communication.”

Near the conclusion of the APEC conference, Australia announced it, along with the US, will develop a naval base in Papua New Guinea.

The PNG naval base is just the latest sign of great power competition in the South Pacific. A number of significant moves have already been played this year, and the Pacific islands, now squarely in the middle of this tug of war, have reaped the benefits.

In June, the Australian government confirmed it would spend $200 million (US$144 million) to fund submarine cables and a cyber security centre for the Solomon Islands, trumping Chinese ambitions. Some analysts believed the scuppered bid from Chinese telecom giant Huawei, which would have connected the Solomons and PNG to Sydney with an undersea cable, could have threatened Australia’s cyber security.

Similarly, in April Fairfax reported high-level discussions had taken place between Washington and Canberra over reports, denied by Beijing, that China was seeking to build a military base in Vanuatu, located less than 2000km from Australia.

At the time, then prime minister Malcolm Turnbull said Australia “would view with great concern the establishment of any foreign military bases in those Pacific Island countries and neighbours of ours.”

Vanuatu’s links with China have strengthened in recent years, with the small island nation receiving hundreds of millions of dollars in Chinese development money.

Vanuatu is known to have backed China’s position on the disputed South China Sea. The US has raised concerns over what it claims are loans issued by China which come with strings attached, and can end with that nation beholden to Chinese ambitions.

Several months after the Vanuatu issue had spiked Turnbull’s pulse rate, Fiji was suddenly thrust onto the radar. Australia and China faced off with competing bids to develop a Fijian military base in Nadi called Black Rock.

The Black Rock base will act as a regional hub for Fiji’s police and peacekeeping training and pre-deployment preparation.

Keen to show their commitment, in the lead up to the Fijian government selecting a winning bid, Australia gave the Fiji navy a patrol boat. Similarly, China gifted the Fijian navy a surveillance and hydrographic vessel.

It appears, at least for the immediate future, Pacific nations can expect government officials to arrive bearing gifts. This year China announced it will be donate a frigate warship to Sri Lanka and four patrol boats to the Philippines navy.

In one of Malcolm Turnbull’s final acts as prime minister, he announced Australia would be fully funding the development of Black Rock. A year earlier, Australia had pledged $2m (US$1.4 million) to the base. During a media briefing in October, Australia’s Department of Defence would not comment on what defence assets or troops might be deployed to Nadi.

Ni said it is obvious that Australia cannot hope to keep outbidding China in the Pacific.

“Australia’s resources are limited, so they have to be very smart as to where they put these resources,” he said. “We have to be creative how we engage with these small Pacific countries.”

According to him, Canberra will need to embrace a competitive and co-operative approach.

“You can’t just have a confrontational approach alone,” he said. “That would mean you are viewing the world through zero-sum eyes, and simply trying to do everything to decrease China’s power.”

Growing power

Under president Xi Jinping’s rule, China has steadily rolled out its ambitious Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

The BRI, also known as One Belt, One Road, seeks to promote co-operation along five corridors out of China: land routes through Central Asia to Europe; to the Middle East, and Southeast Asia; and sea routes connecting Chinese ports to Europe and to the South Pacific.

Among other strategies, the BRI involves huge investment in infrastructure including ports, rail, bridges, oil and gas pipelines.

China’s growing naval power is vital to protecting its trading and BRI ambitions.

“[China] has to guard its investment and expanding footprint,” Ni said.

“To project that kind of power, you need a powerful navy. You need an expeditionary force to be able to move troops overseas. Forward bases and foreign ports are vital,” he said.

Tongans celebrating rugby test in Hamilton

By: Tom Rowland , Hamilton News.


FMG Stadium will turn black and red in 2019 as the All Blacks return to Hamilton for the first time in three years, in a one off test against Tonga ahead of the Rugby World Cup.

At a photo opportunity at FMG Stadium in Hamilton this morning a group representing Tongans in Hamilton broke into an impromptu dance and song as Hamilton Mayor Andrew King and rugby officials celebrated the big fixture.

The three time Rugby World Cup winners will clash with Tonga on September 7 2019, with a return to the tradition of afternoon rugby, with a 2:35pm kick off.

The match will be the final hit-out before the teams travels to Japan for the 2019 World Cup.

Clive Bourne, from the Tongan community in Hamilton, said it would be a great occasion not just for the community, but for the city.

“It is a great thing for rugby, to have everyone cheer for the spirit of rugby, and the spirit of Polynesia,” Mr Bourne said.

“In Hamilton, 90 per cent of the people in Hamilton are Tongan,” he joked.

He said he expects the stands to be filled with the red of Tonga, not just from Hamilton, but from all over the country.

Mr Bourne said that whatever the result, the community will come out as winners on the day.

“It does not matter, as long as we play and enjoy. It is the spirit of living and enjoying life, that is the Tongan way.”

“Lots of kava drinking and the cooking of pigs in celebration, even after the game, no matter what the score.”

He said that it does not matter who he supports as there are Tongans playing for the All Blacks and All Blacks playing for Tonga.

“We are one rugby nation.”

Hamilton Mayor Andrew King said it had been too long since Hamilton had an All Blacks game, and called it the perfect send off for the team before they head to compete in the World Cup.

“We should be having one game every year, it is just exciting to have us back in the game again,” Mr King said.

“I understand the All Blacks may be staying in our town for a few days to train, it will fill up all our hotels and restaurants.”

“The match itself is secondary to what this will do for our city.”

New Zealand Rugby chief executive Steve Tew said in a statement Tonga was invited to play in this fixture, as it allows both teams a way to prepare for the World Cup.

“We invited Tonga to play this fixture which we saw as an important part of the All Blacks’ preparation, but also a great way for Tonga to prepare for Rugby World Cup 2019. We envisage this will be an opportunity for fans to provide a colourful send-off for both teams,” Tew said.

The announcement of the All Blacks v Tonga clash follows confirmation the Tongan national sevens rugby team has secured the final place in the 2019 edition of the HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series tournament to be held at FMG Stadium Waikato over Auckland Anniversary Weekend in January 2019.

Fans who buy a ticket to the HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series tournament in Hamilton in January will also have an opportunity to purchase tickets for the All Blacks Test ahead of public sales.

Two ways for fans to guarantee a ticket to the All Blacks v Tonga Test match before public sales are; either purchase a Chiefs’ season membership and HSBC NZ Sevens package or, purchase All Blacks Hospitality or All Blacks Tours packages.