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Number of students sitting Tonga SSE examination increased compared to 2015

The number of students sitting Tonga Secondary School Entrance Examination (SSEE) this year has increased by 270 students compared to 2675 who sat it last year.

Tonga’s Ministry of Education said 2,945 class six students sat the Tonga SSEE today.

The number included 1845 students in Tongatapu, 202 in  ‘Eua, 205 in Ha’apai, 403 in Vava’u, 49 in the Niuas and  241 from church schools.

2909 students sat the exams in 2014.

The two-day  exam began today with English and Environmental Science subjects.

Tomorrow will be the final day with students sitting the Tongan Studies and Mathematics exam.

The examination results will decide whether or not a student gains entry to their preferred high school.

Tonga want US murder suspect extradited; Vavaʻu Police investigated over Fletcher’s escape

The Tongan government said a formal extradition request has been in process to American Samoa authority to have the US citizen suspected of murdering his wife in Vavaʻu brought back to Tonga.

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

He was arrested in Pago Pago this morning.

Meanwhile a team of investigators from Tongatapu have arrived in Vavaʻu today to investigate the circumstances surrounding the escape of Fletcher.

“I have obvious concerns over this matter and people will be held to account if accepted procedures have not been followed” says Commissioner Steve Caldwell in a statement from Police.

“As a result of Tonga Police casting their net wide, by utilizing international police networks, and good work by America Samoan authorities, escaped prisoner Dean Jay Fletcher has been located in Pago Pago, American Samoa this morning (04/10/16)”.

“Fletcher has been arrested by local authorities and extradition proceedings have been commenced by Attorney General’s Office, Tonga and Attorney General’s Office, American Samoa and U.S. Department of Justice”.

“Commissioner Steve Caldwell also said that he had sent a team of Senior Police Officers to Vava’u today (04/10/16), to investigate the full circumstances of the escape”.

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Pago pago Police seize yacht believed belonged to US suspect who fled Tonga

Tongan Police struggle to apprehend escaped US murderer

Pago pago Police seize yacht believed belonged to US suspect who fled Tonga

The American Samoa’s authority has seized a yacht that resembles the one used by the US murder suspect who escaped from a Tongan prison last week.

Dean Jay Fletcher, 54, was facing charges in Tonga in connection with the death of his Canadian wife in the kingdom’s Vava’u islands in June.

He was remanded in Police custody before he vanished into the Pacific ocean.

Radio New Zealand has reported this afternoon the yacht Sea Oak sailed into American Samoa’s Pago Pago Harbour this morning with a man on board believed by local media to be fugitive murder suspect Dean Jay Fletcher.

“RNZI’s correspondent in Pago Pago said the yacht arrived in Pago Pago to refuel but was not able to dock straight away at the refuelling station.

“It began to sail away and got as far as the island of Aunu’u before the marine patrol unit escorted the yacht back into port late this morning.

“The authorities were then alerted and the Sea Oak has since been kept at the marine patrol docking area.

“A marine patrol officer said a team of police investigators had been to check out the yacht but it was understood they could not search the boat until a warrant was obtained.

“It was not clear if there had been any contact between the local Department of Public Safety and the Tongan authorities.

“There is no extradition treaty between American Samoa and Tonga.

“KHJ News reported the man did not seem concerned and was having a nap on his yacht”.

Mastermind of drug shipments falsely destined for Tonga jailed for 14 years

by Jared Savage (NZ Herald)

A “puppet master” behind the “almost perfect” crime of smuggling 250kg of drugs into the country has been sentenced to 14 years in prison.

Yixin Gan, 35, was last month found guilty of two counts of importing a Class B drug but acquitted on a third count by the jury, who deliberated for just a few hours at the High Court at Auckland.

She was also convicted of possession of a Class B drug for supply in connection to the October 2013 importation, where detectives found 250kg of a medicine containing pseudoephedrine, one of the main ingredients needed to cook methamphetamine.

The jury also heard evidence about how the VIP gambler at Auckland’s SkyCity casino had about $7 million of unexplained cash deposits into multiple bank accounts.

Today at her sentencing in the same court, Crown prosecutor Scott McColgan described Gan as the “mastermind” of a sophisticated smuggling operation which exploited how goods are freighted from China to the Pacific Islands, through New Zealand.

