"16/11" redirects here. For the date, see
November 16
.
2006 civil unrest and riots in Tonga
The
2006 Nuku?alofa riots
, also known as the
2006 Tongan riots
,
[2]
started on 16 November, in the
Tongan
capital of
Nuku?alofa
. The
Legislative Assembly of Tonga
was due to adjourn for the year and despite promises of action, had done little to advance democracy in the
government
. A mixed crowd of democracy advocates took to the streets in protest. The riots saw a number of cases of
robbery
,
looting
,
vehicle theft
,
arson
, and various
property damage
.
Targets of riots
[
edit
]
Riots broke out around 3:30 pm
TOT
as rioters threw stones, broke windows, and looted. By about 6:00 pm, rioters started setting buildings on fire. The first targets of the rioters were government buildings. Then they attacked enterprises, including some that were leased to
ANZ Bank
and those owned by the
Prime Minister
Feleti Sevele
.
A private shop selling mobile telephones and advertising for
Tonfon
(part of the Shoreline Group of Companies owned, at the time, by the royal family) was next. Rioters also attacked and burned the main office of the Shoreline Group of Companies, which was located 1 km (0.62 mi) away from the small central business district.
Several of the larger Chinese shops were targeted for looting and burning. Other shops, including one owned by ethnic Indians, were burned as well, but it is not clear if they were intentionally set on fire or caught fire from surrounding buildings.
At about 6:00 PM TOT rioters torched the Royal Pacific hotel (owned by the Shoreline Group of Companies). The hotel was located on one of the main roads into the city. There are many commercial buildings on the thoroughfare, and the fire spread to some of those buildings as well.
According to an article in
Tonga Now
,
[3]
normally law-abiding Tongans of both sexes and all ages were participating avidly in the looting. However, some photos
[3]
would seem to indicate that the car-tipping and arson were the work of young men. This conception would be reinforced after a destroyed Chinese shop was vandalized with graffiti.
At nightfall, the police and the
Tonga Defence Services
regained control of the central business district and were turning away anyone who tried to enter.
Aftermath
[
edit
]
Estimates of the damage varied. Some estimates said that 60 to 80% of the central business district was destroyed.
[4]
17 November
[
edit
]
It was announced that eight bodies had been found in charred ruins.
[5]
Since most of the employees of the affected businesses managed to reach safety, news reports speculated that the dead were likely looters. It is not clear if the deceased have been identified or if identified, when their names will be released.
The Tongan government declared a
state of emergency
. Only firefighters, police, utility workers, etc. were allowed inside a perimeter defined by Vuna road, ?Alipate road, Mateialona road, and Tupoulahi road. Residents of that area could enter only after being searched. For the next month, gatherings of more than five persons were illegal in that area. Emergency laws gave security forces the right to stop and search people without a warrant.
[6]
The Tongan government promised reform.
Popular elections were held
in 2008.
[7]
The Chinese embassy chartered an airplane to evacuate Chinese nationals.
[8]
18 November
[
edit
]
110 soldiers and 44 police officers from Australia and New Zealand arrived to help the local police to establish order. The New Zealand army was to be in charge of airport security and the police were to protect the
High Commission
. The Australian contingent from the
1st Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment
were to assist and relieve exhausted Tongan police.
[9]
19 November
[
edit
]
A leader of the
Tongan
pro-democracy movement, MP
'Akilisi Pohiva
, criticised the intervention of Australian and New Zealand peacekeepers following the riots.
[10]
20 November
[
edit
]
Some businesses had temporarily relocated to the suburbs. Some looted items were returned. Police were guarding the telecommunications center and investigating mobile call logs. According to the
Matangi Tonga
newspaper, twenty-six arrests had been made and the number of deaths had been revised down to six.
[11]
22 November
[
edit
]
Nuku?alofa was by now largely peaceful. The town center was still cordoned off and heavily patrolled, but local shop owners and the like could easily get permission to enter the restricted area. Some Chinese shops which escaped damage were now open again. Major shops and banks, however, were still operating from temporary locations in the suburbs.
