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Tuvalu News Sheet

  • AU PMB DOC 485
  • Collection
  • 1976-1983

Published by the Broadcasting and Information Division of the Ministry of Home Affairs, Vaiaku, Funafuti, Tuvalu (later, Tuvalu Broadcasting and Information Service); in English and Tuvaluan, fortnightly.

Reel 1:
Nos.1-96, Jan 1976-Dec 1979;
Reel 2:
Nos.97-174, Jan 1980-Dec 1982
Nos.175-197, Feb-Dec 1983.

See Finding aids for details.

Tuvalu News Sheet

Micronesia Support Committee bulletin and related publications

  • AU PMB DOC 447
  • Collection
  • 1975-1982 and 1971-1990

The Micronesia Support Committee was an NGO that carried out research and made its findings available to the public, media, government and other interested individuals and organisations concerned with the political status of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (1947-1990). It was established by Giff Johnson in 1975 and based in Honolulu, Hawai'i. It was superseded by the Pacific Concerns Resource Centre in 1983 with its headquarters in Suva, Fiji. The Committee published the <I>Micronesia Support Committee Bulletin</I> which promoted economic self-sufficiency, self-determination and independence. In the 1970s the US, as the administering power, partitioned the TTPI into four political units: the Republic of the Marshall Islands, the Republic of Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariannas. The latter established a political union with the US in 1978. The Marshall Islands, the FSM and Palau opted for independence in Free Association with the US. While the compacts did lead to internationally recognised independence for the Marshall Islands (1986), the FSM (1986) and Palau (1994), the US assumed responsibility for their defence requirements, and was granted rights of strategic denial and exclusive military access to both land and sea. The <I>Bulletin</I> and related publications thus chronicled the political, economic, military, social, and international dimensions surrounding the dissolution of the TTPI and the emergence of the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariannas and the Freely Associated States of the Marshall Islands, the FSM and Palau. See also <I>PMB 1172</I>, <I>PMB 1173</I> and <I>PMB Doc 441</I>.

<I>Micronesia Support Bulletin</I> (Honolulu), 1975-82, <I>Panadanus Periodical</I> (Honolulu), 1983, <I>The Young Micronesian</I>, (Honolulu) 1971, <I>Friends of Micronesia Newsletter</I>, (Berkerly & Boston) 1971-74, <I>Micronesian Newsnotes</I> (New York) Dec 1981, <I>The Washington Pacific Report</I>, 1983-90
See reel list for further details

Micronesia Support Committee

Labour judgements

  • AU PMB MS 1262
  • Collection
  • 1975-1977

Copies of Joint Court judgements in labour disputes, as follows:
• Feb 1975: Christian Rimbert v. La Societe Fortuaire.
• 1975: Bernard Daniel v. D.J. Gubbay (New Hebrides) Pty Ltd.
• Judgement No.(A)24/75, 6 Jun 1975: Public Prosecutor v. D.J. Gubbay (New Hebrides) Pty Ltd.
• Judgement No.(A)39/75, 16 Sep 1975: Robert Tran Van Binh v. Societe Commerciale d’Etudes et de Travaux.
• Judgement No.(A)44/75, 17 Oct 1975: John Gilmore v. D.J. Gubbbay Pty Ltd.
• Judgement No.(A)52/75, 23 Dec 1975: Claude Bruyere v. La Societe Civile Agricole et Pastorale.
• Judgement No.(A)2/76, 8 Jan 1976: David Art Joffick v. Limerick Pty Ltd and Charter Pacific Ltd.
• Judgement No.(A)20/76, 17 Aug 1976: Pierre Garsonnin v. l’Administration francaise des Nouvelles-Hebrides.
• Judgement No.(A)21/76, 17 Aug 1876: Edouard Bossan v. l’Administration francaise des Nouvelles-Hebrides.
• Judgement No.(A)23/76, 17 Aug 1976: Jean Baddda de Podasalva v. l’Administration francaise des Nouvelles-Hebrides.
• Judgement No.(A)36/76, 3 Sep 1976: Jean Baddda de Podasalva v. l’Administration francaise des Nouvelles-Hebrides.
• Judgement No.(A)33/76, 31 Aug 1976: Hubert Thibault v. Georges Venekas.
• Judgement No.(A)43/76, 1 Oct 1976: Sione Maealiuaki v. D.J. Gubbay & Co (New Hebrides Pty Ltd.
• Judgement No.(A)62/76, 23 Dec 1976: Santanu Lal v. La Societe de Entreprises Lenisa-Benedetti.
• Judgement No.(A)1/77, 12 Apr 1977: Jean-Pierre Falentin v. Madame Stela Bon.
• Judgement No.(A)2/77, 15 Apr 1977: Jean Badda de Podasalva v. l’Administration francaise des Nouvelles-Hebrides.
• Judgement No.(A)3/77, 17 May 1977: Jean Robert le Leannec v. Andre Harbulot.
• Judgement No.(A)4/77, 25 May 1977: Didier Calistri v. George Joseph Welsh and Colin Graham Bryant.
• Judgement No.(A)5/77, 9 Sep 1977: Fred Lewawa v. Raymond Vallette.
• Judgement No.(A)6/77, 8 Nov 1977:Georges Lai Tham v. Leon Chung.
• Judgement No.(A)7/77, 8 Nov 1977, Ah Fosu Faitham v. Leon Chung.
• Judgement No.(A)8/77, 25 Nov 1977: Franz Joseph Wild and others v. La Societe d’Exploitation Agricole et d’Elevage des Nouvelles-Hebrides.

