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U.S Pacific summit faces rocky start as island leaders reject Washington’s offers

U.S attempts to bolster ties with Pacific islands have suffered a major blow on the eve of its landmark summit, with Solomon Islands rejecting a draft U.S agreement, and Micronesian leaders raising serious concerns about “insufficient” financial assistance to the region, leaked documents obtained by the Guardian reveal.

Joe Biden is hosting a number of Pacific leaders in Washington for a US-Pacific Islands summit, which starts on Wednesday – the first time that Pacific leaders have been invited to the White House for such a meeting.

The summit is an attempt by the U.S to strengthen ties with Pacific countries and has been widely seen as a response to China’s growing engagement in the region.

However, the U.S’s offering to the region has sparked consternation among Pacific leaders.

A leaked note, written by the embassy of Solomon Islands in New York, announced the country, which signed a controversial security deal with China in April, would not be endorsing a regional diplomatic agreement being proposed by the U.S.

“Solomon Islands is not in a position to adopt the declaration this week and will need time to reflect on the declaration and refer the declaration through Solomon Islands’ national decision making process,” says the note, which was addressed to the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat, and seen by the Guardian. “Solomon Islands note that the declaration remains under discussion and have yet to enjoy consensus and will need further discussion.”

The proposed declaration is in the process of being negotiated and the U.S was hoping it would be adopted by Pacific leaders at this week’s summit.

A source involved in the negotiations told the Guardian that Pacific Island leaders were going to meet on Tuesday night in New York to discuss the declaration, but the meeting was deferred by the Solomon Islands delegation.

The 11-point declaration of U.S-Pacific partnership, a draft of which has been seen by the Guardian, commits Pacific countries and the U.S to working together “in the face of a worsening climate crisis and an increasingly complex geopolitical environment”.

The draft differs markedly from the sweeping regional economic and security deal that China presented to 10 Pacific countries earlier this year, which was ultimately rejected by Pacific leaders.

China’s deal was incredibly detailed, committing to particular sums of money, programmes and even outlining the number Chinese art troupes that would be sent to the islands as part of a cultural exchange programme.

It also would have seen a massive expansion of China’s involvement in security arrangements in the region, including expanding its training of police forces, constructing laboratories for fingerprint testing, forensic autopsy, drugs, electronic and digital forensics, and strengthening cooperation on cybersecurity.

The draft declaration with the U.S is far more general, committing to principles of engagement – such as bolstering Pacific regionalism, tackling the climate crisis, advancing economic growth, protecting the Blue Pacific and maintaining peace and security – rather than outlining specific policies and promises.

The first point in the draft Declaration details the U.S’s commitment to “the timely and successful completion of negotiations relating to the Compacts of Free Association with the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands and the Republic of Palau”.

The U.S has Compact of Free Association agreements with these Pacific nations, which obliges the US government to provide financial assistance to them in exchange for defence responsibilities. Agreements are currently under negotiation, with the Marshall Islands’ and Federated States of Micronesian compacts due to expire next year.

In the draft declaration, the .US called these compacts “one of the cornerstones of U.S-Pacific cooperation for nearly four decades” and committed to resolving negotiations in a way “that adequately address and meet the priority needs of those three nations”.

However, the Guardian has also obtained a leaked letter sent by ambassadors for Palau, the Federated States of Marshall Islands and the Marshall Islands to Kurt Campbell, the U.S National Security Council coordinator for Indo-Pacific, and one of Biden’s most senior foreign policy advisers, raising concerns about what has been offered by the U.S.

“The current proposed assistance is inconsistent with the contributions of our islands towards the security and stability of the region, which also supports U.S interests in the region,” said the letter, sent on Monday. “The U.S proposed economic assistance seems predetermined and based on insufficient analysis … To put it simply: the U.S economic assistance is insufficient.”

