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Netball: Tonga Tala wary of challenge as they eye fifth title

By Iliesa Tora, Senior Sports Journalist at rnz.co.nz and is republished with permission

The Tonga Tala netball team is wary of the challenge they will receive at the upcoming PacificAUS Netball series in Brisbane.

Captain Hulita Veve (C - left on front row) with her Tala team after winning their third PacificAus Netball Series title in 2023. She returns to lead the side in Brisbane in February. Photo: Netball Australia

Captain Hulita Veve (C – left on front row) with her Tala team after winning their third PacificAus Netball Series title in 2023. She returns to lead the side in Brisbane in February. Photo: Netball Australia Photo: Netball Australia

The series is scheduled to take place from 17 to 22 February at the Nissan Arena.

Head coach Jaqua Pori Makea-Simpson said although they have won the past four series titles, they expect the next series to be tougher than the last four.

She said all competing teams have improved, which will make their goal of winning their fifth consecutive title difficult.

“The Australian First Nation side are back in their the second year. They’re our first match up and they were really tough for us to play against last year, just with different styles of netball,” she said.

“They’re quite exciting. Fiji have been getting closer and closer to us every single time we’ve played. And Samoa have recruited really well.

“The last time we faced Papua New Guinea was at the Pacific Games in 2023 and the gap between us and other nations are starting to close, so we’re going to have to bring our A game.

“And the difficulty in these tournaments is that it’s day after day, having to back up on those performances. But we’re up for the challenge, and we’ll see how we go, it’s going to be an incredible series.”

Defending their PacificAUS Netball Series title will be tough for the Tongan Tala, who have won the last four titles. Photo: Netball Australia

Defending their PacificAUS Netball Series title will be tough for the Tongan Tala, who have won the last four titles. Photo: Netball Australia Photo: Netball Australia

Makea-Simpson said they aim to go and play “the best netball” they can and reclaim their title but believes they still have a lot of work to do before the event.

“We want to get out some new players and debut and give them opportunity to thrive in the environment. The ultimate goal is to have that fifth title, but we have a lot of work to do before we get there to that grand final day,” she said.

“This is probably going to be the toughest of all of the Pacific series that we’ve played.”

Veve returns to squad

Tonga Netball has announced the squad to represent Tonga at the event.

One of the notable names is long-time captain Hulita Veve, who makes a return after missing out of last year’s series because of club contract.

She plays for the Queensland Firebirds in the Australia Super Netball competition.

Makea-Simpson said the captain’s return means a lot for the team.

“Hulita has been an important part of our program. For the past three years, she has captained Tala,” she said.

“We are really grateful to have her back for the next series. She brings strength and confidence to our group, just in the way she leads.

“She leads by an example, with an incredible work ethic, and there’s no doubt, she’s obviously a bit of a game changer at times, and we’re excited to have her back.”

Veve will lead aside that includes experienced hands like the Palavi sisters of Beyonce and top goalshotter Uneeq, with a number of Under-21 players called up for premier team duties.

Makea-Simpson said having that mix was important for the team and the future of Tonga Netball.

“Look, we are quite deliberate in the way that we create opportunities for our younger players,” she said.

“We have debuted new players every time that Tala has competed, you know, we’re fortunate that we actually have a lot of depth in our team.

“The important thing for us, particularly with these young under 21s, is they have the Youth World Cup towards the end of the year in Gibraltar and sometimes the only place to learn how to play under pressure and to thrive in that competitive environment is actually to be in one so that wasthe purpose of us being deliberate in these selections.”

Tonga youth netball team playing at the Oceania Youth Netball qualifiers last year in Rarotonga. Some of the players are in the Tala squad for the PacificAUS Netball Series to be played in Brisbane in February. Photo: Tonga Netball

Tonga youth netball team playing at the Oceania Youth Netball qualifiers last year in Rarotonga. Some of the players are in the Tala squad for the PacificAUS Netball Series to be played in Brisbane in February. Photo: Tonga Netball Photo: Tonga Netball

Under-21s learning

Makea-Simpson said the youth players will learn a lot from the series and hopes that can help their team at the youth world meet.

The Youth World Cup is still eight months away and adds there is so much excitement that the youth team has qualified for their world meet for the first time.

