Home Blog Page 734

Tufui dies from brain injuries, Henrich denies killing him, Fiji court told

The man accused of murdering Sione Tufui in a night club in Suva, Fiji two years ago has said he did not kill him.

A post-mortem examination report has confirmed at Fiji High court on Monday Sione died from a “brain haemorrhage which was caused by a blunt force trauma …. and multiple traumatic injuries”.

The pathologist, Dr Kalougivaki said: “this could have been caused by multiple stomping, kicking and punching”, Fiji Times reported.

Sione of Houma, Tongatapu, Tonga Islands was a student at the USP in Suva at the time he was killed.

A Nauruan man Julian Hendrich was in court in relation to his death.

At the time of the fatal incident Police arrested  five Nauruan secondary school students.

The deceased was with his older brother Tupou Tufui who was also a student at the university and they had a night out on the night when Sione was fatally attacked.

Henrich’s defense counsel told the court  his client did not take part in the killing.

Fiji media reports said his lawyer “Sevuloni Valenitabua told the assessors that Henrich was outside Dragon Nightclub in Suva when the other six people were punching and kicking Sione Tufui”.

“Valenitabua told the assessors to consider one of the defense witnesses’ evidence, who he saw Henrich coming out of the nightclub but when he came out, Tufui was already dead”.

“He also told the assessors that if Henrich was involved in a fight inside the nightclub on the dance floor and if he threw two to three punches at Tufui, this could not cause Tufui’s death”.

Valenitabua told the court the six people Police arrested were responsible for the killing of Sione.

Dr Kalougivaki also said: “… during the post-mortem examination, he noticed the deceased’s face was swollen, black and bloodshot eyes and his nose was also swollen with bruises.

“The fluid that was extracted from the eyes had blood in it,” Dr Kalougivaki said”, it has been reported.

Dr Kalougivaki said Sione’s lips were swollen and “there was a large cut on the lower lip, extensive bruising in the mouth and bruises on the chest”.

“There was an extensive bruising of the entire skull through the layers of the scalp”, he said.

“He concluded the cause of death was a result of brain haemorrhage which was caused by a blunt force trauma from the alleged assault and the presence of multiple traumatic injuries”.

Prosecution Counsel Juleen Fatiaki told the court Henrich “admitted that he joined the fight outside the nightclub”.

A Tongan witness, Finau Leone saw Henrich at the CWM Hospital and at the Central Police Station and he identified him and maintained that Henrich was the person who punched and kicked Tufui, the court was told.

Fetaiaki asked the assessors to consider Leone’s evidence that he was only ten steps far from the place where Tufui was being punched and kicked by some boys and he saw Henrich was one of them.

Justice Salesi Temo will sum up the case this afternoon.

Finance Ministry sets financial targets to underpin future budgets

The Tongan government is aiming to spend one fifth of domestic revenue on government services, half of its domestic revenue on wages and a debt to GDP ratio of less than 50 percent.

Tonga’s Ministry of Finance and National Planning said the three financial targets would be the basis for future budget planning.

The Ministry said the targets would not always be met, but when this happened budgets would be adjusted to keep the targets as a medium term aim.

While the three-year ahead forecasts of budgetary outcomes would vary from year to year, these medium-term targets were expected to remain constant over time.

The three targets are:

A target of 22 percent of domestic revenue relative to GDP, which represents the amount needed to sustain government services, after accounting for other sources of funding such as external grants.

The second is a financial target reflecting the amount the government can spend on wages while preserving sufficient space for other essential spending on goods and services, etc.

This a wage to domestic revenue ratio of less than 53 percent, moving towards 50 percent.

The third is a government debt target which represents how much debt the government can accumulate while maintaining the fiscal space necessary to respond to national emergencies. This is expressed as a ratio of external debt to gross domestic product of less than 50 percent.

The Ministry said the fiscal targets had been set to insure it against fiscal risks while maintaining public services.

“The Government of Tonga is committed to providing the highest quality of public services and the most competitive public sector wages possible, while maintaining fiscal sustainability so that we can also ensure quality services for future generations,” the  Ministry said.

“Over the past five years, the government has made major steps in improving the health of the public finances, and this has put the country in a strong position to face the future and support a high quality of life for all Tongans.

