By Susana Suisuiki, RNZ Pacific journalist in Apia
Fiji Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka says he will take a back seat in the upcoming Pacific leaders’ fact-finding mission to New Caledonia, which was postponed from earlier in the year.
Leaders from the Cook Islands, Tonga, and Solomon Islands make up a group called the Pacific Islands Forum troika, comprising past, present and future hosts of the annual PIF leaders’ meeting.
The call for a PIF fact-finding mission was made while Fiji was still part of the troika.
Rabuka spoke with French President Emmanuel Macron the week before the mission was originally scheduled to take place.
When asked by RNZ Pacific why the trip had been postponed, Rabuka replied: “I do not know. I’m just the troika-plus.”
Moments after touching down in Samoa, Fiji’s Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka was bestowed the chiefly title, Tagaloa in Samoa’s Leauva’a village. #CHOGM2024 pic.twitter.com/zzrNqgc1u0
— Susana Suisuiki (@SanaSuisuikiRNZ) October 23, 2024
Rabuka, who is currently in Apia for the 27th Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), was bestowed with a Samoan matai title of Tagaloa by the village of Leauva’a yesterday.
He confirmed to RNZ Pacific that he would be in Nouméa on Sunday.
“We will be talking about the future of negotiations and the relationship between New Caledonia and the people and France,” he said.
PIF Secretary-General Baron Waqa told RNZ Pacific that supporting peace and harmony in New Caledonia was top of the agenda for the leaders’ mission.
Waqa, who is also attending CHOGM, said an advance team was in Nouméa making preparations for the visit.
Violence and destruction has been ongoing in New Caledonia for much of the past five months in protest over French plans for the territory.
The death toll stands at 13.
This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz