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The One Hundred Fathom Square launch

Associate Professor Malakai  Koloamatangi, Director Pasifika at Massey University  proudly invites all Tongan communities,  interested individuals and organizations to the launch of the  One Hundred Fathoms Square authored by Bruce Alexander and Larry Wordsworth.

Bruce and Larry were surveyors in Tonga in the mid-1950s having been invited by the Tongan Government of the time to formally survey landholding entitlements resulting in the legalisation of the allotment of the 8.25 acre to every Tongan male over the age of 16 years.

The book is the result of their experiences in Tonga, presented in both texts and coloured photographs.  It will be of interest to Tongans, researchers and general readers.

The Book is to be launched by Her Royal Highness Princess Mele siu’ilikutapu tomorrow Thursday 12th September 2013, 6:00pm at the Staff Lounge, Study Centre, Massey University,Albany Campus.

Found guilty: Editor of Kele’a Newspaper apologizes for contempt of court

The Nuku’alofa Supreme Court in August 30 ruled that the Kele’a Newspaper, its editor Mateni Tapueluelu and the publisher Laucala Pohiva Tapueluelu have disrespected the magistrate court.

The Tapueluelus did not appear in court and Justice Michael Scott adjourned their sentencing until this Thursday September 12.

The court ruling stemmed from an editorial published by the newspaper in June 24 titled: “ʻE li e tuʻutuʻuní ʻi he tasipini veve hisitoliá”, literally translated into English as – “The court order would be thrashed in the history’s rubbish bin”.

It referred to a court case in  June this year where Magistrate Paula Tatafu ruled that the Kele’a Newspaper together with the Tapueluelus and a writer to the editor of the paper Solomone Palu have defamed the Prime Minister and six other cabinet ministers.

The magistrate ordered the defendants to pay damages of TOP$124,000 to the plaintiffs within 150 days effective from June 13.

However in June 24 Tapueluelu in the said editorial claimed the legal proceeding was a “fakamanavahē kalae” or a scare tactic referring to how they were at one stage  repeatedly served with a number of different notice of proceedings including the notice of proceeding for the legal proceeeding with the Prime Minister and the six cabinet ministers.

He further referred to the many court cases where the Kele’a Newspaper was found guilty by the magistrate court but later on overturned by the Supreme Court.

The editor also wrote:

“Ki muʻa pea fakahoko ʻa e hopó ni naʻa ku ui ha fakataha mo ʻeku kau ngāue ʻo fakahā kiate kinautolu ko kimautolú te mau moʻua ʻi he hopo ko ʻení. Naʻa ku tala kiate kinautolu ko ha hopo ʻi he vahaʻa ʻo e Keleʻa mo e kau takí ʻi he fakamaauʻanga polisí kuopau pe ke moʻua e Keleʻa ia”

Translated into English as:

“Before this legal proceeding took place I called a meeting with my staff and informed them that “we must be found guilty”. I told them  any legal proceedings between Keleʻa and the government leaders that brought before the magistrate court “Keleʻa must be found guilty”.”

This week on page 5 of the newspaper the editor regrettably says, “Kuo ma ‘oatu heni ha kole fakamolemole kiate kimoutolu kotoa ‘oku ha atu homou hingoa ‘i ‘olunga ‘i he to nounou mo e ma’uhala kuo ma fakahoko ‘o malava ke faka’uhinga’i ai ‘oku ne holoki ki lalo mo uesia ai e falala ‘a e kakai ‘i he fakamaau’anga polisi mo e ‘eiki sea ni kae pehe ki he fakamaau’anga kotoa”.

Translated into English as:

“We hereby apologize to all of you whose names have been mentioned above for the shortfall and misrepresentation we made that (they) could have been interpreted as they degraded and influenced the public’s view of the magistrate court, the magistrate  and the judicial system as a whole.”

In June 2010 Tapueluelu published an article accusing the former Prime Minister Lord Feleti Sevele for his direct involvement in the purchasing of the MV Ashika that sank in Tonga in 2009 killing 74 passengers.

Lord Sevele sued the newspaper along with the editor and publisher demanding them to pay compensation as the article was  a clear breach of Tonga’s Royal Commission of Inquiry’s  Laws.

Editor Tapueluelu eventually retracted his claim, paid Sevele’s legal costs and published an apology in the Kele’a.

The Kele’a Newspaper was founded by ‘Akilisi Pohiva, the leader of Tonga’s Opposition Party in 1986.

George Tau'atevalu is in police custody

UPDATED 10:00PM 9 SEPT – The man who bashed a police officer in South Auckland last Saturday night at about 11:20 pm has handed himself in according to police.

Walter George Tauatevalu, 36, from Otara, was on the run after an attack in which a  42 year-old Sergeant was kicked and beaten unconscious.