“It’s super exciting for Tonga to have qualified a team for the first time and I think that probably a little bit of a point of difference for us is that we have used these Pacific netball series to provide our under 21 players with a platform to get experience, which is probably a unique situation,” she said.

“Some of them will go into that program as ready as they can be, I think, and as ready as we could have made them.

“We hope that they are going to do Tonga really, really proud. They are an exciting bunch of young women, and we are excited to be taking them there and wearing the red dress.”

She said the Tala coaching team and Tonga Netball have done a lot in the past three years to ensure that the team is consistent.

That has seen them win the past four PacAUS series titles, the Oceania Championship and the Pacific Games titles.

She points to building players to build their own self-discipline and their accountability outside of their program and having a Kingdom supporting them.

“We’re really, really lucky that our players have great support networks in their home and local spaces and for the most part, they come to us ready to play, so half the work is actually done for us,” she said.

“And you know, it’s that old saying that it takes a village to raise a child. It’s much the same with a net baller who you don’t have in a full-time program. We rely on the people around them, but also the discipline from them as athletes to make sure that they’re ready to put their best foot forward.”

She said the Tala coaches and management are clear on “what our purpose is and what our Why is”.

“We know that it’s bigger than us. We know that it’s bigger than our game, you know, and when those girls put that red dress on, there’s something really special and empowering in that, and I think that drives them to succeed every single time we play,” she added.

Tala head coach Jaqua Pori Makea-Simpson receives her medal by King Tupou VI in a special medal ceremony in Nuku'alofa in 2024 to honour the achievements the Tala team has done for Tonga. Photo: Tonga Netball

Tala head coach Jaqua Pori Makea-Simpson receives her medal by King Tupou VI in a special medal ceremony in Nuku’alofa in 2024 to honour the achievements the Tala team has done for Tonga. Photo: Tonga Netball Photo: Tonga Netball

Special relationship

Meanwhile, Makea-Simpson, who is also general manager of Taranaki Netball, said she loves her relationship with Tonga and her people, build through her involvement with Tonga Netball.

She said she is lucky to have been accepted by the people of Tonga and she is proud to be involved the way she has been in helping develop the sport she loves in the island kingdom.

“Tonga and its people are very, very special to me,” she said.

“It’s a relationship that has grown over the last few years, and I have been embraced and loved by them, like I’m one of their own.

“And it’s a life changing experience. It’s very difficult for me to describe, but there’s a genuine connection that I have with Tonga and its people, and it has changed my life.

“I will rather be grateful to them, and I couldn’t be a more prouder non-Tongan. I don’t think you will find one anywhere else in the world.”

She was honoured along with her Tala players in September last year by King Tupou VI, who presented special medals to them for what they have been able to achieve in netball for Tonga.

The Tongan Tala squad for the PacificAUS Netball Series in Brisbane next month. Supplied

The Tongan Tala squad for the PacificAUS Netball Series in Brisbane next month. Supplied Photo: Tonga Netball

151 Tongans among 1.4 million facing deportation under Donald Trump’s new immigration policies  

A total of 151 Tongans are currently among the estimated 1.4 million people in the United States who are at risk of deportation, reports said.  

It comes after President Donald Trump held firm to his campaign promise of conducting the biggest mass deportations for undocumented immigrants, specifically targeting individuals he has identified as criminals, in the history of the United States.

Since his inauguration on January 20, the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Enforcement and Removal Operations has arrested more than 3,500 unauthorised immigrants across the US. The Trump administration has also started sending deportation flights — US military aircraft carrying migrants to their countries of origin or third nations. 

The revelation comes after what appeared to be a document compiled by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Enforcement and Removal Operations was released to the media showing a list of hundreds of countries worldwide.  

The document said the deportees were people with removable non-citizen status who are not currently held in ICE detention.

Kaniva News was unable to verify the reports with the US authorities.

Nigeria’s Punch newspaper, which reported the document, said one of its US-based correspondents sighted the list.

MSN news outlet also reported a similar list.

Titled “Noncitizens on the ICE Non-Detained Docket with Final Orders of Removal by Country of Citizenship”, the document shows Fiji at the top of the list of Pacific Island nations facing the most deportation, with 353, while Samoa has only 57.  

