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Funeral of Potenitila Moimoi who died after giving birth to her 7th child

Hundreds are paying their respects as the funeral of Potenitila Moimoi, who died after giving birth to her seventh child, has taken place in Popua.

On social media, thousands have been paying their own tributes to an “amazing mother” in the days following her death.

And now, the family has set up a live stream which you can follow below to watch the funeral as it happens.

https://www.facebook.com/livestreamtonga/videos/451947093471129

Potenitila died in hospital on Wednesday last week, after spending sometimes with her newborn.

After her death, her husband ‘Isoa wrote on Facebook that what he wanted to “make Poteni proud” and said she was “a wonderful, loving and caring person and she has been our super hero for years”.

As Kaniva News reported last week, her family shared to Facebook a photo of Potenitila lying smilingly on a bed while her husband ‘Isoa Moimoi was standing by her bedside carrying their newborn in what appeared to be a room at Vaiola hospital.

The sharing of those photos did not take long before the family returned to social media but this time launching a blood A+ donation for Potenitila.

Border fully reopens, but big visitor numbers not expected just yet

By Jake McKee, and is republished with permission.

New Zealand’s borders are now completely reopened to the world but any change to numbers arriving on the country’s shores is expected to start as a trickle.

Travellers with face masks at Auckland Airport international arrivals during the Covid-19 coronavirus outbreak on 20/3/2020.

Borders may be open, but recovery is still expected to be slow. Photo: RNZ / Liu Chen

The last of five Covid-19 border reopening phases happened at 11.59pm on Sunday – opening the maritime border, as well as applications for tourist, visitor and student visas from anywhere in the world.

Before the pandemic, international students and cruise ships were big money makers for New Zealand.

However, those income flows that largely dried up when the borders closed in early 2020 and the two sectors have been eager to welcome people back.

Auckland’s Macleans College hosted about 300 foreign students pre-pandemic.

Principal Steven Hargreaves is keen to build those numbers back up and would have liked to see applications opened months ago so students could start returning on Monday.

“We’ve got a lot of catching up to do if we want to recapture what’s so important for New Zealand.”

Before the pandemic international students had brought in about $5 billion a year but that figure dropped to about an estimated $1.3 billion in 2021.

Hargreaves said some schools could have their work cut out if they had all but shut down their international programmes and let staff go.

It was more than just simply saying the students could come, but needing to recruit them, finding them a place to live and then moving onto admin processes, he said.

AUCKLAND, NZ - MAY 29:Traffic on Queen street  on May 29 2013.It's a major commercial thoroughfare in the Auckland CBD, New Zealand's main population center.

International students brought in big money to the economy. Photo: 123rf.com

Cruise Association chief executive Kevin O’Sullivan was excited but said his industry also had a wait on its hands.

The first cruise ship was set to arrive in Auckland on 12 August “and then there’ll be something of a hiatus, then, until mid-October when the season begins in earnest”, he said.

The industry would use that time to ensure it was ready, O’Sullivan said – citing there was “already some hesitation in some quarters as to how ready it will be.”

He was confident the industry still had a high economic value, pointing out that in the last season before the pandemic it brought in more than $500 million.

“It’s going to bring a lot to downtown Auckland, for example – restore the vibrancy that’s been lacking without the cruise ships coming into downtowns.”

Head of Immigration New Zealand’s Reconnecting New Zealand unit Simon Sanders said the border changes were a “significant milestone” but it was hard to predict how many people will come to this country as a result.

“I think it’s safe to say we’re not expecting the same level of demand we saw pre-Covid. That’s probably for a number of reasons,” he said.

“We know that China, who’s a larger visitor visa-required country, is still subject to a range of travel restrictions so we’re not expecting large demand from there, at least initially.”

Sanders said immigration would start processing visas immediately, with a commitment to processing “straightforward” visitor visas within 20 working days.

But he urged people who were planning visits next year to wait a little before they apply.

“For students, we are encouraging those who have offers of study to put in applications immediately and we’ll get those under way; and for those who may be looking to study in 2023, hold off for a couple of months so we can assure that those that need to arrive this year will be able to do so.”

Immigration had recruited 230 staff to process visas, replacing people from foreign offices that closed because of the pandemic.

“Any fool could tell” – but still the ferry fit only for scrap was allowed to sail to her doom

MV Princess Ashika anniversary.

“Any fool could tell how bad the ship was.”