Detective Inspector Jim Gallagher said the injured officer was in Middlemore Hospital with serious facial injuries, including fractured eye sockets, fractured cheek bones and significant damage to the throat after being subjected to an unprovoked attack in Sandrine Ave. He has been transferred to Auckland City Hospital for special treatment.

“From the information I have, our officer is very lucky to be alive and will likely need several months of medical attention after being attacked from behind, knocked to the ground and repeatedly kicked in the head while down.

“The officer had followed a car from outside a function at the velodrome and it stopped in Sandrine Ave which is where the driver was spoken to. The victim then went to speak with the passenger and it was then that he was attacked by the driver who had got out of the vehicle.

“ Thankfully, two women who had followed the officer’s patrol car from the function stopped and intervened during the attack and could well have saved his life.

“Our officers are trained to Police in a civilised society yet we are increasingly encountering nothing short of barbaric behaviour which is a significant concern to us all. These attacks should not be accepted by the wider community as ‘occupational hazards’.”

Cricket: Tonga suspended by ICC

UPDATED 12:00PM SEPT 7 – The International Cricket Council (ICC) has suspended the Tonga Cricket Association (TCA) because it did not make any efforts to obey  the  ICC rules and regulations despite being warned.

The suspension was made effective following a resolution passed by the international body during its annual conference in London in June 25 – 29 this year.

Kieran Mcmillan, the ICC East Asia Pacific Regional Development Manager told Kaniva News today Tonga has been voted out as an Affiliate Member of the ICC.

“This is due to them not meeting the membership criteria, in particular not having an appropriate administration.  In line with ICC regulations, the TCA has 12 months to rectify this situation or they risk having their membership of the ICC being removed,” Micmillan said.

ICC sent letters to TCA early this year reminding them of their responsibility to adhere to the ICC requirements but TCA did not respond.

The president of TCA, Hon Sangster Saulala responded to our email and said he will be available for an interview next week regarding this matter as he is now in China for a meeting.

During the suspension period TCA is given up to June 2014 a chance to fulfil ICC requirements so that its membership could be reviewed.

Suicide: Vava’u man found hanging from a tree

Police believed that a man found hanging himself from an Ovava tree in Matamaka, Vava’u on Monday, September 2 was committing suicide.

22 year old Siosaia ‘Atu ‘Ala of Ta’anea, Vava’u was found hanged to a branch of the tree with a kafa kulasi ( sennit made from wools).  The ovava tree is located at the beach of Matamaka just outside a church building.

The Vava’u  Police Inspector, Netane Falakiseni  told Kaniva News the victim is from the village of Ta’anea but recently moved to Matamaka because his sister is married to a man from the island.

“What we have so far is we suspected that a girl has been one of the motives for ‘Ala’s suicide. They were not boyfriend and girlfriend but apparently the victim was madly in love with the girl. He tried on a number of occasions to approach her but the girl repeatedly rejected him,” Falakiseni said.

Police would not release the girl’s name and said their investigation continues.

Last month a  teenager fatally shot himself in Tu’anekivale, Vava’u in an incident police  reported as a suicide committed because the victim had a falling out with his girlfriend. The victim and the girlfriend were both students at high schools.

Tongan Language: A communication link between a Sky-god, Tangaloa ‘Eitumatupu’a and the earthly woman Va’epopua

Origin of the Tongan language by Dr Tonga Mohenoa Puloka

1. How was the Tongan language developed?

Socio-anthropological scientists would readily agree that modern Tongan language was a subunit of the general “poly-lingua” of the Polynesian tribes who came from South East Asia and finally established their homes in the South Pacific Region.  Located south of Hawaii and Tahiti, but in the central part of the Polynesian triangle is Tonga at the base, Samoa to the north and Fiji to the west of Tonga. Geography is of course an important identifier in history. Language, the principal anthropological and societal identifier is also the birthing womb of theoria and praxis, the basis of a people’s way of life, that is, civilization. Modern Tongan language is a continuum of socio-cultural, and religious development of societal epochs.

However, according to Dr. T. T.Mohenoa Puloka’s cosmogony, Tongan language originated as communication link between a Sky-god, Tangaloa ‘Eitumatupu’a  and the earthly woman Va’epopua, who later became the mother of ‘Aho’eitu, the first Tongan man. ‘Aho’eitu’s father was the sky-god Tangaloa and his mother was Va’epopua. The union of divine and human is what Dr. Puloka called, “langiofe,”  langi is sky and ofe is curve, thus langiofe is the bending down of the unreachable sky to touch Va’epopua, the earthing of Tonga.

Liz, here is a case for compassion and power in the Tongan folklore (true history).