“These targets have been developed based on robust economic modelling within the Ministry of Finance and National Planning, which has taken into account the possibility of shocks such as natural disasters happening in the future, and the destabilizing impact they can have on the public finances.”

The  main points

  • The Tongan government is aiming to spend one fifth of domestic revenue on government services, half its domestic revenue on wages and a debt to GDP ratio of less than 50 percent.
  • Tonga’s Ministry of Finance and National Planning said the three financial targets would be the basis for future budget planning.
  • The Ministry said the targets would not always be met, but when this happened budgets would be adjusted to keep the targets as a medium term aim.
  • While the three-year ahead forecasts of budgetary outcomes would vary from year to year, these medium-term targets were expected to remain constant over time.

Nobles carry out pongipongi tapu as 10 days funeral taboo begins

The official mourning period for the late Queen Mother began this morning with the “Pongipongi Tapu” ceremony at Pangai Lahi.

Members of the nobility and estate holder chiefs in the country presented their gifts as a show of sympathy at Pangai Lahi  during the ceremony.

This is the beginning of a 10-day mourning period from March 1 to March 11 which was initially announced by Crown Prince ‘Ulukalala Tupouto’a.

Chinese community presents gifts to Pilolevu as Tonga laments death of Queen Mother

The Chinese community in Tonga had presented gifts to Her Royal Highness Princess Pilolevu Tuita as a show of respect after her mother’s death.

Late Queen Mother Halaevalu Mata’aho was laid to rest today at Mala’ekula, 10 days after she died peacefully in Auckland.

The members of the Tonga China Friendship Association (TCFA) met Her Royal Highness early this week, former government minister and MP Sangstar Saulala has reported on Facebook

He said the Chinese community remembered the Queen Mother and her husband the late King Tupou IV for facilitating the process of connecting the relationship between Tonga and China.

According to a statement made by the princess last year in Nuku’alofa while she opened the inauguration of the Pacific-China Friendship Association (PCFA) conference, she said her father was instrumental in negotiating Tonga’s  diplomatic relationship with China.

“It was my father who looked beyond the money from Taiwan. And I think he was right. In fact, he sent me to Beijing and after that visit, my father himself travelled to Beijing and told the Chinese government Tonga was ready to normalise relations with China,” she said.

Princess Pilolevu, the only daughter of the late Queen Mother and late King Tupou IV,  is the current president of TCFA.

The matriarch’s body was carried on a catafalque by hundreds of men to the royal tombs this morning.

The Free Wesleyan Church president Dr ‘Ahio led the burial service and he told mourners the Queen Mother was a true Christian.

“Her Majesty Queen Halaevalu Mata’aho will be remembered for her work in the church,” he said.

More than 1,000 Chinese now living in Tonga.

New medical centre brings Tongan values to west Auckland

Fiona Thomas fthomas@nzdoctor.co.nz

A planned west Auckland medical centre seeks to bring Tongan values to a new part of the city.

Kelston Mall Medical Centre is due to open in April, owned and run by the Tongan Health Society.

The society already has two clinics across Auckland, one in Panmure and one in Onehunga, and chief executive, medical di­rector and GP Glenn Doherty says the new clinic increases the society’s footprint in Auckland.

Dr Doherty says the space in Kelston Mall became avail­able last year, and the location is close to several organisations the Tongan Health Society al­ready works with, including lo­cal schools, a Tongan early child­hood centre and two Tongan churches.

A number of clients are cur­rently travelling from west Auckland to the society’s other health centres across town.

An integrated family health centre, the new site will house allied health professionals, in­cluding physiotherapy, midwife­ry, chiropractors and laboratory services as well as establishing a working relationship with Kelston Pharmacy.

The medical centre will pro­vide a sublease to its dental part­ner, MaliMali Dental, which will be co-located, and Dr Doherty says radiology services are also on the cards.

While Tongan values will un­derpin the practice’s model of care, he says all of the society’s services are available to anyone.

Dr Doherty says the Tongan Health Society’s model of care looks at the socioeconomic de­terminants of wellbeing and fo­cuses on more than just health, helping clients with issues such as housing, employment, educa­tion and migration.

A big part of the work the soci­ety does involves assisting fami­lies to set goals and objectives, which aren’t always just health related.