1 December
[
edit
]
Peace was believed to be restored and foreign forces began leaving. The forbidden area in town was reduced. Police had made 571 arrests.
[12]
2007
[
edit
]
The first business to rebuild and reopen was the Fung Shin supermarket, which opened in new premises on 19 December 2007.
[13]
2008
[
edit
]
In November 2008, rebuilding began with an anticipated three years of work for the infrastructure to be complete. Roads, footpaths, drainage and more were planned by Minister Paul Karalus. Funding was provided by low-interest Chinese government loans amounting to $US55 million.
[14]
2018
[
edit
]
In July 2018, Tonga was expected to begin the repayments of loans from China for reconstruction that ended up being US$100 million+ to the Chinese government. The commitment to begin this process was made by
?Akilisi P?hiva
.
[15]
Maintaining the state of emergency
[
edit
]
In late January 2008, the Tongan authorities renewed a Proclamation of Public Order for the sixteenth month running, a lingering aftermath of the riots. The statement reads: "It is hereby proclaimed that there continues to exist a state of danger" in central Nuku?alofa. According to the Proclamation, the area will remain "controlled and maintained by the Tonga Police Force and
Tonga Defence Services
for the sole purpose of maintaining public order for all people of the country".
[16]
Tongan information minister
Afualo Matoto
announced that the state of emergency would probably be maintained for another three months (i.e., until the end of April). This was criticised by Tongan pro-democracy advocate ?Akilisi P?hiva: "I don’t see any reason for government to continue to hold on to the emergency power."
[17]
The state of emergency was lifted in August 2008. Member of Parliament ?Akilisi P?hiva noted that the government had probably chosen to wait until after the coronation of King
George Tupou V
to put an end to it.
[18]
It was, however, re-imposed in September, despite the objections of pro-democracy members of Parliament.
[19]
[20]
Operation Kaliloa
[
edit
]
A joint investigation into the riots by the
Tonga
police,
Australian Federal Police
and
New Zealand Police
, codenamed
Operation Kaliloa
, began. 678 people were arrested, some under controversial circumstances,
[21]
with former Police Minister
Clive Edwards
also being charged after claiming that soldiers had engaged in indiscriminate beatings.
[22]
Democratic leader
?Akilisi P?hiva
was arrested on charges of sedition, along with Edwards and a number of other pro-democracy MPs and activists.
[23]
[24]
[25]
[26]
In total there were 320 prosecutions related to the riots.
[21]
No-one was convicted of any political charge. Most non-sedition charges against MPs were withdrawn in September 2007,
[27]
and all were ultimately acquitted in March 2009.
[28]
[29]
Democracy campaigner Sione Halafuka Vea was acquitted in July 2007.
[30]
[31]
Charges against businesswoman
'Ofa Simiki
, who the government had claimed masterminded the riots, were withdrawn in April 2008.
[32]
MP
?Isileli Pulu
was acquitted on charges of abetting murder and arson in July 2008.
[33]
Sedition charges against broadcaster
Sione Sangster Saulala
were also dismissed that month.
[34]
Charges against Edwards were dismissed in May 2010.
[35]
The state of emergency declared on 17 November 2006 was extended several times. It was finally ended in January 2011 once the new Prime Minister took office following the
2010 election
, itself preceded by constitutional reform.
[36]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Tongan pro-democracy movement slams intervention"
.
ABC News
. 19 November 2006
. Retrieved
26 March
2023
.
- ^
"Tongan riots, 2006"
.
libcom.org
. Retrieved
27 November
2018
.
- ^
a
b
"Riots in Tonga 2006"
. Planet Tonga. Archived from
the original
on 14 April 2012
. Retrieved
20 November
2006
.
- ^
Fonua, Mary; Linny Folau and Pesi Fonua (16 November 2006).
"Rioting crowd leaves trail of wreckage in Nuku?alofa"
. Matangi Tonga. Archived from
the original
on 4 February 2007
. Retrieved
20 November
2006
.
- ^
"Riot death toll in Tonga reaches eight"
.