Other Pacific Island nations included Tuvalu, with one deportee; Solomon Islands has three, while Kiribati also has three.    

Reports by the US media said the arrests by ICE appear to remain along the lines of “routine operations” and not part of a large-scale raid in any one place. 

Trump’s designated border czar, Tom Homan, told Fox News on Wednesday that ICE had conducted 308 arrests across the country. 

Meanwhile, some countries were preparing to welcome their deportees.  

In Mexico, workers set up a tent city to house deportees.  

The tent city offers basic necessities and a sense of community for those affected by the challenging circumstances of deportation. 

Tonga situation 

The document does not specify the categories or types of deportees involved. 

In Tonga, there were concerns that a potential influx of criminals deported from the United States could worsen the nation’s struggle against sophisticated drug crime-related activities. Many believe these issues are already being exacerbated by experienced deported criminals who are currently in the country. 

Recent reports indicated that the Hu’atolitoli Prison and its psychiatric facility were facing issues of overcrowding.  

Many of the patients being treated there were victims of illicit drug use. 

It was estimated that about 30 convicted criminals have been deported to Tonga each year since 2010.  

See the full list below:

Person dies after incident in Tonga’s ‘Utulau Beach

Police were called to the incident at Houma ‘Utulau Beach on Wednesday 28.

No further information was available regarding the nature of the incident.

Photos shared on Facebook showed people attempting to administer first aid to the deceased.

They are being celebrated as heroes after they attempted to save the man despite his death.

This incident marks the first reported death at sea for this year.

It is two months after a person fell into a stretch of water at Laulea Beach and died last year.  

Houma ‘Utulau Beach is a coastal headland with steep cliffs.

Police could not be reached for comment.

PM names Tonga’s new Cabinet lineup

EDITOR’S NOTE: We have updated this article to reflect the fact that the king had appointed the new Cabinet Ministers before Prime Minister ‘Aisake Eke announced them yesterday.

Tonga’s Prime Minister ‘Aisake Valu Eke has announced his Cabinet Lineup.

He said the formal ceremony for the Cabinet Ministers will be held on Thursday.

The Prime Minister said the announcement means that the new Cabinet Ministers have officially assumed their duties starting today, taking over the responsibilities of the former ministers serving in an interim capacity.  

The lineup included four unelected MPs: Dr ‘Ana ‘Akau’ola, Dr Siosiua Halavātau, Crown Prince Tupouto’a and Sinaitakala Tu’itahi.

The Prime Minister can nominate no more than four ministers outside of the Parliament, according to the constitution.

The portfolios are as follows:

Dr ‘Aisake Valu Eke 

Prime Minister

Minister for Finance 

Minister for Fisheries

Minister for Prisons

Dr Taniela Fusimālohi 

Deputy Prime Minister 

Minister for Meteorology, Energy, Information, Disaster Management, Environment, Communications and Climate Change (MEIDECC); and 

Minister for Infrastructure. 

Prince Tupouto’a  

Minister for His Majesty’s Armed Forces and Foreign Affairs. 

Dr ‘Uhilamoelangi Fasi 

Minister for Education. 

Minister for Lands, Survey and Natural Resources

Paula Piveni Piukala  

Minister for Public Enterprises. 

Minister for Police, Fire and Emergency Services

Mo’ale Finau 

Minister for Tourism. 

Minister for Justice

Kāpeli Lanumata 

Minister for Trade and Economic Development. 

Mateni Tapueluelu 

Minister for Revenue and Customs. 

Dr Ana ‘Akau’ola

Minister for Health 

Dr Siosiua Halavātau

Minister for Agriculture, Food and Forest

Sinaitakala Tu’itahi

Minister for Internal Affairs 

 

COMMENTARY: ‘Constitutional requirements’ delaying king’s appointment of new Cabinet Ministers concerning 

COMMENTARY: Following the extensive and suspicious delays in the appointment of Hon. Eke’s Cabinet by the king, the most important question is this: what constitutional requirements are so important that they have to be addressed before Cabinet can be appointed?

Why has the kingdom been kept waiting for more than a month for Cabinet to be appointed?

Hon. Eke told Kaniva News His Majesty was expected to appoint his Cabinet towards this weekend (“faka’osinga uike”). He did not say exactly on what day.   

