- Business News : Kiribati reviews Banking Act for second bank [08/03/2021 - Kiribati]
- News Feature : Reef revival: Fiji's corals bouncing back after ruinous cyclone [08/03/2021 - Fiji]
- News Feature : OCO Pacific women in Customs series: Avalisa's balancing act to keep Samoa safe [08/03/2021 - Samoa]
- News : Fijians register now for COVID-19 vaccines: Dr Fong [08/03/2021 - Fiji]
- News : NZ diplomat says they did not draft Fiji Police Bill [08/03/2021 - Fiji]
- Sports News : AIBA President pledges to support planning for Solomon Islands 2023 Pacific Games [08/03/2021 - Switzerland]
- Sports News : Vela Naucukidi keen to make history on and off the pitch for Fiji at Tokyo 2020 [08/03/2021 - Fiji]
- News Feature : Women in leadership: Achieving an equal future in a COVID-19 world [08/03/2021 - Fiji]
- Business News : COVID affects Solomon Islands tourism & aviation, holiday deal launched [08/03/2021 - Solomon Islands]
- News : China could soon outgun U.S. in western Pacific, Indo-Pacific chief says [08/03/2021 - United States]
- News : Draft Police Bill is draconian – Fiji Opposition leader Gavoka [08/03/2021 - Fiji]
- News : PNG Government secures K1billion loan from Japan for Covid-19 [08/03/2021 - Papua New Guinea]
- Sponsored : Oceania National Olympic Committees (ONOC)

One of the Pacific's elder statesmen has pleaded with Micronesian nations not to quit the region's top diplomatic body, saying small island states risked leaving themselves without a voice on the global stage.
Former Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) president Emanuel Mori called for a “time out” on the bitter leadership row that threatens the future of the Pacific Islands Forum, with five of its 18 members vowing to leave.
“The hard reality is that we speak to strength when we speak as one across the Pacific,” Mori said in a statement to AFP.
“I urge the trans-national Micronesian leadership considering this drastic move to call a time out. Let's discuss this possible move in depth.”
Long-simmering differences among the region's Micronesian, Polynesian and Melanesian peoples erupted earlier this month during a fight over the rotating leadership of the forum.
Micronesian countries -- Palau, Marshall Islands, Kiribati, Nauru, and Federated States of Micronesia -- were furious their candidate for the Forum's next secretary-general was rejected in favour of ex-Cook Islands premier Henry Puna.
The Micronesians had argued it was their turn to fill the post under an informal arrangement that has stood for decades, and claimed the snub showed the forum was biased towards members from the South Pacific.
Mori, the FSM leader from 2007 to 2015, acknowledged the strength of feeling over the leadership snub but said the Pacific, including Micronesia, faced bigger issues.
“There's too much at stake... to be talking about going it alone at this time,” the 72-year-old said.
He said the challenges included “a concerted effort on climate change; protection of our strategic interests during another period of Big Power military and diplomatic muscle flexing; and coordinated efforts to keep the novel coronavirus pandemic from potentially decimating our small populations”.
The PIF is mostly made up of small island states, along with Australia and New Zealand, and is a key element of the US allies' diplomatic efforts in the region.
It has helped amplify the climate change concerns of small island states threatened by rising seas and ever-more intense cyclones
Mori said Pacific nations needed to work together to strengthen their voice internationally.
“This is not the time to withdraw into our own corners of this great Pacific Ocean and try to find a way forward alone,” he said.
SOURCE: AFP/PACNEWS
News feature
Pacific Islands News Association
Who & What is PINA? Membership Member Countries Media Freedom Training PINA Convention Awards Contact Gallery Forum Events Jobs Classifieds |
PACNEWS
Home Regional Feature Business Sports Archives |
Partners
Communications Initiative International News Safety Institute (INSI) UNDP PC AusAID NZAID SPREP ONOC UNAIDS Media Helping Media |
Partners
PIFS SPC IFEX UNESCO AIBD GFMD SEAPA WPFC IFJ |