There is always such excitement in Dr. Puloka’s voice when he tells us about the “distance-made-near- romance” between the sky-god Tangaloa ‘Eitumatupu’a and the earthly maiden, Va’epopua. There was this toa tree that grew on the hilltop of Popua at the eastern end of Nuku’alofa. It was Va’epopua’s home at the foot of the toa tree. One day, Tangaloa looked down from the langi and “mafumala’u” at the sight of Va’epopua. He then decided to climb down the toa tree to be with Va’epopua, and out of their union was the birth of their son, ‘Aho’eitu, the first man, ‘Uluaki Tangata.’  A line from Dr. Puloka’s poetry, Langiofe, says it better than my poor effort at description.

‘Isa he langi ne taukakapa

kae ofe’i ‘e he ‘afio ka kuo ‘i-a’a

‘Uluaki Tangata ko e kaiafua

‘a e fefine he toa ‘i Popoua.

 

Langi was so transcendent

Yet made immanent by the

Fierce searching love that

Bears first man at Toa in Popua

2. How did it evolve to reflect our hierarchical society and other aspects of our culture?

Tongan language then and now is fundamentally a communication link between God and people.  As the society evolved from privacy to public domain, people then applied the same principles of their relationship to God such as reverence, deference, and submission, to the royalty and to the chiefs and to the common people. Thus modern Tongan language is as stratified as the Tongan  society: royalty, chiefs, commoners. Each strata has its own exclusive sub-unit lingua. Language division is power sharing and commanding.

3. How is the Tongan language unique in comparison to other Pacific Islands or Polynesian languages?

All languages use metaphor as a tool in communication. But in the case of the Tongan language, the use of metaphor is a reflection of the Tongan way of life. Metaphor as figurative speech using a word or phrase to bring out the meaning of another idea with the same meaning, is the basic structure of Tongan language. However, that basic structure is the birth-child of “founga faka Tonga, the Tongan way of life. I, therefore, suggest that the Tongan way of life is metaphorical  in such that doing and living of the “founga faka Tonga,” is in deference to God first, then the royalty, the chiefs, and the “tu’a” the people of the land—who are the most important basis of the Tongan  hierarchical  society. For instance, the use of the important institution of “ta’ovala,” a specialized mat wrapped on the waist by a kafa (a belt made of coconut fiber sennit), signifying respect to the people and to the mother earth, “fonua.” Different types of ‘ta’ovala’ signifying different types of occasion to which a person pays respect and due honor.

Editor: Kaniva Tonga Ltd would like to thank Dr Tonga Mohenoa Puloka for allowing us to publish his works to mark the Tongan Language Week in Aotealoa this week. His above-mentioned article in the Tongan Language is a poem dedicated to the Queen of Tonga, Queen Nanasi Pau’u Tuku’aho and the Queen Mother Halaevalu Mata’aho and all the women in Tonga who are coming together this month to celebrate the Sepitema Day. 

Court approves more than half a million pa’anga church settlement

The Nuku’alofa Supreme Court has approved on August 16 a TOP$593,264.39 settlement with Church of Tonga known as Siasi Tonga Hou’eiki in a matter  related to a former president and six other clergies allegedly misappropriated the church’s funds.

Both sides reached the settlement after the plaintiff, Reverend Sione To’a Tonga’onevai son of another former president of the church took the defendants to court claiming they unconstitutionally transferred the funds to a financial business known as Mana.

The matter was  first brought up at the church’s conference in May 2011 while Rev Dr Tevita Feke Mafi was the president.

Rev To’a  reportedly told the conference  Mafi registered Mana  under his own name together with his brother.  He also said a  branch of the company established in New Zealand was  registered  under the name of Mafi’s niece.

At the time the church members thought the services belonged to the church because they were operated from the church’s offices.

Mana was operated as a moneylending service but ran into financial difficulties after the borrowers failed to pay back their loans. It means the church’s money has  never been repaid.

The six clergies got involved because they were ministers of various parishes at the time when Rev Mafi allegedly ordered them to make donations from the church money to help fund  the Mana.

They were  Salesi Mafi of Ngele’ia, Penisoni Mafi of Halaleva, Sione Finau Kaati of Ngele’ia, Siosifa Mahe of Kolofo’ou, Sitiveni Mafi of Pangai Ha’apai, Satini Taufalele of Ha’afeva, Ha’apai and the Church of Tonga.

The settlement document states “the second defendant, Salesi Mafi is dismissed from his action”.

“All the remaining defendants, except the eighth defendant (the Church of Tonga) are jointly and severally liable and shall pay to the eighth defendant (Church of Tonga) damages in the sum of $593,264.39,” the document says.

The “said damage shall be paid, without interest, by no later than the 16th August 2018”.

