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Fiji records 1,100 new cases of covid-19, 13 deaths reported

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-Fiji has recorded1,100 new cases of COVID-19 and 13 deaths Monday increasing the total number of cases to 31,443 cases since the outbreak that started in April. Health and Medical Services permanent secretary, Dr James Fong said 386 cases were from the Western division and 714 cases from the Central division in Vitilevu, Fiji's main island. Dr Fong said the 13...

Vaccination first priority: Samoa Health Minister

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Samoa's Minister of Health has assured the new Government’s priority is to fully vaccinate the country's eligible population, before plans are finalised to open a travel bubble with New Zealand. In response to questions from the Samoa Observer, Valasi Tafito Selesele said the latest amended state of emergency orders is only to start the conversation for long-term plans. “The only priority...

More ANZMAT personnel arrive to help Fiji’s Ministry of Health

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An additional 10 members of the third Australia and New Zealand Medical Assistance deployment – Charlie team arrived in Nadi today. ANZMAT Charlie will be deployed for three weeks at the request of the Fijian Government and on advice from ANZMAT Bravo medical experts already in Fiji. They will join forces with the Ministry of Health and Medical Services to support...

Samoa PM urges Public servants to prioritise professionalism

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Samoa Prime Minister Fiame Naomi Mata’afa is urging all public servants not to let their support for a political party cloud their professional duties and obligations to their calling. “In any Government, the Cabinet is the decision maker and the public servants are the arms and legs of Government to implement those decisions,” she said. The Members of Parliament, according to...

NZ Government to open travel corridor with Tonga, Samoa, and Vanuatu – allowing seasonal workers to skip managed isolation stay

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Seasonal workers will be able to travel to New Zealand from Tonga, Samoa, and Vanuatu without undergoing a two-week stay in managed isolation, the Government has announced. The Government are keen to get this arrangement in place before September, but the decision has only been made in principle by Cabinet. The new travel corridor is aimed at helping industries that are...

Delta variant, a warning the COVID-19 virus is getting ‘fitter and faster’

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Cases and deaths resulting from COVID-19 continue to climb worldwide, mostly fuelled by the highly transmissible Delta variant, which has spread to 132 countries, said the head of the World Health Organisation (WHO Almost 4 million cases worldwide were reported last week to WHO and the agency expects the total number of cases to pass 200 million, in the next...

Australia to give $68m Fiji airport loan in effort to beef up lending in the Pacific

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Australia will provide a $68 million (US$49 million) loan to Fiji to upgrade its airports as part of a step-up in infrastructure lending across the Pacific to help the region recover from the COVID-19 pandemic and compete with China’s decade-long spending spree. In the first deal of its kind, the Australian government and the ANZ bank will use a $2...

Guardian class patrol boat delivered to Vanuatu

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Vanuatu has taken ownership of its new Guardian-class Patrol Boat. The RVS Takuare is the 12th vessel delivered under the Australian Government’s Pacific Maritime Security Programme and was handed over by Australia on Vanuatu’s Independence Day at a ceremony in Henderson, Western Australia. Samson Fare, Vanuatu’s High Commissioner to Australia, accepted RVS Takuare on behalf of the Republic of Vanuatu alongside...

Sink or swim: Can island states survive the climate crisis?

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Small island nations across the world are bearing the brunt of the climate crisis, and their problems have been accentuated by the COVID-19 pandemic, which has severely affected their economies, and their capacity to protect themselves from possible extinction. We take a look at some of the many challenges they face, and how they could be overcome. Low emissions, but...

NZ Ardern offers ‘unreserved’ apology to Pacific Islanders for dawn raids on Government’s behalf

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New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has offered a “formal and unreserved apology” Sunday to the Pacific communities left traumatised by the dawn raids in the 1970s. The practice saw immigration officials target the homes of Pacific Islands people in the early hours of the morning, beginning in the 1970s, in a crackdown on alleged “overstaying” on their visas. The policy...

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Climate change pushback if Trump wins, warns Cook Islands environmental group

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The leading Cook Islands environmental lobby group says that if Donald Trump wins the United States elections, it will push back on climate change...

Republican Kimberlyn King-Hinds wins delegate race in CNMI

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Kimberlyn King-Hind, from the CNMI Republican Party, won the race for the CNMI's lone non-voting delegate in the US House of Representatives on Tuesday. The...

Drugs disrupt Pacific Island bliss

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A surge of drugs is engulfing the paradisal South Pacific as cartels and triads use far-flung island nations to channel narcotics across the globe,...