The method was so clever, McColgan said it would not have been discovered by police had Gan not been in contact with two others, Van Tran and Da Wen Shao, already under surveillance.

On behalf of Gan, defence lawyer Graeme Newell said his client was at the same level in the syndicate hierarchy as Tran and Shao – but not higher.

“Ms Gan should not be seen as the mastermind.”

Her three young children are in China.

“They will suffer the loss of their mother for a considerable length of time,” said Newell.

In handing down the 14 year sentence – the second longest for Class-B drug offending in New Zealand – Justice Mathew Downs said Gan was motivated by profit and a conservative estimate of the 250kg shipment was worth $8.9 million.

He rejected the argument that Gan was the same rank as Tran and Shao.

“I am sure you were the primary architect, at least in New Zealand, of the October 2013 shipment.”

Justice Downs also ordered Gan serve at least 60 per cent of her sentence before being eligible for parole, or eight years and four months.

Gan is the last of more than 30 people who were convicted across four trials following Taskforce Ghost, an 18-month covert investigation which delved into Auckland’s underworld.

The case was about pseudoephedrine, once the active ingredient in New Zealanders’ favourite cold and flu medicines, but now banned because of its part in meth-making.

Pseudoephedrine can be extracted from a medicine widely available in China called ContacNT. A packet costs a few dollars but a “set” of 223g of pink granules sells for around $9000 on the black market in New Zealand.

Bugged phone conversations, mainly in Mandarin and Cantonese, and covert surveillance dominated the evidence given to the jurors.

The officer in charge of Operation Ghost, Detective Sergeant Mike Beal, told the High Court the investigation began when police became aware of “significant quantities” of pseudoephedrine coming into Auckland, then being diverted into drug manufacturing around the country.

The decision was made to immerse an undercover agent called Joe Arama in the criminal underworld to build his own credibility and gain the trust of his target, Felix Lim.

They rubbed shoulders in SkyCity and a friendship turned into a business arrangement.

One recorded conversation, in May 2013, played to the court showed Arama was successful in posing as a drug dealer.

“I’m going to see a guy, how about the pink stuff that Alan’s got?” Arama asked Lim. “How much for five?”

Beal said they were talking about five sets of pseudoephedrine, which it seemed was half the amount Lim would normally sell.

Lim’s answer was $46,500.

By tapping Lim’s phone, the police were able to identify his supplier, See Meng Hoo, and, in turn, his supplier, Van Thanh Tran.

Through Tran, police also listened to the conversations of Da Wen Shao, also known as Tall Man. It was physical surveillance of these two men that led police to Gan.

Tran was sentenced to 13 years and 8 months in prison, Shao nine years and four months. Both entered early guilty pleas.

In his opening address, McColgan told the court Gan had “cottoned on to an almost perfect” method of smuggling the drugs into the country.

She ran a legitimate business shipping food from China to the Pacific Islands, with a short stop in New Zealand.

But because the shipments were shown as goods in transit, and therefore not technically coming through the border, the consignments were not inspected by Customs.

Instead, the shipments – disguised as potato starch – were sent to the secure Customs-controlled area at Auckland airport until they were freighted to the final destination.

“But what if you had an inside man in the Customs-controlled area?” was the question McColgan posed to the jury.

The inside man was Mosese Uele, who ran a freight-forwarding company called Ezi World Cargo.

Inside the Ezi World Cargo premises, Uele switched the ContacNT with real potato starch to be sent to Tonga. The boxes of drugs were put in a van and driven to a car park in Auckland, all while being followed by police.

Uele was sentenced to five years and five months in prison, but has now been released.

He was a Crown witness in Gan’s trial and told the jury he did not know what was inside the boxes of “starch”. He said he was paid $60,000 in a large brown envelope.

“Did you ask why she paid $60,000 to swap 20 boxes of starch?” asked McColgan.

“It wasn’t my business. My role was to swap boxes and get money. That was my only concern,” Uele replied.

“It was too great … [I was] too greedy.”

NZ Herald

Tongan PM receives Honorary Int’l Consultant of Peace and Love award

The President of the Federation of World Peace and Love (FOWPAL), Dr. Hong Tao-Tze, presented the Certificate of Honour as the Honorary International Consultant of Peace to Tonga’s Prime Minister ‘Akilisi Pōhiva.

