Islands Business
Bougainville votes
Do you agree for Bougainville to have: A)Greater autonomy? B)Independence? This is the question Bougainvilleans are answering this month in a long-awaited referendum, 20 years after peace was brokered. The referendum is
We say – Upheaval continues at USP
“It has been a year of hell. I have suffered enormously and so has my family for doing the right thing.” That was the testimony of University of South Pacific Vice Chancellor, Professor Pal Ahluwalia to the Fiji
We say – Upheaval continues at USP
“It has been a year of hell. I have suffered enormously and so has my family for doing the right thing.” That was the testimony of University of South Pacific Vice Chancellor, Professor Pal Ahluwalia to the Fiji
Tuvalu’s 100-day splurge
An across-the-board pay rise for all government employees including cabinet ministers and parliamentarians, an incentive payment for senior citizens plus an A$10,000 pay out to island communities top the first 100-day
Nauru judge orders retrial
It is back to square one—and the attendant frustrations, fear of political persecutions and absence of legal representation at trial for the so called Nauru- 19 following a judgement on the island this month. The
PNG political tussle continues
Anti-corruption campaigner and now minister of police in Papua New Guinea, Bryan Kramer, has taken to social media to expose the challenges in getting former Prime Minister Peter O’Neill to answer to corruption
Why is the Nobel Prize for Economics important for the Pacific? It’s changing the way we do development
Last month three development economists won the 2019 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, working in an area of economics that is only now gaining traction in the Pacific region. Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo
InDepth: “You’ve got to back yourselves” Tuikuitonga
After almost six years at the helm of the Pacific Community, Dr Colin Tukuitonga is at the end of his term. On January 22 next year he makes way for new Director General, Australian Dr Stuart Minchin. Dr Tukuitonga
FEW NON-SEASONAL WORK OPPORTUNITIES IN AUSTRALIA FOR THE PACIFIC
Australia’s Pacific Step Up, announced in September 2017, has made much of providing more access to work opportunities in Australia. The Foreign Policy White paper noted, ‘Australia will work to improve
Kiribati government loses majority
Will Kiribati have a new government by December? That is the million-dollar question with the split in the ruling government of President Taneti Mamau that has seen the defection of 14 party members and with it, the
ANOTHER REFERENDUM FOR NEW CALEDONIA
New Caledonia will hold a second referendum on self-determination in early September 2020. On 10 October, the annual Committee of Signatories to the Noumea Accord brought together representatives of the
SUSTAINING PEACE, NOT SUSTAINING PATRIARCHY
Next year the global women’s and feminist movement will commemorate Beijing+25 – the 25th anniversary of the adoption of the Beijing Platform for Action (BPfA) by 189
Going viral – Measles outbreak takes a heavy toll
The deadly measles outbreak currently spreading through the Pacific is exacting a great human, and likely significant economic cost. At least 60 children and one adult in Samoa have died from measles or its
PNG Barramundis make cricket history
“We’re going to the big dance”.These were the words of Papua New Guinea’s star bowler, Charles Jordan Amini after the PNG Barramundis made history by becoming the first Pacific island country to qualify for
Pacific stumbles on tuna targets
By NETANI RIKA in Port Moresby AS Pacific fishing nations end their first week of discussions on tuna, the question of Target Reference Points loom large on the agenda. What indicators establish the target fishery state
CSOs want limits to tuna fishing
By NETANI RIKA, Port Moresby CIVIL society groups have called for limits to tuna caught in the Pacific and better regulations around fish management. In a joint submission to the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries