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Little prince shows his true colours

Tonga’s Prince Taufa’ahau Manumataongo, who is just six months’, showed his true colours  at a welcome for members of the Tongan national team last week.

The little prince was dressed for the occasion in a red infant jersey with ‘Mate Ma’a Tonga’ printed on the back.

Prince Taufa’ahauManumataongo, who would become king of Tonga in the future, attended the ceremony with his parents, Crown Prince Tupouto’a and Crown Princess Sinaitakala.

The members of the royal family were invited to be special guests at a welcome ceremony and fund raising concert for the team.

Eight members of the Mate Ma’a Tonga team flew home from England to celebrate Tonga’s participation in this year’s Rugby League World Cup.

The Crown prince is patron of the Tonga Rugby League Association.

This was the first time so many Tongans had been able to see the baby prince.

Crown Princess Sinaitakala showed the royal couple’s son to the people, who vied for his attention by smiling and waving.

The organisers of the fundraising concert said they did not expect the royals to stay for the fundraising because of the long parade from the airport .

 “But the Crown Prince was intrigued by the support of the people and he just got off his vehicle and went straight to the tent erected for the fundraising concert,” Mate Ma’a Tonga team President Semisi Sika said.

“He remained at the fundraising with his family till it finished.”

Events like the fundraising concert are normally attended by commoners and President  Semisi Sika said they felt honoured to be joined by members of the royal family.

Police hunt Tongan gunman after Sacramento shooting

Police today identified the suspect wanted in an early morning shooting that killed a 23-year-old Sacramento State alumna in San Francisco’s South of Market neighborhood over the weekend.

Michael Sione Green (photo above) has been identified as the man believed to have killed Sacramento resident Melquiesha Warren and injured another women after a small traffic accident in a parking lot near Sixth and Jessie streets around 2:10 a.m. Sunday, San Francisco police said.

The shooting occurred after a group of friends went out at a nearby nightclub. As they were saying goodbye, Warren and her female passenger got into a traffic accident in the parking lot.

After the incident, a Pacific Islander woman in her 20s, described as standing 6 feet tall and wearing a red dress, approached the driver’s door and tried to open it, police said.

Warren exited the car and attempted to calm down the woman who was apparently angry. That is when a man, believed to be Green, appeared with a gun, police said.

Green then shot Warren and the driver of the car, according to police.

Both women were taken to San Francisco General Hospital, where Warren was pronounced dead, police said.
The driver was last listed in life-threatening condition.

Warren graduated in 2012 from California State University, Sacramento, with a degree in criminal justice.

Police have identified Green, 23, as the gunman. He is Tongan and stands 5 feet 11 inches tall, weighs 230 pounds and was last seen with a beard and long hair past his shoulders.

Police said Green is considered “extremely dangerous.” He may be driving a 2011 Mercedes with a California license plate No. 4UIP704.

Police are still working to identify the woman involved in the shooting.

Anyone with information about the shooting and the suspects is asked to call the Police Department’s anonymous tip line at (415) 575-4444 or to send a tip by text message to TIP411 with “SFPD” in the message.

Sasha Lekach, Bay City News

It’s unomoa season in Tonga

‘Ota, eating raw fish is a word indicating insatiable appetite, and common in Tonga. When one says ‘Ota mai ha fo’i ‘unomoa – I am hankering to eat raw unomoa. Someone may respond and say  – That’s really appetizing!

So this is the time of the year to enjoy ‘unomoa in Tonga.

Unomoa is when a mullet is still at the younger stage of its life cycle.  It’s a delicacy to natives of Tonga.

Ngalo’afe ‘Ulupano  who lives in the coastal area of Tongatapu, the village of Popua, talked about how he enjoys fishing for unomoa when he takes leave from his work, every year in November.

“The unomoa season is from November to January,” he said. “This month is their breeding stage, he added.

When, January to March you would find them at their biggest sizes. That’s when they reach maturity. We call it Kanahe,” ‘Ulupano said adding that some people still call it fua.

The fish’s stages of life cycle begins with te’efo – ‘unomoa – fua and then Kanahe according to ‘Ulupano but he said the names varied from place to place.

On the day of fishing they have to figure out the tides before they sail to Mata’aho, an island situated close to Popua, and do the fishing there.

When the tide is coming in, someone has to climb up the tongo trees and watch out for the fish.

When the fish appear, the fishers are ready to do the ha’o or surrounding the fish in a shape of a ‘U’. 

They would then drive the fish into the net.

The net is then pulled out into shore and they start plucking the fish out. At the same time others may start the ‘ota eating the unomoa with manioke or haka talo – cooked cassava or taro.

Once getting a bite of the ‘unomoa after it's cleansed one may say “Ouaa! meaning, Stop it! This does not really mean to stop eating, but it is just kind of jokingly asking the person who is enjoying the eating of the ‘unomoa to simply take it nice and easy. They have plenty of unomoa for him to eat. So there is no need to rush.

It is a kind of Tongan humour they do when knowing fully well that someone is hankering for something. And finding him being interfered and not to concentrate on what he or she is hankering for when he was told to stop causes others to laugh.

When one has enough eating of the ‘unomoa, he may say, “Mate!”. Mate in Tongan means die.  But saying the word after eating the ‘unomoa  or any such delicacies does not mean that someone died. It means he's had enough and now the only thing he looks for, is to get somewhere as soon as possible where he can lie down to rest, as he may have been over-eating the ‘unomoa.

This is the kind of way of life some of the people who left Tonga for overseas, miss and would not forget about.

'Ulupano said the catch is then divided among the fishers, they would then share with their neighbours.

They sell part of the it for $10 pa'anga for 20 ‘unomoa locally, and if they take it to town, Nuku’alofa, then they sell them for $20 pa'anga for 15 ‘unomoa.

Growing up at Nomuka in the Ha’apai group ‘Ulupano said they relocated to Tongatapu and live in Ma’ofanga when he was six.

Since then he used to scour the sea area by boat looking for fish.

In 1984 they moved to Popua at the far end of Ma’ofanga, to the east coast.

“My father was, a primary teacher at government primary school, and after Hurricane Isaac that wrought havoc the kingdom in 1982 his father was called by the Ministry of Education to start the Popua Primary School.

At the time I was already really familiar with the sea area,” he said. 

‘Ulupano is working as a bosun  for the  Germany shipping company, Heino Winter and he spent most of the year overseas, in the Mediterranean and Atlantic seas.

“I take a leave every year according to my contract and that is the only thing I bring with me when I leave. A fishing net and other fishing gear,” he said.

For the 'unomoa he said, “We do the fishing every day except Sunday”.

They have to do it everyday as it is not guaranteed they get the ‘unomoa every time they go fishing, 'Ulupano said.

Malia’s manslaughter case goes to Supreme Court

A manslaughter case against a mother and a brother along with a friend is heading for the Supreme Court in Nuku’alofa.

Magistrate Similoni Tu’akalau ruled that the case now falls outside his jurisdiction as a magistrate and it must be taken to the Supreme Court.

The mother Fifita ‘Ofa, 34  is accused of manslaughter relating to the death of her 14 year old daughter Malia Pelenatita Kolo 14 in August 16.

Her brother Tomasi ‘Ofa, 37 is also charged against the death of the teenager.  

The third accused Mohulamu Toumohuni, 42, faced charge of abetting a crime.

The teenager was rushed to Vaiola Hospital on August 15 after she was found lying helplessly by a visitor in a house in Nuku’alofa with bruises and severe body injuries. 

Police said the young girl was assaulted at two different locations, firstly in Nuku’alofa and then at Houmakelikao.

The hearing is set to be heard on Friday, November 29.

Ha'apai MP warning over instant noodles

From the Parliament of Tonga, October 2013

A six year old boy died after eating instant noodles, MP Mo’ale Finau of Ha’apai 12 constituency told the House.

The noodles, which come in colourful packets are particularly popular with students, because they are cheap and convenient to cook, and they just eat them right away.

Returning from school on September 18 the victim told his father that he was hungry, MP Finau told the House.

The father sent him to a retail shop to buy instant noodles. After eating the noodles with two of his brothers, his mother found the boy lying in the house but thought he was just lying down.

Later on the mum was told that the boy was not normal. The mum checked and noticed the colour of her son’s skin had turned dark, MP Finau said.

He was rushed to the hospital and attended by a doctor allegedly named Eka according to MP Finau.

The MP said the boy was sickened by the noodles and died immediately after his meal of them.

An investigation is underway, he added.

The doctor confirmed there was something unusual in the boy’s lungs and throat, but he wasn’t sure what that was in there. 

The doctor left for overseas. He was yet to return and confirm the result of the post mortem which he did.

The older brother of the victim who was eating the noodles with the boy, conceded the victim told him not long after they ate the noodles that he had a stomach ache.