Many of the victims are still on the sunken wreck of the Princess Ashika

Thirteen years after the last voyage of the MV Princess Ashika, the words of Sione Mafi Kavaliku, a Marine Officer in Tonga’s Ministry of Transport have not lost their power.

Kavaliku was responding to a question from the then Acting Director of Marine and Ports about his opinion of the doomed vessel.

According to an investigation into the disaster, she was fit for nothing but scrap.

The Princes Ashika capsized just before midnight on August 5, 2009, in moderate seas while sailing from Nuku’alofa to Ha’afeva,  about 47 nautical miles north of the capital.

The Royal Commission of Inquiry into the sinking of the Princess Ashika made its findings clear: The ferry should never have been allowed to sail, she should never have been rushed into service and she should never have been bought in the first place.

On the anniversary of her sinking, which claimed 74 lives – including 13 children aged under 10 – the report raises an awkward question: If anybody could tell how bad the ship was, how could it have happened?

“The ship sailed on four voyages in Tonga before the accident,” the Royal Commission said.

“Before each of those voyages a number of people, who should have known that the vessel was unseaworthy, could have prevented the ship sailing: the acting director of Marine and Ports, who had the power to detain the ship, the Marine and Ports surveyors through their director, the master or chief engineer of the Princess Ashika, the managing director of the Shipping Corporation of Polynesia and the board of the Shipping Corporation of Polynesia (SPC).

“None did.”

Chain of failures

The Preliminary Report said that even after the rusting, leaking ship sailed, disaster might have been averted if the crew had acted promptly. That they didn’t was part of a chain of failures  that led to the disaster.

Lord Sevele ‘O Vailahi. Photo/Youtube

However, the report also made it clear that even if the Princess Ashika had survived that night, she was in such poor condition that eventually she would have sunk.

The Tongan Royal Commission of Inquiry declared that the ferry was unseaworthy and in an appalling condition.

“It should never have been allowed to sail in Tonga under any conditions,” the Commission said.

Any suggestion to the contrary, including claims by John Jonesse (the CEO of Shipping Corporation of Polynesia Limited until he was suspended by the Board of Shipping Corporation on November 6, 2009) and former Minister of Transport Paul David Karalus  that the vessel was in good condition or well maintained were “not only patently absurd, but dishonest.”

“The evidence as to the unseaworthiness and appalling state of the vessel is overwhelming and compelling.”

The Royal Commission described the ferry as being in a frightening and horrendous condition.

Built in Japan in the early 1970s, the Princess Ashika was only ever meant to sail on the calm waters of Japan’s inland sea. She was not designed to sail in open waters. Her bow and stern loading ramps were not watertight and her design meant she was vulnerable to waves and flooding.

Fiji service

After her service in Japan came to an end she was sold to Patterson Brothers in Fiji, which operated her between the islands. By then, however, she was already in such a state of disrepair that the Fiji Islands Maritime Safety Administration (FIMSA) imposed a series of restrictions on her operations that meant she could only be used in sheltered waters on a short route.

Her hull was full of holes, her decking and sides were rusted through and she was covered in a patchwork of concrete and welded patches. She was supposed to be regularly hauled out of the water and surveyed and in her last days in Fiji she was certified to keep working for only a few weeks.

Her owners wanted to get rid of her, but even if she was sold for scrap, the cost of taking her to somewhere she could be cut up would mean a loss. Better then, to sell her. And now here came a potential customer, anxious to buy a replacement for the SPC’s failing ferry, the MV Olovaha and, according to the damning Royal Commission Report, willing to ignore the rules, dismiss all the evidence and ignore the international rules governing shipping.

The Royal Commission cited a survey of the vessel made in Fiji about six months before its arrival in Tonga: “The vessel is now 36 years old and the condition it is now in if it is allowed to trade will cause a maritime disaster . . . The vessel is beyond repair and is no longer fit for sea services of any nature.”

Failed

The Royal Commission report said Tonga’s leaders had failed to do their duties properly in the rush to replace the Olovaha. The Princess Ashika was bought from the Patterson Brothers on May 8, 2009, for FJ$600,000.

Lord Dalgety of Scotland

The Commission said documentation used to obtain the Tongan provisional certificate of registration had been intentionally altered to hide the significant operating restrictions placed on the Princess Ashika by FIMSA. A number of other documents that were used to support the purchase contained forged or misrepresented signatures.