When Eke was asked for the reasons why the royal appointment was delayed, he said that it was due to the need to fulfil certain constitutional requirements (“ngaahi fiema’u fakakonisitūtone”). 

The Constitution clearly outlines the straightforward process for nominating and recommending Cabinet Ministers to the king for their appointments. 

Given this clarity, it makes one wonder what other provisions in the Constitution or interpretations may not be fully comprehended or adequately addressed, thereby contributing to these prolonged delays.

Eke was responding after we sent him several questions based on unconfirmed information circulated on the wire regarding the appointment.  

We also asked him two other questions to which he did not reply.  

We asked him whether it was true the king had not accepted some of the nominees he had recommended. 

We also asked whether it was true that he was told to wait because the king’s Privy Council was working on its own nominations for the Cabinet Ministers.  

The prolonged postponement represents the first instance, since the democratic reforms of 2010, in which this process has extended beyond a month following the premiership election conducted on December 24, 2024. 

The procedure 

It has been normal practice that it takes no more than two weeks after the Prime Ministerial election for the king to appoint the Prime Minister, followed by the appointment of the Cabinet Ministers the same day.   

Former Prime Minister Hu’akavameiliku was elected on December 15, 2022. Only 12 days later, on December 27, the king appointed him to the premiership. It was reported that during Hu’akavameiliku’s appointment, he presented to the king his Cabinet lineup, which the king appointed the same day.  

The Late Prime Minister Pohiva Tu’i’onetoa was elected as Prime Minister by Parliament on September 27, 2019. He was appointed by the king on October 8, 2019. That is an 11-day timeframe. Tu’i’onetoa confirmed to Kaniva News his Cabinet lineup on the same day the king confirmed their appointed. 

However, despite the quick processes in the appointment of these two Prime Ministers and their Cabinets their relationship with the king soured before His Majesty chastised Tu’i’onetoa’s government in his Parliamentary speech in May, 2021.  

In February, 2024 the king withdrew support for Hu’akavameiliku as Defence Minister, a move the Attorney General said was “unconstitutional.”  

 Prime Minister’s ‘executive authority’ 

The circumstances surrounding Eke’s situation appear to reflect a back-and-forth interaction predominantly influenced by the king, resulting in delays in the appointment of his Cabinet, which appears to contravene the Constitution.

The Constitution grants the Prime Minister, as the head of the Cabinet, the authoritative power to run the government unchallenged within that context. It also gives the power to nominate the Cabinet Ministers to the Prime Minister.

It labels this power of the Prime Minister as “executive authority” given to his Cabinet.  

Clause 51 of Section One of the Constitution says: 

“The executive authority of the Kingdom shall vest in the Cabinet, which shall be collectively responsible to the Legislative Assembly for the executive functions of the Government”. 

The constitution also delineates the power of the Prime Minister over his Cabinet as fundamentally absolute and any intervention by the monarch or his Privy Council is unwarranted. 

Section 2 says: “The Cabinet shall consist of the Prime Minister and such other Ministers who are nominated by the Prime Minister and appointed by the King”.

Clause 51, Section 7 says:  

“(7) The term “executive authority” in sub-clause (1) excludes all powers vested in the King or the King in Council, whether by this Constitution, or any Act of the Legislative Assembly, any subordinate legislation, and Royal Prerogatives.” 

Call for clarifications 

Whatever the reasons behind this unexpected delay, the Prime Minister needs to come clean as soon as possible and explain this to the public.  

It’s essential that any actions related to the Constitution maintain a high level of transparency, especially in light of recent claims that it has been violated. The latest was when the Attorney General said last year that the letter from the king’s Privy Council expressing His Majesty’s loss of confidence in former Prime Minister Hu’akavameiliku being the Minister of Defence was “unconstitutional.”  

There is no doubt the Tongan practice of mālū‘ia (emotions emanating from the presence of the king) may be strong in Eke. He must stand by the transparency and accountability policies he announced after his election in December.  

He has received commendation for the proactive measures he announced to address corruption and the misappropriation of public funds, issues that have adversely affected the nation for an extended period.  

He is expected to take the same measure when it comes to his relationship with the king.  