At one point, the ingredients’ plastic bags were found emptied in the kitchen sink. MP Finau said the ingredients were “eaten” and “drunk” by the boy.

Food safety rule

Finau went further and expressed his concern that a research he knew of says about 95 per cent of primary and high school students in Tonga are affected, because they ate this type of noodle.

He said research by experts shows there is a poisonous chemical found in the ingredients that come with the noodles. 

There is a type of chemical known as “monosodium glutamate” found in the noodles' ingredients and it can cause kidney damage and stroke, Finau said.

The instant noodles contain a wax coating and that is why it does not stick together when cooking. MP Finau pointed out that that is a [poisonous] chemical that come with the noodle.

He invited the members of the House to try a package of instant noodle also known as Two Minute Noodles.

When they put it in boiling water they should notice a white stuff floating on top of the water and that is the wax. That is a chemical [poisonous], he said.

Finau told the House they had just passed a bill for Food Safety. They have discussed the issue of how the chemical is being harmfully used on vegetables.

He said this is the duty of the Ministry of Health, to take care of food safety, because it may cause people's deaths. The government should be sued if it was found out they failed to do their job, Finau said. 

Response

The Minister for Health was disturbed by MP Finau’s report and said he has not heard about a boy who died in the hospital.

He reminded the members, that the policy for raising matters regarding a particular ministry in the House has to go through the minister, by sending him questions in writing.

The minister said the way MP Finau raised his report about the boy contaminated the minds of the people about the minister's operations.

But MP Finau was thankful, believing that the minister’s response meant the message he was trying to reveal has been received, and now it just remained for the minister and his ministry to work on it.

Tonga make four changes for Wales test

Tonga Head Coach, Mana 'Otai have made four changes for Friday night’s clash against Wales at the Millennium Stadium.

Taumalolo has been handed with a four weeks ban and surely miss this last game.

Taumalolo has been replaced by Melbourne Rebels front-row Eddie Aholelei, who is joined up front by Sila Puafisi who replaces tighthead Tevita Mailau.

In other changes, Oyonnax back-row Viliami Ma'afu comes in for Taniela Moa at the base of the scrum while Latiume Fosita starts at fly-half in place of Fangatapu 'Apikotoa. Flanker Nili Langilangi Lotu will captain the side.

Vungakoto Lilo (Tarbes Pyrenees); Fetuumoana Vainikolo (Exeter), Siale Piutau (Yamaha), Sione Piukala (Perpignan), Will Helu (London Wasps); Latiume Fosita (Borthland Taniwha), Taniela Moa (Selection Paloise); Eddie Aholelei (Melbourne Rebels), Vaea Taione (Jersey), Sila Puafisi (Tasman Mako), Tukulua Lokotui (Gloucester), Joe Tuineau (Lyon Olympique), Sione Kalamafoni (Gloucester), Nili Langilangi Lotu (NEC Rockets, capt), Viliami Ma’afu (Oyonnax).

Reps: Suliasi Taufalele (Counties Manaku), Taione Vea (London Wasps), Tevita Mailau (Mont de Marsan), Hale T Pole (Southland), Opeti Fonua (Bayonne), Samisoni Fisilau (Bay of Plenty), Fangatapu  Apikotoa (Northland Taniwha), David Harvey Halaifonua (Hofoa RFC).

Law officials discuss laws with villagers

An educational opportunity for the  villagers to learn about "village laws" in Tonga has been organised by the Attorney General’s Office to begin next week Monday 25 –  29 November.

It is a chance for the Tongatapu community to understand how the law is applied, and also to discuss views on current laws, which may lead to law reforms, AG Office says.

The theme is “Village Laws” and the intention is to discuss laws directly relating to life in villages.

Such laws include laws relating to the powers and duties of town officers and district officers, order in public places, stray animals, loud noise and music, dances, land rights, cemeteries, domestic violence, access to tobacco and alcohol, and traffic offences, to name a few. 

The programmes that will be delivered in Law Week 2013 will consist of a daily radio talk back show on Radio Tonga from Monday to Friday at 2pm to 330pm, and also a nightly television discussion panel that will be broadcast on Television Tonga, with town officers from different villages in Tongatapu. 

The public is invited to listen and participate in the daily radio talk back shows, and also to watch the nightly television programmes. 

Law Week 2013 is jointly funded by the Government of the Kingdom of Tonga through the Attorney General’s Office, and the New Zealand Aid Programme through the New Zealand High Commission in Tonga. 