“Had those operating restrictions and the reasons for them been known to the Tonga Government, it is unlikely that the Government would have approved the purchase,” the Commission said.

The report said the Cabinet, the vessel’s operator, the Shipping Corporation of Polynesia and the Ministry of Transport all failed to conduct due diligence in the purchase of the vessel, ultimately resulting in the disaster.

During the hearings, Prime Minister Feleti Sevele told TV3 in New Zealand that the ship “was tested, it passed [and] therefore it was able to get the seaworthiness certificate plus the marine insurance cover. I don’t think it was the ship’s sea worthiness that was the cause.”

Defensive

The Commission said that when answering the inquiry’s questions the Prime Minister “was defensive in many of his responses and refused to accept the obvious.”

Lord Sikotalani, aka Ramsey Dalgety,  who was secretary of the Shipping Corporation of Polynesia blamed government for buying the vessel and said that he “just signed the checques.”

No recommendations were made for any criminal or civil responsibility charges.

Ultimately, the ferry’s captain, Viliami Makahokovalu Tuputupu, the SCP’s managing director, John Jonesse, the ferry’s first mate, Semisi Pomale, and the acting director of the Tongan marine and ports department, Viliami Tu’ipulotu were found guilty of the manslaughter by negligence of Vae Fetu’u Taufa, a 21-year-old mother. Ms Taufa was the sole Tongan passenger whose body was recovered.

Prime Minister Sevele did not stand for re-election in the 2010 elections. He was subsequently made Lord Sevele of Vailahi by King George Tupou V. In recent months he has been the subject of controversy over his appointment to Tonga’s National Reserve Bank.

In October 2017 Lord Sikotalani resigned as chief executive of the Tongan Electricity Commission after an inquiry was launched into unaccounted-for pension funds.

Covid-19 update: 4238 new community cases, number of attributed deaths rises to 1502

By RNZ.co.nz

The number of deaths in New Zealand confirmed as attributable to Covid-19 has risen above the 1500 mark, as 4238 new community cases are reported today.

In today’s statement, the Ministry of Health said as at yesterday, there were 1502 deaths confirmed as attributable to the coronavirus, either as the underlying cause of death or as a contributing factor.

It said the average increase in deaths each day attributable to Covid-19 over the past week is now 19.

Another 23 deaths of people with Covid-19 were also reported today.

They included one person in their 30s, one in their 40s, one in their 60s, two in their 70s, 10 in their 80s and eight aged over 90. Eleven were women and 12 were men.

Four were from Auckland region, five were from Waikato, three were from Bay of Plenty, three were from Hawke’s Bay, two were from Wellington region, four were from Canterbury, one was from West Coast, one was from Southern.

The seven day rolling average of community cases is now at 7183, compared to 7405 yesterday and down from 8600 this time last week.

But the number of people in hospital with Covid-19 has risen, with 806 hospitalisations reported today compared to 769 yesterday, with 12 people currently in ICU.

The average age of the people in hospital is 65.

There were 67 deaths with Covid-19 reported yesterday, although the Ministry of Health said the spike in numbers was because of a “recent data reconciliation process”. There were also 6232 new cases confirmed yesterday.

The Ministry said 226 of today’s new cases had recently travelled overseas.

There have now been more than 1.6 million – 1,603,545 – confirmed cases of Covid-19 in New Zealand.