It is essential that he provides full transparency to the public regarding all relevant information pertaining to his Cabinet.  

This includes any issues that may potentially affect the public’s expectations concerning the nomination process,  which should adhere strictly to his discretion. 

New Zealand’s aid for Kiribati under review after meeting cancelled with Winston Peters

By rnz.co.nz and is republished with permission

Foreign Minister Winston Peters has confirmed New Zealand’s aid for Kiribati is being reviewed after its President and Foreign Minister cancelled a meeting with him.

RNZ/Reece Baker

Winston Peters had been due to meet with the president and foreign minister of Kiribati last Tuesday and Wednesday. Photo: RNZ / REECE BAKER

Terms of Reference for the review are still being finalised, and it remains unclear whether or not funding will be cut or projects already under way would be affected, with Peters’ office saying no decisions would be made until the review was complete.

His office said Kiribati remained part of the RSE scheme and its eligibility for the Pacific Access Category was unaffected – for now.

Peters had been due to meet with Taneti Maamau last Tuesday and Wednesday, in what was to be the first trip by a New Zealand foreign minister to Kiribati in five years, and part of his effort to visit every Pacific country early in the government’s term.

Kiribati has been receiving increased aid from China in recent years.

In a statement, a spokesperson for Peters said he was informed about a week before the trip Maamau would no longer be available.

“Around a week prior to our arrival in Tarawa, we were advised that the President and Foreign Minister of Kiribati, Taneti Maamau, was no longer available to receive Mr Peters and his delegation.

“This was especially disappointing because the visit was to be the first in over five years by a New Zealand Minister to Kiribati – and was the result of a months-long effort to travel there.”

The spokesperson said the development programme was being reviewed as a result.

“New Zealand has been a long-standing partner to Kiribati. The lack of political-level contact makes it very difficult for us to agree joint priorities for our development programme, and to ensure that it is well targeted and delivers good value for money.

“That’s important for both the people of Kiribati and for the New Zealand taxpayer. For this reason, we are reviewing our development programme in Kiribati. The outcomes of that review will be announced in due course.

“Other aspects of the bilateral relationship may also be impacted.”

New Zealand spent $102 million on the development cooperation programme with Kiribati between 2021 and 2024, including on health, education, fisheries, economic development, and climate resilience.

Peters’ office said New Zealand deeply valued the contribution Recognised Seasonal Employer workers made to the country, and was committed to working alongside Pacific partners to ensure the scheme led to positive outcomes for all parties.

“However, without open dialogue it is difficult to meet this commitment.”

They also said New Zealand was committed to working alongside our Pacific partners to ensure that the Pacific Access Category leads to positive outcomes for all parties, but again this would be difficult without open dialogue.

The spokesperson said the Kiribati people’s wellbeing was of paramount importance and the terms of reference would reflect this.

They said New Zealand stood ready “as we always have, to engage with Kiribati at a high level”.

Colombia defying Trump deportation policies, lesson for Tonga to negotiate over US murder suspect who fled the kingdom in exchange for deportee deals 

COMMENTARY: The decision by Colombian president Gustavo Petro to return two military aircraft of deportees from the United States, citing tens of thousands of illegal US immigrants in his country, provides an important clue for Tonga.  

FILE – In this Oct. 4, 2016, file photo provided by the Samoa News, Dean Jay Fletcher, left, is escorted by a police officer after his initial appearance in the District Court of American Samoa in Pago Pago, American Samoa. A U.S. judge in Hawaii has ordered the release of U.S. citizen Fletcher, being held for extradition to Tonga, where he’s accused of beating his wife to death, escaping police and sailing some 300 miles to American Samoa. (Ausage Fausia/SamoaNews via AP, File)

The kingdom is expecting an influx of deportees from the States as part of the Trump administration’s crackdown on criminals and undocumented immigrant policies.   

Petro, according to a Guardian report,  blocked two US military aircraft last week carrying deported Colombians from landing in his country, prompting a feud with Donald Trump, who enacted emergency tariffs and other retaliatory measures. 

Mexico reportedly refused to receive a similar flight on Saturday, according to US officials cited by Reuters and NBC News.  

Petro condemned the practice on Sunday, suggesting it treated migrants like criminals. In a post on social media platform X, Petro said Colombia would welcome home deported migrants on civilian planes. 