The Ambassadors made it clear that the US “has been, is, and will continue to be our first and foremost ally” but also that “the governments we represent cannot rely on a successful outcome from what has been presented” in negotiations.

“The gaps between the needs of our peoples and what has been offered are narrowed, but are far from closed,” said the letter.

The impacts of the climate crisis are being acutely felt across the Pacific, including in the north Pacific nations of Palau, FSM and Marshall Islands. A report from the World Bank last year found that 40 percent of the buildings in the Marshall Islands’ capital of Majuro would be permanently flooded and entire islands would disappear, based on projections of one-metre sea level rise.

“Our remarks may come across as heated, but the primary point is that this [climate change] is our hottest and most important topic,” said the ambassadors in the leaked note. “We are unable to solve climate change, and unable to provide for our citizens’ education and health needs, unless and until these negotiations conclude, and conclude in such a manner that genuinely meet our development needs.”

Richard Clark, the press secretary for President David Panuelo of the Federated States of Micronesia, said that FSM considered the U.S, Palau and Marshall Islands to be “family”.

“We are a healthy and functional family, and we are internally discussing sensitive issues with frankness because we have no doubt that we collectively have each other’s backs,” he said.

The president of Palau, the foreign minister of the Marshall Islands and the U.S National Security Council could not immediately be reached for comment.

SOURCE: THE GUIARDIAN/PACNEWS

Forum SG Henry Puna Virtual Keynote address to Pacific Media Summit 2022

High Level Panel “The Media and Political Leadership in a Digital Age”

To the PINA President Kora Nou of Papua New Guinea and your Secretariat, your board members across the region, and national member associations.

To the Media Association blo Solomon Islands President Georgina Kekea and your host country delegation– and of course, all your volunteers and friends of media in the Hapi Isles–Ni sa bula, Kia Orana and Halo olgeta wantoks lo PINA Pacific Media Summit.

May I especially commend the efforts of your Secretariat manager Makereta Komai for her ongoing commitment and support for regional excellence and networking as the face of PINA.

The Pacific media family across all our Forum Member countries is a cadre of leadership and long-time journalists who are no doubt well known to many of our leaders through your work.

I know in my former role I have met many of you, and certainly as Secretary General, I do appreciate the benefits of your work to communicating the values of the Pacific Way.

I also want to commend a well-known face to you all– Kia Orana Johnson Honimae– who served as Forum Media Advisor when I hosted the Forum Leaders meeting in Rarotonga, Cook Islands.

It’s good to see you are continuing your service to the region Johnson, through your leadership back at the helm of SIBC especially as it marks a milestone 70 years in 2022.

May I also commend all those who partnered with workshops supporting the theme for this Summit.

The digital revolution you have all been discussing in your pre-summit groups this week has surely generated some great recommendations.

I am glad to see there are sessions around anti-corruption, cyber security and factchecking. These are important skills and in fact only this week, we’ve seen this highlighted with a spam campaign coming to our attention. Thank you to those journalists who checked in with us on the matter. We are as concerned as you are, when fake emails come in from accounts claiming to represent your news organisations. We want to support your factchecking, noting those who choose not to check claims and sources are red flags for your industry and the media integrity your leaders have fought so hard to maintain. Beyond industry standards, may I commend the role so many of you have taken up, rising to the challenge of COVID 19 education, information, and awareness as you put public interest and lives at the top of your news agenda. Thank you.

Friends, this is going to be the shortest keynote ever– for a couple of reasons– Firstly– there is a panel line-up in front of you who bring generations of Pacific truth, experience and lessons into the room and I respect and acknowledge their presence and passion for the issues you will discuss in coming days.

Secondly, I feel like I have come full circle. The last time I spoke to this group it was also virtually, and a hybrid event, based in the Solomon Islands. We spoke about a declaration that investigative journalists know well– The Teieniwa Vision for regional action supporting integrity, for a region free of corruptive influence. I remember telling you about how reporting integrity and anti-corruption work being a long goal.