“Costs of the plaintiff in these proceedings in the sum of $30,000 shall be paid by the above stated remaining defendants, except the eight defendants , to counsel for plaintiff upon the making of these orders”, it says.

The plaintiff was represented by counsel Laki Niu and the defendants were represented by counsel Petunia Tupou for  Dr Rodney Harrison QC from New Zealand.

Pacific churches encouraged to denounce gambling

There’s a plea for church leaders to play a greater role in reducing problem gambling in Pacific communities.

New research at A U T shows a major factor in determining whether Pacific people gamble, is the role church leaders have in guiding or intervening around gambling issues.

This calls into question churches fundraising through pokie and bingo events.

The Associate Director of the Gambling and Addictions Research Centre, Dr Maria Bellringer, says its time church leaders denounced gambling.

“Because they have a lot of authority, if church leaders were able to talk about the harm in problem gambling their congregation would listen to them. We need to dispel the myth that gambling is an easy way to make money.”

The research shows that the most popular forms of gambling among Pacific people are lottery tickets and pokie machines.

Cook Islanders had the most pressure to provide money from gambling for family obligations, and Samoan fathers were the least likely to gamble.

Radio 531 PI

King Tupou V1 first official visit to USP

Press Release

Preparations at the University of the South Pacific Laucala Campus for the September 2013 graduation are well underway.

The graduation ceremony which will take place at the Vodafone Arena on Friday, 6 September, will also see His Majesty, The King of Tonga, Tupou VI officiate in his capacity as 20th Chancellor of the University of the South Pacific.  His Majesty was recently installed as Chancellor at the USP Tonga Graduation ceremony held in July of this year.

In his first official visit as USP Chancellor, His Majesty will also be touring the University’s Laucala Campus on Thursday morning, meeting with key senior staff and sections of USP.

His Majesty carries on the tradition of distinguished individuals across USP's 12 member countries, holding the title of Chancellor.  His late father, His Majesty King Taufa'ahau Tupou IV was the first Chancellor of USP.

Given that His Majesty will also be visiting Fiji for the first time as Tonga's monarch, the Tongan community based in Fiji will also be conducting a formal welcome ceremony for him on Wednesday. Several USP staff and a significant USP student population will join the wider Tongan community to welcome their monarch.

Over 700 students will be graduating at Friday’s ceremony, with at least 600 being expected to attend.

The University holds two annual graduation ceremonies at its Laucala campus, with the first one being held in April.

SPC EU support for coastal protection in Tongatapu, Tonga

Press Release

Tonga will begin trialling coastal protection methods to arrest beach erosion and buy more time for communities living near the coast to adapt to climate change. The project in eastern Tongatapu, the main island of Tonga, will focus on six low-lying communities identified as vulnerable to the progressive effects of coastal erosion and sea level rise. The mixed ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ coastal engineering techniques and the results of the project will be used to inform the preparation of a wider coastal management plan for Tongatapu.

The project is a part of the regional Global Climate Change Alliance: Pacific Small Island States (GCCA: PSIS) initiative, which is funded by the European Union (EU) and executed by the Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC). This national project, worth €0.5 million (approx. USD 650,000), will be implemented by the Government of Tonga and will significantly improve the capacity of stakeholders in Tonga to plan for the effects of climate variability and change on coastal systems.

‘The project is valuable, it’s very valuable. We can make a lot out of it and the benefit goes directly to the people, directly to the grass roots’, says the Hon. Samiu Kuita Vaipulu, Deputy Prime Minister of Tonga.

The Government of Tonga requested SPC EU support to trial different coastal protection methods in anticipation of future planned interventions. The Ministry of Lands, Environment, Climate Change and Natural Resources and the Ministry of Infrastructure will oversee and manage the construction of the coastal interventions. These will include the construction of permeable groynes and small detached breakwaters combined with sand replenishment and planting of site-appropriate plant species, including mangroves at the villages of Talafo’ou, Makaunga and Manuka.

Mr. Vaipulu praised the participatory approach of government ministries and project staff in engaging the local communities in the design of the project. ‘If you can get the community involved then they will maintain it. They feel it’s theirs and they will look after that particular project because they know it’s theirs and it is there for them.’

In all, the project will focus on building the resilience of 3,367 people living in 566 properties across six villages. The project will build the capacity of community, local government, private sector and national government in Tonga to design, coordinate and deploy coastal defences and acquit internationally sourced climate change adaptation funding.

The regional GCCA: PSIS project receives €11.4 million in EU funding and provides tailored climate change adaption support to nine Pacific small island states. In each case, the focus of the project is determined and implemented by the national government. Support to the country is provided by the specialist staff of SPC, the region’s principal technical and scientific organisation. In Tonga, the focus is on coastal protection. Separate projects are also being implemented by the governments of Cook Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Niue, Palau and Tuvalu.