FAKAMATALA FAKATONGA

Kuo fakapapau’i kuo fakalaka ‘a e kau mate ‘i he Koviti -19 ‘i he toko 5,000 pea ko e keisi fo’ou ‘i he komiunitī ‘e 4238 kuo lipooti ‘i he ‘aho ni.
‘I he fakamatala ‘o e ‘aho ni na’e pehē ai ‘e he Potungāue Mo’ui ‘o hangē ko ‘aneafi, na’e toko 1502 ‘a e kau mate na’e fakapapau’i ko e tu’unga ‘i he vailasi kolona, ‘o fakahangatonu pe fekau’aki.
Na’e pehē ko e hiki hake ko ia ‘a e kau mate ‘i he ‘aho ‘i he Kōviti -19 ‘i he uike kuo ‘osi kuo a’u ‘eni ki he toko 19,.
Ko e toe mate ‘eni ‘a e kakai ‘e toko 23 ‘i he Kōviti -19 na’e toe lipooti mai ‘i he ‘aho ni.
‘Oku kau ai ‘a e toko 1 lahi hake he ta’u 30, 1 lahi hake he ta’u 40, taha lahi hake he ta’u 60, 2 lahi hake he ta’u 70, 10 lahi hake he ta’u 80 pea toko 9 lahi hake he ta’u 90. Toko 11 fefine pea 12 tangata.
Toko 4 mei ‘Aokalani, 5 mei Uaikato, 3 mei Bay of Plenty, 3 mei Hawkes Bay, 2 mei Uelingatoni, 4 mei Canterbury, 1 mei West Coast, pea 1 mei Southern.
Ko e ‘avalisi ‘o e lau fakahili ‘aho 7 ‘o e keisi ‘i he komiunitī ‘oku toko 7183 ‘i he taimi ni, fakatatau ki he toko 7405 ‘aneafi, pea holo mei he 8600 mei he taimi peheni ‘i he uike kuo ‘osi.
Ka ko e kau tākoto falemahaki ‘i he Kōviti-19 kuo toko lahi ange, ‘aki e toko 806 kuo lipooti ‘oku tākoto falemahaki fakatatau ki he toko 769 ‘aneafi, mo e toko 12 ‘i he loki tokanga’i makehe.
Ko e ‘avalisi ‘o e ta’u ‘o e kakai ‘oku tākoto falemahaki ko e ta’u 65.
Na’e toko 67 ‘a e kau mate ‘i he Kōviti na’e lipooti ‘aneafi, neonga ia na’e pehē ‘e he Potungāue Mo’ui ko e matuitui hake ‘a e toko lahina’e ‘uhinga ‘i he toe fakalelei ‘o e me’a ngāue. Na’e toe fakapapau’i foki mo e keisi fo’ou ‘e 6232 ‘aneafi.
Na’e pehē ‘e he Potungāue ko e toko 226 ‘o e ngaahi keisi ‘o e ‘aho ni kuo nau tomi folau atu ki tu’apule’anga.
Kuo a’u ‘eni ‘i he taimi ni ki he toko 1.6 miliona [1,603,545] ‘o e ngaahi keisi ‘o e Kōviti-19 /i Nu’usila.

Niue has first Covid cases in the community

‘Oku taupotu ‘i lalo ha fakamatala fakaTonga

Covid-19 has arrived in the community in Niue.

The government says four people, all from the same household, are being recorded as the first community cases.

Up until now the country has not experienced a case of the virus in the community, while there have been just 30 cases recorded at the border.

Niue Hospital in Alofi, Niue.

Niue Hospital in Alofi, Niue. Photo: Supplied/ Dr Penny McAllum

The acting Premier and Minister of Health, Sauni Tongatule, says contact tracing began immediately after the cases were detected and all affected people are being contacted by Niue’s health officials.

Earlier this week Niue was able to announce that the number of workers in its Covid-19 teams had increased after assistance from a New Zealand medical team.