Supreme Court of Vanuatu

Nouvelles 1878 Andi Ma Dhô

  • AU PMB DOC 480
  • Collection
  • 1975-1981

Published by Le groupe 1878, Nouméa, New Caledonia.
Le Groupe 1878 was formed in August 1974 by Déwé Gorodey and another leader of the liberation movement, Elie Poigoune, following violent incidents, arrests and imprisonments in Nouméa during the previous month. The Groupe 1878 operated as a section of known as PALIKA (Parti de Libération Kanak), a new socialist political party, formed in February 1976 by the Kanak liberation movement in New Caledonia.
(Myriam Dornoy, Politics in New Caledonia, 1984; pp.208-9.)

Nos.1-68, 1975-1981.

Le groupe 1878, Nouméa

Correspondence re book the Lost Caravel

  • AU PMB MS 999
  • Collection
  • 1975 - 1987

The Lost Caravel was published in June 1975 by Pacific Publications Pty Ltd., Sydney. The book puts forward the theory that the crew of a Spanish ship, the caravel San Lesmes, lost in the eastern South Pacific in 1526, played a prominent role in the prehistory of several Polynesian islands, including the Tuamotu Archipelago, Society Islands, Austral Islands, Easter Island and New Zealand. The San Lesmes was one of the ships of the expedition of Garcia Jofre de Loaisa which left Spain in July 1525 to obtain a cargo of spices in the East Indies.

The correspondence includes comments on the book following its publication and Langdon's subsequent research into related matters discussed in the book. The correspondence is in three parts:<P>1. General correspondence, 1975-80<BR>2. Correspondence, 1978-87, re the conservation of two iron cannon retrieved from Amanu Atoll, French Polynesia, in 1969<BR>3. General correspondence, 1981-1987<BR><P>A calendar for each section of correspondence precedes the correspondence itself on the microfilm. Sections 1 and 3 are filmed in alphabetical order by correspondent and then in chronological order; section 2 is microfilmed in chronological order.<P>Reel 1: Section 1, A - Kish<BR>Reel 2: Section 1, Ko. - Z; Section 2 to 1986<BR>Reel 3: Section 2, 1987; Section 3.<P>For Langdon's pre-publication correspondence on The Lost Caravel, see PMB 551.

Langdon, Robert Adrian (1924-2003)

Robert Norton photographs of Falefa village, Upolu, Samoa

  • AU PMB PHOTO 156
  • Collection
  • 1975 - 1982

This is a collection of 134 digitised slides of Falefa, on the northeast coast of the island of Upolu, 20 km from the Samoan capital Apia. With a population in recent years of over 1500, Falefa comprises four ‘sub’ villages - Sagapolu, Saleapaga, Gagaemalae, and Sanonu. Its leading matai [chiefly] ali’I titles Leutele and Salanoa and leading tulafale [orator] titles Moeono and Iuli figure prominently in Samoan political history, particularly in relation to the district title Tui Atua, and Tama Aiga titles Tupua Tamasese and Mataafa.