Well, thanks to climate change, the pandemic, and yes, the digital age, time is becoming one of the most precious commodities we have.

I urge you to recall and share the challenges I issued you with during that Teieniwa discussion in 2021, to do the self-check required for the investigative journey. Take the lessons of regional solidarity from all you have reported on the Forum and other regional bodies—I know many of you have much to teach us about regional solidarity through your experiences, both positive and challenging, of regional media solidarity. Celebrate what is working in the regional media family, just as the Forum Leaders did.

And get on with it.

Our Forum Leaders are doing just that, with the strategy they launched globally in New York this week–off the back of the Suva debut which some of you may have attended. The 2050 Strategy for our Blue Pacific is the roadmap to our shared future. It’s the result of a few years of discussion and consultation across the region involving thousands of people. One strategy. Seven thematic areas. Ten political commitments.

I urge you to google #pacific2050 and download your copy to your device.

I can promise you that everything you share and discuss at this PINA summit is in some way going to be captured or connected to the Strategy. Because media are a core part of making it move. And the work of regionalism is something you already deliver, especially through summits such as these.

Friends, wantoks, I look forward to continuing those 2050 conversations with you for our shared Pacific future –and wish you all the best for a game-changing Pacific Media summit 2022.

SOURCE: PIFS/PACNEWS

NZ minister backs fossil fuel ban treaty

-New Zealand has offered in-principle support to an ambitious climate change treaty championed by Vanuatu which aims to phase out fossil fuels.

Vanuatu President Nikenike Vurobaravu issued an emotional rallying call at the United Nations last Saturday, asking fellow nations to develop and commit to a fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty.

“No one is immune to the extreme weather events no ravaging our islands, cities and states. No one can escape the rising tides,” Vurobaravu said.

The treaty would phase out the use of greenhouse gases responsible for the vast majority of global warming, with the aim of keeping warming below 1.5C – in line with the Paris Agreement targets.

Speaking from Wellington on Tuesday, New Zealand Climate Change Minister James Shaw said he was “absolutely all for” the agreement.

“We’re in an era now where there’s no such thing as too ambitious,” he said.

“We have to pull every possible lever that that we can because we’re still on track for a world of heating over three degrees.

“The idea of of a fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty is one that deserves exploring.”

While Vanuatu has given the treaty a first airing at the United Nations, it already has the support of dozens of cities and sub-national governments, including London, Sydney, Paris and Los Angeles.

Treaty advocates also cite support from thousands of NGOs across the world and 101 Nobel Laureates.

Leaders from Samoa, Tuvalu and East Timor have also spoken in support.

New Zealand’s climate change minister offered his support with a proviso, saying the country’s foreign service was too stretched to help develop the treaty itself.

“There are a lot of initiatives going on internationally on climate change and our foreign affairs team can only support so many,” he said.

“That doesn’t mean that we don’t support the principle of it. We do.

“We have been putting a lot of effort over the last few years on fossil fuel subsidy reform, which is obviously completely aligned to the objectives that Vanuatu has got with a treaty on prohibiting new fossil fuels.”

Vanuatu is also leading a push to ask the International Court of Justice for an advisory opinion on whether governments have an obligation to protect the rights of future generations against the ravages of climate change.

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern – whose government has not formally considered the fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty – affirmed New Zealand’s support for the advisory opinion.

“Vanuatu has really picked up the mantle on it … there is a bit of work that they’re doing in preparation, but we’re working closely with them and very supportive of it,” she said.

SOURCE: AAP/PACNEWS

Climate change expected to be top of U.S-Pacific Islands summit

Climate Change is expected to be the main issue of discussion at the first U.S-Pacific Islands summit in Washington DC this week.

During the 77th Session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, Pacific leaders called on developed nations to urgently lower fossil fuel emissions and also to consider climate finance.