FAKAMATALA FAKATONGA

Kuo tu’uta e Kōviti-19 ‘i he kakai ‘o Niuē.
‘Oku pehē mei he pule’anga ko e kakai ‘e toko 4, kātoa mei he fāmili pē ‘e taha, kuo lipooti ko e fuofua keisi ia ‘i he komiunitī.
Na’e te’eki foki ke hoko ha keisi ia ki he kakai ‘i Niuē ka kuo lipooti ‘eni ha toko 30 kuo ‘i he kau’ā-fonua .
‘Oku pehē ‘e he tokoni palemia mo Minisitā mMo’ui Sauni Tongatul, ‘oku fai hono vakai’i lelei’i ‘aupito ‘i he vave taha hili hono ‘ilo ko ia ‘o e keisi pea kuo ‘osi fai e fetu’utaki mo e kakai kotoa ko ia ‘oku nau puke ‘e he kau ngāue ki he mo’ui lelei.
Na’e tala foki mei Niuē kuo fakatokolahi ‘a e toko lahi ‘o e kau ngāue  ‘a e timi Kōviti -19 hikli ia ha tokoni mei ha timi ngāue fakafaito’o mei Nu’usila.
‘Oku ‘alu hake ai ‘a e kau mate ‘i he Kōviti -19 ‘i he lipooti fakamuimui taha ki he kakai ‘e toko 2039.
Ko e liliu ko ia ‘i he fakakātoa ‘o e kau mate ‘i he Kōviti-19 kuo talaki ki he kakai ‘oku ‘ikai tatau ia ki he fika ‘o e kau mate fo’ou kuo lipooti ‘i he ‘aho ni. Ko e ‘uhinga ‘eni he ko e kau mate ko ia ‘i he ‘aho ‘e 28 kuo ‘osi pea ‘osi sivi ‘o mahino ‘oku ‘ikai ha felāve’i ‘enau mate mo e Kōviti -19, ‘oku to’o kinautolu ia mei he fakakātoa.
Ko e toko 1396 leva ‘o e kau mate kuo fakapapau’i ‘oku tu’unga pe felāva’i ‘enau mate mo e Kōviti – 19.
Ko e ‘avalisi leva ‘o e lau fakahili ‘aho 7 ko ia ‘o e kau mate kuo fakapapau’i mai na’e felāve’i mo e Kōviti -19.ko e toko 17.
Ko e ‘avalisi ‘o e lau fakahili’aho 7 ko ia ‘o e ngaahi keisi fo’ou ko e 8335, holo hifo ia mei he toko 9534 ‘o e uike kuo ‘osi.
Ko e ngaahi keisi na’e ma’u ‘i he Tusite ‘i hono ngāue’aki ‘o e sivi RAT mo e PCR, ko ‘Aokalani ko e toko 823, Bay of Plenty ko e toko 396, Canterbury mo West Coast ko e toko 1302, Capital mo e Coast/Hutt ko e toko 1078, Counties Manukau ko e toko 923, Hawkes Bay ko e toko 332, Lakes ko e toko 224, MidCentral ko e toko 420, Nelson Marlborough ko e toko 247, Northland ko e 242, South Canterbury ko e toko 157, Southern ko e toko 767, Tairawhiti ko e toko 59, Talanaki ko e toko 247, Uaikato ko e toko 686, Wairarapa ko e toko 108, Uaitemata ko e toko 1052, mo Fanganui ko e toko 187.
Ko e toko 6 ‘oku ‘ikai ‘ilo pe ko ‘enau puke mei fe’ia.
Kuo tu’uta mo e keisi Kōviti -19 ‘e 430 ‘i he kau’āfonua ‘i he houa ‘e 24 kuo ‘osi.
Kuo lipooti mai ko e ola ‘o e sivi PCR Ko e toko 3117 fakakātoa pea toko 17653 ‘i he sivi RAT, ‘i he houa ‘e 2 kuo hili.

Russia bars entry to 32 New Zealanders in sanctions response

Russia’s foreign ministry has slapped New Zealand journalists and officials with sanctions for supporting what it called the country’s “Russophobic agenda.”

Moscow, Russia

Russia’s Kremlin, Moscow Photo: 123rf/ Cezary Wojtkowski

The political move was announced Saturday.

The list includes New Zealand’s Military Secretary to the Minister of Defence Shane Arndell and the mayors of Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch, among other officials.

Journalists named include Whena Owen, Matthew Hooton and James Hollings.

The sanctions bar the targeted individuals from entering Russia indefinitely, the Russian ministry said.

“Taking into account that Wellington does not intend to abandon its anti-Russian course and continues to produce new restrictions (against Moscow), work on updating the ‘black list’ will continue,” the ministry added.

In April, Russia announced an earlier blacklist of politicians from New Zealand, including Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.

Reuters

Arrests made after spate of Auckland shootings

By RNZ.co.nz

Police have arrested four people in relation to a spate of shootings across Auckland from Friday afternoon until Saturday morning.

Stock photo.

(File photo) Photo: RNZ / Richard Tindiller

There were two reported firearms incidents in Avondale, one in Ōtara, and one in Gulf Harbour, Whangaparāoa – all unrelated.

Police said four people had been arrested in relation to the Gulf Harbour incident.

A 23-year-old man was charged with unlawful possession of an imitation firearm and was scheduled to appear in North Shore District Court.

The three others arrested have been referred to Youth Aid.

Tongan family mourns son’s death after a single-vehicle crash on SH1, Northland

A young Tongan man died after a single-vehicle crash on Umawera State High Way 1, Northland, New Zealand on Wednesday.

Makalita Angianga and her son Len Courtenay. Photo/Supplied

Len Courtenay, 22, died along with a friend at the scene at around 5.40pm, Police said.