The photographs were taken in Falefa by Robert Norton during four periods of sociological field research - October 1975-January 1976, August-September 1977, December-January 1980, February 1982. Norton was studying aspects of social and political change, particularly influences of the growing remittance economy. The large scale emigration of Samoans to New Zealand for wage employment was encouraged by the hurricane destruction of banana plantations in 1966 and an increasing need for industrial labour in New Zealand. Norton began his research in Falefa just nine years after the commencement of this exodus of young people to earn money to send home.

Many of the photos illustrate the changes in housing underway funded mainly by remittances in the early years of the labour emigration. A family’s success in establishing members in New Zealand’s work force was soon displayed and measured by the construction of modern houses. The change had slowly begun some years before the labour emigration wave, but was greatly accelerated by it.

Some families were a lot more successful than others in their access to remitted funds, having established several members in overseas employment. So the new era of migration and remitting brought a new dimension of economic and social inequality in the village. The inequality was sometimes quite stark in housing contrasts even between different households of the same aiga [land-owning descent group] - Traditional fale [houses] were still common in the village. Some families also used the new income to make a strong showing in their funding of fa’a’lavelave - important and expensive events such as weddings, matai title bestowals, funerals, and church dedications. The new source of economic inequality led to new dependencies between different households within an aiga.

Remittance income to village families was spent to a lesser extent in capital investments in plantation production, copra driers, utility vehicles etc; Vehicles were very few in the village during the 1970s [around half a dozen]. Although some people became successful entrepreneurs on their aiga land with the aid of remittances, more became less interested in their plantations and more contemplative of anticipated regular money gifts from emigrant family members.

Before the labour emigration wave, money income was gained mainly by the sale of produce from the land and sea [taro and other root vegetables, coconuts and copra, fish]. A few households included members with salaried jobs in town or in the village itself [the school, and the health centre], and several maintained small shops with everyday commodities purchased in Apia, Samoa’s main town. Travel to Apia 20 km to the west was mainly by bus - to schools, to visit and attend social events in other villages, or for shopping or visits to government offices, banks, hospital, lands and titles court etc

Norton also gave particular attention to leadership and authority, eventually publishing an academic paper on electoral politics at the village level. To enable him to sit with the matai [aiga titled chiefs] in the village fono [council] meetings he was given an honorary title.

Many of the photos were taken at Fono meetings - at village, sub-village, and inter-village levels. Some photos are of a Fono meeting functioning as a court hearing and judging minor disputes and imposing fines. These photos are restricted access. Norton himself once faced the prospect of attracting a fine that would be levied on the matai head of his host household if he refused to remove his beard. The village fono had for a year or two decreed it an offence for men to grow beards or long hair and for women to wear slacks. The rule expressed tension between the Fa’a’Samoa [Samoan way] and the Fa’a’Palagi [European way] that had strengthened a little with the impact of the labour migration, not just on material living conditions and social competition, but on popular consciousness, particularly in the youths who became accustomed to interactions with emigrants returning to the village for important social celebrations and to display their successes and tell stories about life in New Zealand. Norton didn’t hesitate to shave for the duration of his short stay in 1977. But by his next stay three years later the anti-beard rule had been dropped.

Norton, Robert

Publications of the Pacific Concerns Resource Center, Nuclear Free and Independent Pacific Movement, and associated organisations

  • AU PMB DOC 533
  • Collection
  • 1975-2006

The Pacific Concerns Resource Center was the secretariat of the Nuclear Free and Independent Pacific Movement. The first conference of the Nuclear Free and Independent Pacific Movement was held in Suva in April 1975. The Pacific Concerns Resource Center published several documents relating to a nuclear free and independent Pacific, including Pacific news bulletin, a monthly journal first published in Sydney, and from 1999, in Suva. Issues and countries it covered include decolonisation and self-determination struggles, the environment and sustainable development, indigenous rights, sovereignty and land rights, demilitarisation and anti-nuclear campaigns, intellectual property rights for indigenous peoples, East Timor, West Papua, Bougainville, Kanaky, Te Ao Maohi and the Philippines.