“More action is needed from developed nations,” according to Tagaloa Cooper, Director of Climate Change Resilience at the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP).

“The support of Pacific leaders financial climate finance so that they can adapt. We need support to implement our NDCs and our adaptation plans. There are things that have been requested to be done. It’s just that we need accelerated support to meet the needs of the Pacific, and not meet the needs of partners.”

The Nationally determined contributions (NDCs) are at the heart of the Paris Agreement and the achievement of these long-term goals. NDCs embody efforts by each country to reduce national emissions and adapt to the impacts of climate change.

In November, the next United Nations Climate Change Conference, COP27 will take in the green city of Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt.

In his address to the UN General Assembly, Fiji’s prime minister Voreqe Bainimarama urged developed nations to deliver on the US$100-billion climate finance commitment at COP27 in Egypt this year.

“Only come if you plan to arrive true to your climate finance commitments. Only come to Sharm El-Sheikh if you are ready to agree to a loss and damage mechanism in addition to a post-2025 financing framework. This must be in the order of US$750 billion, with at least 10 percent of climate finance destined for small island states,” he said.

Fiji’s prime minister is one of 12 Pacific leaders attending the summit.

According to Tagaloa, there’s a sense of dissatisfaction among small island states.

“There has been some support but the Pacific needs so much more support and urgent support that meets their needs,” she said.

SOURCE: RNZ PACIFIC/PACNEWS

Solomon Islands refusing to sign 11-point declaration at historic Pacific-U.S meeting

Solomon Islands has signalled it won’t sign on to an 11-point declaration between the United States and Pacific Island nations, dealing a blow to the White House ahead of a high-profile presidential summit with Pacific leaders in Washington this week.

The ABC has been told that Washington and Pacific Island countries have spent recent weeks negotiating a new joint statement on the partnership between the US and the Pacific states.

The declaration is designed to provide a framework for intensified U.S engagement in the Pacific.

Washington is moving to ramp up its diplomatic, development and commercial presence in the region, partly in response to China’s growing influence in several Pacific nations.

Some Pacific leaders have described the declaration as being “similar” in intent to a more sweeping trade and security deal which China unsuccessfully pursued with ten Pacific Island nations in May.

Washington’s proposal covers issues including strengthening U.S-Pacific ties, tackling climate change, sustainable development, security and preserving the rules-based international order.

Several Pacific nations are expecting to sign the declaration during the historic meeting with President Joe Biden at the White House on 28 -29 September.

It’s the first time Pacific nations have been invited to Washington for an in-person summit.

However, several sources stressed that negotiations over the joint declaration are still ongoing.

The ABC has also been told that Solomon Islands sent a diplomatic note to other Pacific Island nations on Monday, announcing it will not sign up to the declaration, and stressing there was no consensus over the document.

The note also said Solomon Islands needed more time to reflect on the proposal, and that the declaration would have to be considered by its national parliament.

The move is likely to consolidate anxieties in both Canberra and Washington about the trajectory of Solomon Islands under Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare, who has repeatedly berated traditional partners including Australia and New Zealand, while drawing closer to China.

Earlier this year Solomon Islands also signed a deeply controversial security pact with Beijing, although Sogavare has repeatedly ruled out allowing China to establish a military presence in the country.

It’s not clear what impact Solomon Islands’ decision to hold off on the declaration will have on negotiations over the text.

Several other Pacific nations have welcomed increasing U,S engagement in the region, while also making it clear that it must be on their terms.

Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) President David Panuelo said there had been a “very involved process2 to develop the document, which was initiated by the White House.

“Our officials have been going back and forth with the United States,” Panuelo said.

He said it focused on bolstering Pacific regionalism, tackling climate change, advancing economic growth, and supporting disaster preparation and response.

It also includes addressing COVID-19 and other health concerns, responding to the legacies of war in the Pacific and promoting nuclear non-proliferation.