The presentation was made at the United Nations General Assembly on September 22.

Hon Pōhiva was invited to speak at a United Nations side event to mark the celebration of the International Day of Peace at the United Nations.

As Chief Guest at the event, the Hon Pōhiva reiterated that leaders have a great deal of discretionary powers being responsible for decisions that can markedly affect individuals, national, regional and the international community.

“Being world leaders demand the highest standard of probity, honesty, integrity, accountability, perseverance and persistence in the exercise of their leadership role for the common good of all people,” said the Prime Minister.

New research says Tongan diabetes rates have fallen and WHO figures are flawed

The number of people with diabetes in Tonga has decreased, according to new Australian research.

The finding contradicts a prediction by the World Health Organisation that the diabetes rates would double.

Researchers from the University of New South Wales and the Baker IDI Heart & Diabetes Institute say that tests carried out for the World Health Organisation in Tonga (2004) and Fiji and Samoa (2002) were flawed.

Their work has been published as an article, ‘Erroneous inflation of diabetes prevalence: Are there global implications?’ in the Journal of Diabetes.

And according to members of the same team, there are so many discrepancies between the different methods used to test for diabetes around the world that the true global figure for the disease may have been underestimated by up to 100 million people.

The WHO surveys looked at the prevalence of diabetes in those countries. The researchers compared the results with follow-up surveys done 11 years later.

They said that because an incorrect procedure had been used in the original WHO surveys, the rate of the increase of diabetes appeared to be double what it actually was.

In Tonga the prevalence surveys suggested a 12% increase, from 22.4% in 2004 to 34.4% in 2012. The new research said that the actual rate from corrected data showed it had actually decreased by 3.4% to 19.0%.

According to current WHO figures, 19.1% of males and 24.5% of females in Tonga have diabetes. The figures are matched by much higher levels of obesity, a situation which has led Tonga to be christened “the diabetes heavyweight of the Pacific.”

The WHO predicts a doubling of the number of the number of cases in Tonga by 2030, a progression it makes for other Pacific island countries as well.

The report said the inflated reports on the prevalence of diabetes 2 had affected public health policy, monitoring, and evaluation, as well as advocacy and program planning in the Pacific region.

The report’s co-author, Professor Richard Taylor, said the WHO surveys were crucial because they gave an indication of the success, or otherwise, of health intervention programs.

“These WHO surveys are widely cited and used as a reference by many organisations and individuals to make public health decisions which then influence future health program planning in the Pacific region,” Professor Taylor said.

Report co-author Professor Paul Zimmet, said it might be necessary to recalculate results in other countries where diabetes rates might now be suspect.

In an interview with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation earlier this year, Professor Zimmett said three different methods were used to test for diabetes.

Because they did not all sample the same things, overall global figures for diabetes might be wrong.

He told the ABC that the true figure may have been underestimated by 100 million.

Zimmett cited a paper published in Nature Reviews earlier this year which said that while the official prediction of diabetes sufferers was 415 million people, it could actually be more than 500 million people.

The main points

  • The number of people with diabetes in Tonga has decreased, according to new Australian research.
  • The finding contradicts a prediction by the World Health Organisation that the diabetes rates would double.
  • The report said that in Tonga the WHO prevalence surveys suggested a 12% increase, from 22.4% in 2004 to 34.4% in 2012.
  • The actual rate from corrected data decreased by 3.4% to 19.0%.

For more information

Dramatic rise in Pacific Islands diabetes cases questioned due to ‘methodological errors’ (Gary Scattergood)

WHO diabetes programme

Tonga health profile 2016 (WHO)

Tonga – the diabetes heavy weight of the Pacific

Diabetes prevalence could be severely underestimated: Researchers

Tongans split over language issue after workers dropped from pilot programme

Tongan workers who applied to work in Christchurch have been rejected because of poor language skills, but callers to Radio Tonga  said being able to work hard was more important than being able to speak English.

CEO of Internal Affairs ‘Ana Bing Fonua told Radio Tonga News that Tongan workers had been dropped from a pilot programme offering visas to 28 workers from the kingdom, Samoa and Fiji.