He also said that there were 15,660 Americans who were living without legal immigration status in Colombia.  

He said, “he would never carry out a raid to return handcuffed Americans to the US”. 

Petro’s reference to the number of Americans living without legal immigration status in his country could be seen as a strategic move in negotiations with the US, suggesting a form of reciprocity and returning favours that could be used by targeting countries to address Trump’s mass deportation policies.  

While there may be no American citizens residing in Tonga unlawfully, there exist other circumstances that could assist the Eke government in engaging with U.S. authorities to address the potential arrival of deportees in Tonga. 

2016 US Suspect 

Over the past five decades, Tonga has unsuccessfully pursued requests to repatriate United States citizens suspected of committing murder in the kingdom so they could face justice. 

In 2016, the Tongan government processed a formal extradition request to the American Samoa authority to have the US citizen suspected of murdering his wife in Tonga’s Vavaʻu islands be brought back. 

Dean Jay Fletcher, 54, was facing charges in Tonga in connection with the death of his Canadian wife. 

He fled a prison cell on Vava’u before he was arrested in American Samoa. 

The US authorities took him to Hawai’i to face judicial proceedings. 

Deborah Gardner

The court finally released him, saying the US was worried that without a legal aid system in Tonga, Mr Fletcher would not have legal representation or a fair trial. 

Despite the release, the Tongan government kept fighting to have him returned, but to no avail.  

1976  killing of US volunteer  

A female Peace Corps volunteer was killed in Tonga in 1976.  

Debra Gardner, 23, was murdered in the village of Ngele’ia in Tongatapu by Dennis Priven, another US Peace Corps volunteer. 

It has been alleged that the Peace Corps and US authorities duped the Tongan government into letting them move Priven to America, where he was eventually released. 

During the legal proceedings, the US government sent a psychiatrist from Hawai’i to assist Priven in court, but the Tongan government could not afford to hire one. 

Tongan lawyer Clive Edwards represented Tonga in court.  

Edwards submitted to the court that Priven was not guilty by reason of insanity. 

American promises 

The US authorities assured the Tongan government that if they allowed Priven to be handed over, he would face confinement in the US. 

The move was opposed by Tonga’s then Prime Minister, but Priven’s removal was later approved after a letter from US authorities promised that Priven would be admitted to Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington for treatment. 

The letter said Priven could be held involuntarily and “that his mental commitment would be terminated only upon findings that (the) patient is no longer a threat to society or himself.” 

Priven was flown under escort to Washington, but instead of being committed to psychiatric care, he returned to his family home in Brooklyn and took a government job as a computer supervisor with the Social Security Administration. 

Deborah Gardner’s father assumed her killer had spent decades in an institution. He later learned from Philip Weiss, who wrote a book about her daughter, not the Peace Corps or the government, that he had never been confined. 

Eke government 

It is estimated that approximately 30 individuals convicted of crimes in the United States are deported to Tonga each year. This figure complicates the already significant challenges associated with Tonga’s illicit drug crisis.

If the mass deportation policies implemented during the Trump administration were to double the current number of deportations, Tonga could potentially experience a significant escalation in drug-related illicit activities.

Tonga can use the Fletcher and Priven cases to negotiate with U.S. authorities and encourage them to rethink their current deportation policies and consider a more lenient approach for undocumented Tongans and criminals in the States. 

Tributes paid after doctor dies in Tonga collision

Tributes have been paid following the death of a doctor in a two-car collision in Tonga this morning.

Dr Viliami Lavemai

Viliami Lavemai has been honoured in heartfelt tributes shared on social media following the tragic news of his death in a fatal car accident at Vaolōloa.

The details of the fatal incident remain unclear.

As Kaniva News previously reported this morning, footage showed churchgoers scrambling to free the driver of a car which crashed near the Tupou High School compound.

We reported that the footage showed what appeared to be helpers carrying something from the driver’s seat.

It was unclear whether it was the driver.

According to the streamed video, people at the scene included some wearing Tongan formal attire.

It is understood the young doctor was graduated in 2022. However, the details about him and his graduation remain unknown.