Washington has been increasingly uneasy about the way China has expanded commercial and security links in the Pacific, suggesting it could undermine sovereignty across the region.

Earlier this year, China sought a multilateral trade and security deal with ten Pacific nations, but this was shelved at a meeting between Beijing and Pacific leaders in May.

Samoan Prime Minister Fiame Naomi Mata’afa said the agreements were similar in intent, but added that the U.S had been more willing to negotiate with the Pacific as a whole.

Initially, only Pacific countries that had formal diplomatic ties with the US were invited to this week’s summit, which excluded Cook Islands, Niue, New Caledonia or French Polynesia.

However the invitation was extended to those countries, as well as Australia and New Zealand, after lobbying from Pacific Island leaders.

“We’ve been insisting that if partners wish to talk to us, collectively, then they need to do it through the modalities of the Pacific [Islands] Forum,” Mata’afa said.

“When the Chinese were proposing something similar, we were giving them that message, but it didn’t seem to filter through or they weren’t willing to take that on board.”

Mata’afa said the declaration between Pacific countries and the U.S was “pretty general” and prioritised climate change, which is seen as the region’s biggest security threat.

She said there were also significant discussions about maritime security.

“Not only the protection of the fisheries, but also the maritime boundaries,” she said.

The Samoan prime minister pressed the importance of maintaining peace in the region, and said she would not like to see increased U.S military presence in the Pacific.

“When you begin to talk about defence, you’re sort of looking at scenarios where other countries or forces will be coming into the Pacific,” she said.

“We wouldn’t like to encourage that in any way.”

Other nations are pushing for more economic investment from the U.S.

“Our biggest investment partner right now is China … it shouldn’t be that way,” said Palau President Surangel Whipps Junior.

“We don’t even have diplomatic relations with China. But the number one investors are coming from China. Before COVID-19, the number one tourists were from China.”

Whipps said climate change was stifling his country’s economic development.

“Palau was actually making some progress, I’d say in 2010,” he said.

“We were on the right trajectory to go somewhere, then what do we get here? Three typhoons in the last 10 years, which we never had before.

“Every time we tried to dig ourselves out of the hole, we’ve got problems with climate change that send us backwards.”

Whipps said he hoped the meeting with Biden would be “more than just a photo opportunity at the White House”.

“I hope it’s substantial programmes and initiatives that really build that partnership,” he said.

Director of the Lowy Institute’s Pacific Islands Programme Meg Keen agreed the U.S summit with Pacific leaders was very significant, but must lead to real outcomes.

“The signing of the declaration is important because it’s a signal. But more important is what actually gets delivered over time,” Dr Keen said.

“There have been promises, in fact, on a number of these types of topics in the past, and there hasn’t been strong delivery.”

She said it was encouraging to see U.S open embassies in Pacific Island nations, including Solomon Islands, Kiribati and Tonga.

But she said financing promises made in this week’s summit would be a challenge for Washington.

“Those commitments have to be translated into action, and that needs financing, and the financing has to go to Congress and it has to be approved,” she said.

“There can be quite a lag time between the provenance and the delivery.”

Dr Keen said there were key differences between the US-Pacific declaration and China’s proposed trade and security deal with the region.

“There’s some overlap, and we can see that in climate change, economic development, and so on,” she said.

“I think what the United States is trying to show is a strong commitment to development, and they’re trying to pull back on security.

“The regional proposal with the Pacific [and China] … had a much stronger security element to it,” she said….

SOURCE: ABC/PACNEWS

U.S Defence secretary Austin welcomes Marshall Islands President to Pentagon

U.S Secretary of Defence Lloyd J. Austin III has met with Marshall Islands President David Kabua, who is in Washington to participate in the first U.S-Pacific Island Nation Summit with President Joe Biden later this week.

“he partnership between the United States and the Republic of the Marshall Islands is strong, and we have long shared the vision of a free and open Indo-Pacific,” Austin said at the beginning of the meeting.

