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WUOrevolt
12th February 2006, 05:17
Autonomy vote for Pacific islands
The tiny South Pacific territory of Tokelau is voting on whether to become one of the world's smallest self-governing states.
The 1,500 islanders are holding a referendum, which could reclaim Tokelau's sovereignty for the first time in 120 years.

Tokelau - made up of three coral atolls which have no airport, roads or capital - has been governed by New Zealand.

Four UN observers have made the 28-hour trip. Votes will be collected by ship.

Each island - Atafu, Nukunonu and Fakaofo - will vote on successive days. Tokelauans based in the Samoan capital Apia, some 300 miles (500km) south, voted on Saturday.

Results of the referendum are expected within five days.

'Formalised position'

Tokelau's three specks of land make up just 4.7 sq miles (12 sq km), lying halfway between Hawaii and New Zealand.

Seized by Britain in 1889, they were handed to New Zealand to administer in 1926.

With an annual income of just $2m, Tokelau could not exist without New Zealand aid, says the BBC's Greg Ward in Auckland.

The islands' 600 registered voters will decide whether Tokelau should remain a dependent territory or become self-governing, in free association with New Zealand.

New Zealand administrator for the territory, Neil Walter, said Tokelau had been in full control of its own affairs, with New Zealand support, for a number of years already.

"This act of self-determination would... simply formalise that position," he was quoted by the Associated Press as saying.

The referendum has been welcomed by New Zealand's Prime Minister Helen Clark who says aid from Auckland is guaranteed whatever the outcome.

But some Tokelauans "question whether this is the right time" to cut free from New Zealand, says Apia-based Falani Aukuso, head of Tokelau's government service.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4705704.stm

BattleOfTheCowshed
13th February 2006, 01:18
Go them? Dont know anything about Tokelau, but self-governance is in general a good thing.

Sankara1983
13th February 2006, 23:12
Tokelau is microscopic and unlikely to sustain itself. This could be said of many Pacific island states, but Tokelau doesn't even have an airport (there's no room for one). It consists of three atolls that are far apart, are overpopulated, and have virtually no natural resources of value. Tourism can't be developed because there are no facilities, and even if they did exist, it is a long and expensive trip by sea to get there. Its main revenue sources are remittances from abroad and the .tk domain name. If sea levels continue to rise, it will disappear.

I predict that free association will be rejected in this referendum. This process is being rushed by New Zealand because the UN decolonization office lists Tokelau as a "non-self-governing" territory.

Sankara1983
16th February 2006, 20:17
The results are now in, and — as I thought — free association did not receive a 2/3 vote and was rejected.

bayano
16th February 2006, 20:25
when will the pacific US colonies get these votes????

Nothing Human Is Alien
16th February 2006, 20:58
When swine grow wings.