Dr Doherty says the soci­ety would next like to extend its reach into south Auckland and has recently entered into a new contract with the National Hauora Coalition called Mana Kidz, a school-based health ser­vice for primary and intermedi­ate students.

The society is a member of Alliance Health Plus and the Kelston Mall clinic will fall under the Waitemata PHO and Alliance Health Plus collective.

There will be two doctors to start with at the clinic, which will also be a teaching practice for GP registrars and nursing students.

At this stage, it is difficult to tell how many people the clin­ic will serve, Dr Doherty says, but he would like to develop a register of around 2000 to 3000 patients.

Queen Mother laid to rest at family tombs

Queen Mother Halaevalu Mataʻaho has been buried in Malaʻekula royal tombs, following a memorial service at the Nukuʻalofa royal palace.

Her body was carried by about 100 men followed by the royal family and thousands of people who turned up to show their final respect to the beloved matriarch.

Students from Tonga College, Tupou College, Queen Salote College and ‘Api fo’ou College were assigned to line the route  along Tu’i Road for the burial ceremony.

The funeral cortege drove from the airport, where her body had arrived in an RNZAF Hercules past schoolchildren who lined the road for 20 km  in order to pay their respects.

The matriarch’s body was received at the Fu’amotu International Airport by Their Majesties King Tupou VI and Queen Nanasipau’u Tuku’aho and  members of the royalty.

As a mark of deep respect, people from all over the kingdom have worn traditional Tongan tauanga’a.

As Kaniva Tonga reported on Monday, students at Marcellin College requested that they be allowed to attend school in formal attire to show their devotion.

Tauanga’a: Foreigners clothe their respect for Queen Mother in Tongan culture

Elsewhere in Tonga, people from other cultures and backgrounds have shown their respect to the Queen Mother’s death by adopting Tongan customs, such as the wearing of tauanga’a.

Wearing the black clothes and ta’ovala tied to the waist with a kafa is one of the highest forms of respect a Tongan can show when attending a funeral.

The wearing of the tauanga’a by non-Tongans at the Queen Mother’s funeral could be interpreted as a show of high respect and esteem.

Almost all Chinese in Tongatapu wore tauanga’a and their stores and homes have been draped and wrapped with black and purple tupenus.

(L-R) One News Correspondence Barbara Dreaver, Raymond Moore and Tangata Pasifika correspondence John Pulu. Photo/John Pulu

Taimi ‘o Tonga reporter Melemanu Bloomfield met some of these Chinese and palangi wearing tauanga’a.

Bloomfield said she was outside at the royal palace when she met two women from Canada.

“They were amazed by our unique tradition”, she told Kaniva News.

Bloomfield said she was emotional when she saw them wearing tauanga’a.

She also met two French people were wearing tauanga’a.

She said one of them had just arrived in the country and had been given a aveave (type of ta’ovala) to wear by her friend who was working in Tonga.

Welcoming of the Matriarch 

Thousands in Tonga today braved heavy rainfall to show their respect for Queen Mother Halaevalu Mata’aho.

School children lined the Taufa’ahau and Tuku’aho roads from Fu’amotu to the Matapā Tapu of the Royal Palace in Nuku’alofa.

The school children bowed their heads in absolute silence during the approach and passing of the funeral cortege.

The matriarch’s body was received at Fu’amotu International Airport by Their Majesties King Tupou VI and Queen Nanasipau’u Tuku’aho, along with other members of the royal family.

Also in attendance were diplomats from several other countries including Hon Fiame Naomi Mata’afa, the Deputy Prime Minister of Western Samoa, His Excellency Epeli Nailatikau and Adi Koila of Fiji, along with King Maori and Makau Ariki Atawhai from Aotearoa.

The body of the deceased Queen Mother was welcomed to the palace by His Majesty’s Armed Forces as they performed a military parade in her honour.

Her vigil tonight began with prayer services conducted by several churches from 6pm till 12am.

Tongan student from the Waikato University presents findings on Cyber Security

The University of Waikato has sent a Tongan student to present a cyber security thesis to more than 20 information system personnel from line ministries and agencies in Tonga, in an effort to grow country relationships and highlight the importance of cybersecurity.

Siuta Laulaupea’alu presented his thesis, titled ‘Data Security Assessment for the Government Information Systems in Tonga’, was part of his Masters degree in Cyber Security.