His Tongan mother Makalita Angianga is expected to arrive in Houhora, Pukenui near Cape Reigna at the northwesternmost tip of the North Island for Courtenay’s funeral.

She said Courtenay had just celebrated his 22th birthday on July 20.

A prayer service is expected to take place at a residence in Māngere, south Auckland to remember Mr Courtenay.

Police previously said emergency services were notified of the crash.

Senior Sergeant Hayden Korach said the vehicle left the road on a right-hand bend, hit a tree and continued into a paddock.

He asked anybody who saw the vehicle, a Nissan Safari four-wheel drive, travelling between Kaikohe and Umawera on Wednesday night to contact police.

Police are still investigating the cause of the crash, but seatbelts may have been a factor, Korach said.

“We can’t say at this point whether they were or weren’t wearing seatbelts, but it appears they weren’t. It could have been a factor that would have saved one of them.”

Lord Fohe tipped to become Minister in PM Hu‘akavameiliku’s cabinet

Nobility MP Lord Fohe could become the second nobility member to join Hon Hu’akavameiliku’s cabinet.

Lord Fohe

The Prime Minister confirmed this in his response to a reporter during a press conference this afternoon.

The Tonga Broadcasting Commission’s reporter asked Hon Hu’akavameiliku whether it was true Lord Fohe had been approached to replace the deceased Minister for Food and Agriculture Viliami Hingano.

In his response the Prime Minister said in Tongan: ‘Osi ‘ave pe fokotu’u mau kei fakaongoongo pe ki he tu’utu’uni’.

This translates into English as “a proposal had been submitted and we are awaiting the decision’, implying that Lord Fohe was proposed to the king to be appointed as Minister for Food and Agriculture.

READ MORE:

Lord Fohe was a first time MP who was elected to Parliament by the 33 nobility members during last year’s general election.

His election to Parliament came shortly after he was fined $500 by a Magistrate court after pleading guilty to an assault of a man living in his estate. He was discharged without conviction.  

As Kaniva News reported previously, the noble of Puke and his former Free Wesleyan church minister had to be allegedly restrained during a dispute over damage to a fence.

Local reports said at the time that that incident stemmed from the church minister being unhappy after a bulldozer destroyed the fence of the church’s ministerial residence.

Former Senior Customs officer convicted over meth and firearms import charges

A suspended Senior Customs Officer  has been found guilty over an attempt to smuggle 6662 grams of methamphetamine worth of TOP$1 million from the US into Tonga concealed inside a box.

Paula Naitoko. Photo/Facebook

Paula Naitoko, 62,  was also found guilty over an attempt to import prohibited goods into the Kingdom including 1 Kaiser Defence Mod KR5 semi-automatic rifle; 1 Glock 19 semi-automatic pistol; 1 Taurus 709 semi-automatic pistol; 1 Springfield semi-automatic pistol and 39 ammunition without import licences under the Arms and Ammunitions Act.

Text messages provided to the court showed a man Aleki Mafile’o in the US confirmed to a shipment company that Paula Naitoko would pick up the consignment in Tonga. A response to that text message confirmed the shipment was released to Naitoko.

Naitoko’s lawyer Sifa Tu’utafaiva told the court his client “had no knowledge about the illegal items that were contained in the box”.

“He submitted that the Crown has not proven beyond reasonable doubt that the Defendant had knowledge of the illegal items contained in the box”.

Justice Laki Niu said he was satisfied beyond reasonable doubt, that the accused, Paula Naitoko, had knowledge of the illicit drugs, firearms and ammunition which were found in that box.

“He himself tried to get that box released from customs when he had no legitimate connection with it or its contents in any way whatsoever”, Mr Niu said.

“I consider that he had not committed the offence of importing (count 1) but that he had committed the offence of causing to import (count 2).

“ If he had provided to ‘Aleki Mafile’o his own name, Paula Naitoko, as the consignee of the box, he would clearly have been guilty of importing the box. But in this case, he agreed to provide and he provided to ‘Aleki Mafile’o the name of a person who was not consulted and who had not consented, and who had no knowledge of it whatsoever, but which enabled the box to be processed through customs in Tonga. He thereby caused the box to be imported into Tonga.

“I therefore find that the accused has committed and is guilty of the offences in counts 2 and 3 and he is acquitted of the offence in count 1 because it is in the alternative to count 2, and I convict him accordingly of counts 2 and 3.