Fonua said workers from all the Islands were dropped in the final stage of selection because they did not perform well in their English presentations.

The workers had been expected to start work next May.

The programme for Island workers is run by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment, Pacific Trust Canterbury and Christchurch Polytechnic Institute of Technology. It is designed to help fill a skills shortage in Christchurch.

The project is a trial intended to run for up to a year. It is part of PACER Plus, a trade and economic integration agreement between New Zealand and Pacific Island governments.

It was expected that Island workers would also work towards a New Zealand qualification.

Several callers to Radio Tonga’s Talk Back Show argued that the ability to speak and understand English was not important as Tongans were known for their hard working abilities skills.

However, another caller who said he was working on a construction site in Auckland claimed most of his co-workers were Asians who were unable to speak or understand English.

However, other callers said English was a key factor to gaining more job opportunities.

Others said contractors did not have the time or money to carry out special training for temporary workers.

Being able to converse and write well in English was important so workers could not be cheated by their employer.

“Once you’re picked to work overseas you have to understand your work contract, safety signs and other important issues which are all in English at the workplace,” a caller said.

A report by the Labour and Immigration Research Centre, In Harm’s Way, said language barriers were a major factor in workplace injuries, safety and education.

Work visas

The New Zealand government lists criteria for general short term work visas online. These include essential skills needed for Canterbury and the Christchurch reconstruction programme.

The website says applicants must be aged 55 or under, and meet English language, health, and character requirements.

  • How important are English language skills for seasonal workers and short term skilled visa workers in New Zealand? Kaniva News would like to hear about your experiences and welcome your views.

The main points

  • Tongan workers selected for a pilot project bringing Island workers to Christchurch have been cut from the  programme because of poor language skills.
  • CEO of Internal Affairs ‘Ana Bing Fonua told Radio Tonga News that Tongan workers had been dropped from a programme offering visas to 28 workers from the kingdom, Samoa and Fiji.
  • Some callers to Radio Tonga said being able to work hard was more important than being able to speak English.
  • However, others said workers needed to be able to read safety signs and their contracts.

For more information

Trained Pacific workers join the Christchurch rebuild

Fears standards will suffer as thousands of extra NZ apprentices trained

In Harm’s way

Indonesian man drowns; Tongan Police awaiting autopsy report

Tongan Police investigating the death of an Indonesian fisherman at Tuʻimatamoana wharf  in Nukuʻalofa were awaiting autopsy results to confirm the cause of his death.

A 30-year-old year old Indonesian fisherman was reported to have fallen into the sea in Maʻufanga in Tongatapu at about 11pm.

His body was recovered by a Police diver the following day.

Police said the Chinese’s Yushun fisherman was having a party with his co-workers before the incident happened.

The deceased body was still in Vaiola mortuary and Police were still awaiting the autopsy report.

King and Queen to attend Lord Tangatatonga’s funeral

Their Majesties King Tupou VI and Queen Nanasipauʻu will arrive in Auckland this evening.

They will leave tomorrow Tuesday 4 for Fiji to attend Ratu Joni Madraiwiwi’s funeral.

The Tongan law lord died after a short illness.

Tonga’s counsul in ‘Atalanga Stafford ‘Aho has confirmed this to Kaniva News.

The Fijian citizen was a life peer on Tonga’s Privy Council after he was appointed by Late King George V as one of his law lords.

He was given the name Lord Madraiwiwi Tangatatonga.

75-year-old mother believed oldest Tongan USP graduate

Seventy-five-year-old Leaʻaetoa ‘Ofakihevaha Fatai received a Certificate in Early Childhood Education on Friday, making her believably the oldest graduate in Tongan USP history.

More than 100 students at the USP Tonga centre received degrees, diplomas and certificates after a morning street procession along Taufaʻāhau Rd in Tongatapu.

Fatai was a former Tongan government primary school teacher who mostly taught in Pangaimotu, Vavaʻu.

Students at USP have to study the programme full time before it could be completed within one year or in one and a half year if they studied it part time.

The event was attended by the Chancellor of the University of the South Pacific Hon. Henry Puna who’s also the Prime Minister of the Cook Islands and Tonga’s Prime Minister ‘Akilisi Pohiva.