“The United States is a proud Pacific nation, with states, a long coastline and territories in the Pacific.”

The island nations of the Pacific are neighbors, allies and friends of the U.S, he said. “Our countries are bound by a shared history, shared values and profound links between our people,” the secretary said.

“We are more than just two Pacific nations — we are family. I’d also like to recognise so many citizens of the Republic of the Marshall Islands for their proud record of service in the U.S Armed forces.”

Per capita, more Marshallese serve in the U.S. military than residents of many states, Babua said.

The Marshall Islands also host U.S forces, like the U.S Army Garrison at Kwajalein Atoll, which includes the Ronald Reagan Ballistic Missile Defence Test Site.

The island nation faces serious challenges. China, with its efforts to subvert the rules-based system, is the main challenge, which is compounded by the effects of COVID-19 and the increasing dangers posed by climate change, the secretary said.

“The United States remains your steadfast partner — committed to you now and into the future,” Austin said.

“The Department of Defence is deeply committed to our defense responsibilities to the Marshall Islands as part of the Compact of Free Association, and we look forward to successfully negotiating the economic assistance provisions of that contract that will further strengthen our partnership and help us work together toward a free, open and secure region,” he said.

SOURCE: US GOVT/PACNEWS

Fiji PM leads the Pacific to Washington will hold first official meeting with U.S President in 38 years

Fijian Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama will meet the American President Joe Biden at a Pacific Island Leaders’ Summit at the White House on 29 September 2022.

The meeting is the first time that a Fijian Prime Minister will hold an official audience with the President of the United States of America in almost 40 years.

Prime Minister Bainimarama will join the meeting as the Fijian Prime Minister and the Chair of the Pacific Islands Forum. He will also meet with Congressional leaders from the Pacific Islands Caucus.

“Most Fijians living today were not born in 1984 when the then-Prime Minister Ratu Mara met the President of the United States of America. This week, Fiji’s strengthening voice and global leadership have finally taken us back to the White House to deepen our ties with the United States in the most direct manner possible,” said Fiji’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Dr Satyendra Prasad.

While in Washington DC, the Prime Minister will also meet high-level officials from the State Department, Department of Treasury, the U.S Chamber of Commerce, and the US Coast Guard…..

SOURCE: FIJI GOVT/PACNEWS

Pacific launches innovative call to action for a 1.5 degree world

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Pacific peoples retain their history, culture and traditions, and pass them on from generation to generation through songs, poetry, and stories.

A book which was launched Tuesday during the Pacific Preparatory Meeting for the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change 27th Conference of the Parties (Pacific Pre-COP), documents the Pacific’s climate change voyage over the years in much the same way.

The book, titled ‘Pacific voices – the Pacific climate change voyage’, is the Pacific’s innovative call to action for a 1.5 degree Celsius world. It is a compilation of poems, stories and images from Pacific creatives and artists, along with statements from Pacific leaders at past Conferences of the Parties.

This call for action, according to Sefanaia Nawadra, Director General of the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP), needs to be amplified during COP27 in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.

The call for action is supported by science, which is also interwoven into the stories and poems throughout the book.

“This book is quite special, as it allows us to tell our Pacific stories while also including the science in a way that people can relate to,” said Ms Tagaloa Cooper, Director of SPREP’s Climate Change Resilience Programme.

“We also pay homage to our Pacific negotiators, because we wouldn’t have this book and we wouldn’t be able to do this work without them. We would like to acknowledge them and encourage them to stay the course and walk the walk for a resilient Pacific.”

The poetry, stories and images included in the book were showcased at COP26 as part of the Mana Moana Pacific Voices campaign, which brought together Pacific island poets, names such as Dr Karlo ‘Ulu’ave Mila of Tonga, Betty S Chapau of Papua New Guinea, Faumuina Felolini Maria Tafuna’i of Samoa, and Craig Santos Perez of Palau to name a few.