Shortly after the tragic incident, friends and community members took to Facebook to express their sorrow and remember the doctor’s vibrant spirit, highlighting his impact on those around him.

“Ko e toketā angalelelei lahi he’ene fakafōtunga ki he’ene patients”, a commenter wrote in Tongan, saying he was a well-presentable doctor when receiving his patients.

“The incident has left a deep void in the lives of many who knew him”, another commenter wrote.

“Taken so soon”.

Churchgoers scramble to save driver in Tonga crash

Churchgoers rushed to free the driver of a car which crashed in Tonga this morning, Sunday 26.

Footage shows onlookers carrying something from the driver’s seat.

It was unclear whether it was the driver.

A video poster claimed the apparent two-car crash happened at Vaolōloa opposite the Tupou High School compound.

People at the scene included some wearing Tongan attire, according to the streamed video.

It was unclear whether they were on their way to church when they came across the accident or were car passengers.

The details of the incident were still unclear.

Kaniva News could not verify the authenticity of the footage independently.

Police have yet to comment.

The crash follows a fatal single-vehicle crash at Hofoa earlier this week in which a family suffered two children deaths.

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Suspension of US aid programs’ new funding may affect Tonga significantly  

US President Donald Trump’s decision to freeze new funding for nearly all US aid programs could have significant implications for Tonga.

The State Department, according to an Associated Press report, “has ordered a sweeping freeze Friday on new funding for almost all U.S. foreign assistance, making exceptions for emergency food programs and military aid to Israel and Egypt”. 

The US provides more foreign aid globally than any other country, budgeting about $60 billion in 2023, or about 1% of the U.S. budget. 

The US has a long history of assistance with Tonga, which proved helpful to the archipelago.   

The aid supports various initiatives, including disaster relief, infrastructure development, military, security, fisheries and health services in the kingdom.  

In 2021, the United States, through the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), provided an additional $2.5 million in humanitarian assistance to support people affected by volcanic eruptions and tsunami waves in Tonga.   

That funding was in addition to an initial $100,000 in immediate assistance and longstanding programs in Tonga that are already responding to urgent needs.

The kingdom received critical water, sanitation, and hygiene supplies and supporting disease prevention messaging campaigns to reduce the spread of infectious disease.

USAID also worked through partners to address food security, agriculture, livestock, and shelter needs among the most affected populations.  

“USAID also works year-round in Tonga to help communities prepare for and be more resilient to natural disasters. With more than $8 million in existing programs across the Pacific region, USAID partners have been on the ground responding. For example, local partners are distributing thousands of first aid and hygiene kits that were prepositioned in Tonga”.  

Another USAID partner is providing emergency telecommunications support after the eruption broke an underwater communications cable, leaving most of Tonga without communication and internet access.  

USAID also works with partners to maintain air and sea transport capabilities that stand ready to deliver relief supplies to people on all affected islands and in remote communities. 

USAID disaster experts in the region coordinate response efforts with humanitarian partners and other donors like France, Australia, and New Zealand to help Tonga.

Major financial contributor

Apart from providing direct funding to Tonga, the United States is a major financial contributor to international and regional organizations that assist Tonga.  

This included the Asian Development Bank (ADB), World Bank, UN Children’s Fund, World Health Organization, and UN Fund for Population Activities. However, the US has withdrawn its financial support for the World Health Organization this week, with President Trump saying that the global health agency has mishandled the COVID-19 pandemic and various other international health crises.

Tonga receives Foreign Military Financing (FMF) to equip its military and participates in the International Military Education and Training (IMET) program, which sends Tongan officers and senior enlisted personnel to professional military education and leadership development courses in the United States.   

The Nevada National Guard has a State Partnership Program with Tonga, with whom it regularly conducts joint training.   

The United States also has a ship-rider agreement with Tonga to provide security and support ship-rider missions which allow Tongan law enforcement officials to ride aboard U.S. Coast Guard vessels.   

The United States also contributes U.S. Coast Guard and U.S. Navy air assets to regional Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA) operations that help combat IUU fishing in the country’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ) and supports the long-term sustainability of the fisheries resources.  

Additionally, Tonga is a regular participant in U.S. Pacific Command sponsored workshops on topics including humanitarian assistance/disaster relief, maritime security, peacekeeping, and international humanitarian law.