Dr Ryan Ko, the University of Waikato’s head of Cyber Security Lab, says the trip to Tonga was to report the thesis findings on the current cybersecurity awareness and readiness. It also builds a working relationship with the Government of Tonga.

“Last year we came here and we were talking about working together. The University of Waikato Cyber Security Lab and Tongan Government wishes to work together on not just cyber security education but on research together so to start going deeper into research we have to know the current status and the situation so once we know that then we know which areas we can focus on and we can set priorities that will benefit the Tongan people,” Ko says.

Ko says that the Government of Tonga recognises that it has done well in its security efforts, but there’s always more development ahead.

“I think with the leadership of the Deputy Prime Minister Hon Siaosi Sovaleni, Tonga has done very well already in establishing the Tonga CERT, right now we saw that the awareness is the key number one step that we have to educate, not just the government servants but also for example the people on the streets and the public,” he says.

Ko explains that Tongan internet users would be a prime audience for educational messages, campaigns and posters about common threats, such as an ATM scam.

“Through information about new scams or television messages, the government can help to tell people how to look out for it and be aware of the risks. This way, the whole country can be safer in terms of cyber attacks,” he says.

The University of Waikato and the Government of Tonga will be working towards a memorandum of understanding, and will also be conducting research through the Tonga CERT and MEIDECC, as well as providing education and scholarships for IT personnel.

“It is an honour to be back here and present my findings and I am grateful that my lecturer Dr. Ryan is here with me. I am also fortunate to have the opportunity to study in Waikato. My family and I migrated to New Zealand once becoming a New Zealand citizen the tuition is cheaper so that was a great opportunity for me,” adds Laulaupea’alu.

Queen Halaevalu Mata’aho’s funeral cortege leaves ‘Atalanga

The cortege bearing the coffin of Queen Mother Halaevalu Mataʻaho began its journey back to  Tonga this morning at 7.30am.

Members of the royalty including Princess Pilolevu and Princess Lātūfuipeka Mataʻaho got into cars at ʻAtalanga royal residence and followed the hearse carrying the Queen Mother’s body which was led by a police car.

The funeral cortege was expected to leave Whenuapai airfield for Tonga at 9.30am.

At the ʻAtalanga gate at St Andrews Street a man wearing tauangaʻa was standing there before the cortege entered the road and turned left heading to the Balmoral Road on its way to Whenuapai.

The Queen Mother died in Auckland on Sunday 19 and will be flown back to Tonga in an RNZAF Hercules.

She will then lie in state at the Royal Palace in Nuku’alofa.

On Wednesday her body will be taken to the Royal Tombs Mala’ekula.

The royal family will observe ten nights of mourning following the burial.

Marcellin College students mark Queen Mother’s death in school ceremony

Students at Marcellin College remembered Queen Mother Halaevalu Mata’aho today with a prayer service at school.

The students came to school wearing their formal clothes and tauangaʻa.

“I was approached on Friday lunchtime by a year 13 student asking if they could wear their formal clothes and tauangaʻa on Monday,” college principal Jan Waelen told Kaniva News.

“We readily agreed, sent a note around the classes and today I think every Tongan student dressed for the occasion.”

“We celebrated a beautiful prayer liturgy to remember the queen mother.”

Photographs supplied to Kaniva News show the college’s staff and students during the service.

The body of the Queen Mother, who died in Auckland, will be flown back to Tonga tomorrow (Tuesday) in an RNZAF Hercules.

She will then lie in state at the Royal Palace in Nuku’alofa.

On Wednesday her body will be taken to the Royal Tombs Mala’ekkula.

The royal family will observe ten nights of mourning following the burial.

Marcellin College is a Catholic, integrated, co-educational college in Hillsborough, Auckland, New Zealand for students in Year 7 to Year 13.

The  main points

  • Students at Marcellin College remembered Queen Mother Halaevalu Mata’aho today with a prayer service at school.
  • The students came to school wearing their formal clothes and valas.
  • “We celebrated a beautiful prayer liturgy with our students to remember the Queen Mother,” college principal Jan Waelen said.
  • The body of the Queen Mother, who died in Auckland, will be flown back to Tonga tomorrow (Tuesday).