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Pacific Review
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A roundup of major stories from across the region and the people involved and affected by them.
Tongans say new travel restrictions preventing them from entering the United States are an unfair form of collective punishment.
A brazen daylight robbery at Port Vila's international aiport generates intense public interest and speculation on social media.
Eighty cruise ship passengers have been flown to Australia after spending four days on the grounded Coral Adventurer in Papua New Guinea waters.
Award-winning PNG musician Mal Meninga Kuri is leading a fight against a surge of AI-generated cover songs to protect the soul of Papua New Guinea’s music.
Lord Fakafanua has been elected as Tonga's new prime minister but the noble has had to defend his appointment against critics who say it marks a decline of Tonga's democratic system.
Villagers on the Vanuatu island of Ambae say their food gardens and water sources have been damaged by volcanic ashfall and sulphur following a low-level eruption.
Thousands of Pacific seasonal workers left undocumented, unemployed and homeless after leaving abusive and exploitative employers.
Surfers in Fiji could soon have to pay to surf, with the government moving to repeal a unique law that opened access to tourists and locals alike.
Pacific activists join indigenous Amazonians for protests on the streets of Belem at the UN's COP30 climate summit.
Vanuatu's prime minister has joined the backlash over a provincial government ban against women preparing and selling food while on their period.
As Toa Samoa prepares to take on New Zealand in the Pacific Cup rugby league final, Samoans around the world will be celebrating but in Samoa police have banned parades.
On the program: questions over Vanuatu patrol boat grounding; mixed responses to Solomon Islands defence force proposal; campaigning starts ahead of Tonga's national election; pride in Tonga as netballers play first home series; and Solomon Islands soccer stars get a taste of professional sporting life.
Pride in Papua New Guinea as Pope Leo XIV canonises Saint Peter ToRot, a layman killed for preaching the Catholic faith during World War II.
On the program:Excitement is building in Papua New Guinea ahead of the canonization of the country's first Catholic Saint, Peter ToRot.Pain still lingers 50 years after the murders of the Balibo Five in Timor Leste as relatives continue to call for justice. Micronesia's World War II shipwrecks are a magnet for divers but they're also a ticking environmental "time bomb"
Solomon Islands police say they are investigating the discovery of a low-profile semi-submersible boat found abandoned in Malaita Province.
Papua New Guinea and Australia are on track to sign a historic security treaty next week.
Angaur, a tiny island at the southern end of Palau, spans just four square kilometres, but it's overrun by thousands of invasive macaque monkeys.With only 114 locals left, the island's human population has been squeezed into a small corner, while the monkeys run rampant.Originally introduced by German colonists over a century ago, the macaques have multiplied through a chain of events involving war, neglect and geopolitics.Award-winning podcaster James Nokise boards an eight-seater plane to investigate this situation. What he finds is a tangled tale involving WWII-era unexploded bombs, US military interests in the Pacific and a perfect monkey storm of cultural and environmental disruption.Presented and produced by James Nokise
Palau's president Surangel Whipps Junior says he was disappointed by Donald Trump's UN speech, which labelled climate change a scam and rubbished efforts to reduce emissions.
Papua New Guinea was the focus of attention this week as the Pacific region's largest nation celebrated 50 years of independence.