Sona Taumalolo banned for four weeks

Tonga prop Sona Taumalolo will sit out Friday night's clash with Wales after receiving a four-week ban.

Taumalolo was sent off for punching France lock Yoann Maestri, who was also red-carded for striking the Tongan in the same incident, during last weekend's 38-18 win for the hosts in Le Havre.

Maestri escaped further sanction when both players appeared before a disciplinary committee in London.

But disciplinary chiefs dished out a more severe punishment to Taumalolo after studying video footage of the second-half clash and he misses the trip to the Millennium Stadium.

A statement read: "Both players had accepted prior to the hearing that their actions had warranted a red card, and the committee deemed that Sona Taumalolo's offence was in the mid-range of the IRB's sanctions (five weeks), allowing one week off for mitigating factors.

"Sona Taumalolo is free to resume playing on 16 December 2013, and both players have the right of appeal."

Source: 1.skysports.com

Court hears claims by Tonga’s first independent AG

A case against Tongan government for alleged breach of Employment Contract has begun at the Nuku’alofa Supreme Court Tuesday, November 19.

Seven jurors presided over by the Chief Justice Michael Scott would hear the civil case, in which the plaintiff John Cauchi is claiming over AUD$500,000 in special damages and relief for Breach of Contract, Repudiation of Contract and Constructive Dismissal.

Lawyer for Cauchi, Laki Niu told the court his client was Tonga’s first independent Attorney General.

He was contracted to work for the Tongan Government by the former administration of Prime Minister Feleti Sevele on 28 May 2009.

The contract lays out conditions for both parties to follow including Cauchi’s salary of AUD$250,000 per annum.

The Government of Tonga has to provide him with free accommodation.  He also has to receive the same entitlement and benefits of a Cabinet Minister.

If Cauchi wanted to resign he must notify the government within three-months according to his contract, Niu told the court.

The contract states Cauchi can only be removed from office for reasons of physical or mental incapacity or if convicted with an offence under the Anti-Corruption Commission Act.

No reimbursement

The government attempted to obtain Cauchi an accomodation according to the contract but could not find one.

Cauchi then rented an accommodation for $3000 per month.

The rental price was high and upon agreement between him and the Solicitor General a new contract was written stating that he and the Government each would pay 50 percent each for the accomofation.

Cauchi signed the contract but PM Sevele refused to sign it. The government has not paid him anything up to now.

After returning from Melbourne and Apia in 2009 on a business trip that he paid for all the expenses himself he laid a reimbursement claim before the treasury but they never paid him anything up to now, Niu said.

Niu also told the court Cauchi was surprised when he was told in about late November that the government made a decision that he no longer continued on with his responsibility as attorney general which it was removed and given to someone else.

Royal Commission of Inquiry

In August 2009 the MV Princess Ashika, an inter-island ferry which belonged to the government sank in Tonga killing more than 70 people.

A Royal Commission of Inquiry set up to investigate the causes of the tragedy. It was Cauchi’s responsibility to make sure witnesses were called before the commission and that the government could allow all documents required by the commissioners to be given.

The court was told the report of the commission was critical of the Government and the Shipping Corporation company along with  its directors.

Niu claimed that Cauchi informed Government after the conclusion of the Commission to hire two independent prosecutors from overseas to prosecute matters regarding the sinking of the MV Ashika.

Prime Minister Sevele was not satisfied with it and the suggestion to bring in the independent prosecutors was cancelled. 

There were also other matters Cauchi claimed the government interfered with in which his independence laid out by his contract was affected.

Niu claimed that the government breached the contract by terminating Cauchi's office.

Cauchi will take the stand Wednesday 20 before the defence is expected to open its case afterwards.

Neil Adsett, Tonga's Artoney General is acted for the government.

Tongatapu communities' offices connected through internet

With the help of newly installed computer internets in offices of the town and district officers, the official communication now among the villages and government would be more convenient and fast.

A number of district and town offices including Kolofo’ou, Ma’ufanga, Vani, Pahu, Tatakamotonga, Fua’amotu and Lapaha enjoy broadband internet access since it was first brought to Tonga in August.

It’s an opportunity for the district and town officers to perform their tasks through the internets.

Their monthly reports to the Ministry of Internal Affairs would now be sending through the internets.

Lord Vaea,  the Minister of Internal Affairs launched the internet connection for the offices on November 9-8.

Statement from the MIA says, the opening ceremony conducted following computer trainings for the Tongatapu District and Town Officers.

The ministry hopes to extend the initiative to outer islands soon.