Other documents filmed include: Pacific Concerns Resource Centre annual report (1999-2004); Canberra Kanaky bulletin (1985-1986), edited by Barry and Dorothy Shineberg; Kanaky update: towards New Caledonian independence (1984-1989), edited by George Tieman and Reverend Dick Wooton; Nuclear free Pacific news (1982-1983); Pacific Concerns Resource Center bulletin (1981-1985); and, Pacific news (later title: Pacific news bulletin) (1983-2004).

The collection also includes: To'ere: no te tiamaraa, a private newspaper published weekly in Faa'a, Tahiti, and edited by Claude Marere from 2002-2006; and, Independence and sovereignty for Te Ao Maohi (French Polynesia), translated by Nic MacLellan and published in Faa'a, Tahiti in 1997.

MacLellan, Nic

Archives

  • AU PMB MS 1187
  • Collection
  • 1975-2000

The Solomon Islands General Workers Union (SIGWU), later known as the Solomon Islands National Union of Workers (SINUW), was founded by Bart Ulufa'alu and registered on 17 June 1975. Solomon Islands trade unions ran into immediate difficulties gaining recognition from employers and, following a large demonstration in Honiara in December 1975, a number of union leaders were fined and two, Bart Ulufa'ulu (SIGWU) and James Meafa'alu (GNEWU), were gaoled. Bart Ulufa'ulu won a seat in the June 1976 general elections, as a candidate for the union-organised Nationalists' Party. He consequently resigned as SIGWU General Secretary, staying on as an adviser to the Union. Joses Tuhanuku was elected as his replacement. Mr Tuhanuku went to Denmark for training from February 1977 till June 1978, however SIGUW's registration was suspended from October till December 1977 on the grounds of misappropriation of funds (later disproved). By the time Joses Tuhanuku returned to Honiara the Union's membership had dropped from 6,000 to 300. However strong organisation among plantation workers over the next few years produced collective agreements with Unilever's palm oil operation in Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands Plantations Ltd, and two other Unilever subsidiaries, Levers Pacific Timbers Ltd and Levers Pacific Plantations Ltd. By 1980 the union had rebuilt its membership to 10,000, half the Solomon Islands workforce. The name of the union was altered to Solomon Islands National Union of Workers at the at the AGM in April 1980, reflecting the Union's national representation of workers in various categories in almost all industries in the Solomon Islands. (From Joses Taungenga Tuhanuku, 'Trade Unions and Politics', in Peter Lawrence and Sue Tarua (Eds.), <I>Solomon Islands Politics</I>, Suva, USP Institute of Pacific Studies, 1983.

Bart Ulufa'ulu's SIGUW correspondence, Apr-Dec 1975; National Council minutes, 1984-1999; annual returns, 1976-1980; financial returns, 1983-1988; press releases, 1982-1992; correspondence re collective agreements with Foxwood (SI) Timbers Ltd, Honiara Town Council, Levers Solomons Ltd, Lever pacific Timbers, Solomon Islands Plantations Ltd, Solomon Taiyo, Solomon Islands Ports Authority; Trades Disputes Panel Awards, 1984-2000. See Finding aids for details.

Solomon Islands National Union of Workers

Preparation and Negotiation: the transfer of power from Australia to Papua New Guinea, 1970-1975

  • AU PMB DOC 411
  • Collection
  • Sep 1975

Thesis submitted to the Department of Political Studies, University of Papua New Guinea.

I. Introduction
II. A Historical Perspective, 1967-1969
III. The First Transfers of Power, 1970-1971
IV. 1972, A Year of Transition
V. 1973, Transfer of Power to Self-Government: a year of negotiation
VI. The Legislative Framework and Mechanics of Transferring Power
VII. Disengagement: from Self-Government to Independence
VIII. Conclusion.
Appendices:
I. Lists of Ministerial Offices, 1968-1975
II. Approved arrangements issued by the Minister for External Territories/Minister Assisting the Minister for Foreign Affairs in Papua New Guinea Matters under Section 25 of the Papua New Guinea Act, 1968 to 1975
III. Governor-General's Instructions to the Administrator/High Commissioner under Section 15 of the Papua New Guinea Act, 1970 to 1975
IV. Transfer of defence and Foreign Relations Functions - exchange of letters.

Goode, Christine Mary

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