It also includes statements by Pacific ministers at previous COPs, including Hilda Heine of the Republic of Marshall Islands, Voreqe Bainimarama of Fiji, Dalton Tagelagi of Niue, and Ali’ioaiga Feturi Elisaia of Samoa.

This creative content is underpinned by the heavier science throughout the book, including ocean warming, marine heatwaves, Pacific disaplacement, Pacific emissions, and Global Inaction.

SPREP’s Director General, Sefanaia Nawadra, remarked that it is very special that the book is launched during the week of the Pacific COP Preparatory meeting, as it is the first time that the Pacific’s family of climate change negotiators have been able to come together in a face-to-face meeting since the start of the pandemic.

Joe Aitaro of Palau, says of the book, “As said today – we stand on the shoulders of our ancestors to move forward, and this book captures that. One day when future policymakers and negotiatos ask how we amplified our voice – it’s here in this book.

“We work together in partnership. Having our Pacific voices captured in this book unities us in our fight for climate resilience,” Vaiaoga Lameko of Tuvalu says.

Also present at the launch was Andrew Croot of Storybox who partnered with SPREP to develop the book.

The launch took place in Apia, Samoa on 27 September 2022 during the PSIDS Preparatory Meeting for UNFCCC COP27 now underway in Samoa from 26 – 29 September.

Pacific Voices: The Pacific Climate Change Voyage Book was developed in partnership with SPREP and Storybox, with support from Aotearoa New Zealand.

SOURCE: SPREP/PACNEWS

217 applicants for Vanuatu snap election

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At least 217 individuals have applied to contest the upcoming Vanuatu snap election.

Deputy Principal Electoral Officer (PEO), Gary Tavoa, confirmed this was the total number of applications they received out from over 300 candidature applications that they have issued.

Currently the Office is undertaking the screening process on the respective applicants to check whether or not they are qualified to run in the election.

Given the short period of time, the screening process is conducted in phases. The first phase commenced last week and this was conducted on the former Members of Parliament (MPs) who were part of the last legislature and have indicated their interests to contest.

Tavoa said this week, the screening covers all other proposed candidates.

The Electoral Office is working closely with government agencies to verify records of the applicants and this is expected to end by the end of this week.

The Deputy PEO explained that any applicant with outstanding debt with the government agencies for more than two months have failed the eligibility criteria.

These means they failed to pay respective fees required by the government such as land rents, business licenses, and or road tax, to name a few.

Only those that owe the government agencies in the last two months fall within the requirements.

The Electoral Commission will publish the names of the qualified candidates on 01 October, 2022.

SOURCE: VANUATU DAILY POST/PACNEWS

Kesolei joins leadership of Pacific Anti-Corruption Journalists Network

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Ongerung Kambes Kesolei, a seasoned journalist from Palau was elected Secretary of the Pacific Anti-Corruption Journalists Network (PACJN) during the meeting of the 6th Pacific Media Summit in Honiara, the Solomon Islands, this week.

Palau Media Council’s nominee Kesolei to the Board of the Pacific Anti-Corruption Journalist Network was elected during the PACJN’s AGM held alongside the 6th Pacific Media Summit.

Kalafi Moala of Tonga was elected Chairman, Solomon Islands nominee was elected Vice Chairman, and Fiji’s nominee became Treasurer.

Kesolei, also on behalf of the Palau Media Council, was a presenter in the panel on “Media Role in Investigating the Management of Public Resources.”

The 6th Media Summit is the meeting of all the registered members of the Pacific Islands News Association.

“The Pacific Islands News Association (PINA) Ltd is the premier regional organisation representing the interests of media professionals in the Pacific region. It links radio, television, newspapers, magazines, online services, national associations and journalism schools in 23 Pacific island countries.”
Its President is Kora Nou (PNG) and its Manager is Makereta Komai (Fiji).

SOURCE: ISLAND TIMES/PACNEWS

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