Radio New Zealand
. 17 November 2006
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Death toll in Tonga reaches eight.New Zealand and Australia send security reinforcements"
. RNZ. 18 November 2006
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Six died in Tonga rioting - report"
. New Zealand Herald. 17 November 2006
. Retrieved
28 December
2021
.
- ^
"Flight chartered to evacuate Chinese in Tonga"
.
ABC News and Current Affairs
. 22 November 2006. Archived from
the original
on 31 March 2010
. Retrieved
26 November
2006
.
- ^
"NZ, Aust troops land in Tonga"
.
Television New Zealand
.
Australian Associated Press
. 18 November 2006
. Retrieved
18 November
2006
.
- ^
"Tongan pro-democracy movement slams intervention"
.
ABC News and Current Affairs
. 19 November 2006. Archived from
the original
on 11 November 2007
. Retrieved
1 December
2006
.
- ^
"Police confirm six dead in Tonga fires"
. Matangi Tonga. 22 November 2006. Archived from
the original
on 27 May 2011
. Retrieved
22 November
2006
.
- ^
Radio Tonga news and
"Archived copy"
. Archived from
the original
on 27 May 2011
. Retrieved
5 December
2006
.
{{
cite web
}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link
)
- ^
"Fung Shin opens for Christmas"
.
Matangi Tonga
. 20 December 2007. Archived from
the original
on 24 December 2007
. Retrieved
22 December
2007
.
- ^
"Rebuilding begins in Nuku'alofa after 2006 riot"
.
Radio New Zealand
. 19 November 2008
. Retrieved
27 November
2018
.
- ^
"Tonga to start repaying loan for Nuku'alofa reconstruction"
.
Radio New Zealand
. 13 July 2018
. Retrieved
27 November
2018
.
- ^
"PM renews public order proclamation for 16th month"
Archived
27 May 2011 at the
Wayback Machine
, Matangi Tonga, 30 January 2008
- ^
"Tongan pro-democracy advocate questions state of emergency continuation"
.
Radio New Zealand
. 28 January 2008
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Leading Tongan MP welcomes end of state of emergency"
.
Radio New Zealand
. 29 August 2008
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Tongan PM re-imposes emergency regulations"
, ABC Radio Australia, 10 September 2008
- ^
"Anger in Tonga after emergency police powers put back in place"
.
Radio New Zealand
. 10 September 2008
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
a
b
Steven Ratuva (2019). "Thy kingdom burn: Hegemony, resistance and securitisation in Tonga".
Contested Terrain: Reconceptualising Security in the Pacific
. ANU Press. p. 186.
ISBN
9781760463199
.
JSTOR
j.ctvq4c0m7.8
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Tonga MP says hundreds brutally beaten by soldiers"
.
Radio New Zealand
. 28 November 2006
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Tongan pro-democracy leader released on bail, facing charges of sedition"
. RNZ. 19 January 2007
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Tonga's former police minister charged with two counts of sedition"
.
Radio New Zealand
. 2 February 2007
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Tonga police confirm third MP arrested in connection with Nuku'alofa riot"
. RNZ. 30 January 2007
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"TONGA RUGBY CHAIRMAN CHARGED IN NOVEMBER RIOTS"
. Pacific Islands Report. 1 March 2007. Archived from
the original
on 24 November 2020
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Crown withdraws six charges against five People's Representatives in Tonga"
. RNZ. 11 September 2007
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Five accused found not guilty of sedition in Tonga"
. RNZ. 30 March 2009
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Five acquitted on charges of seditious conspiracy in Tonga"
. RNZ. 14 September 2009
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Tongan democracy campaigner 'not guilty'
"
.
The Sydney Morning Herald
. 27 July 2007
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"TONGAN CHARGED WITH SEDITION FOUND NOT GUILTY"
. Pacific Islands Report. 27 July 2007. Archived from
the original
on 26 June 2020
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"TONGA WITHDRAWS SEDITION CHARGE AGAINST WOMAN"
. Pacific Islands Report. 2 May 2008. Archived from
the original
on 2 September 2021
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Tonga's number two People's Rep cleared on riot-related charges"
. RNZ. 14 July 2008
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Tonga's judiciary described as independent"
. RNZ. 16 July 2008
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
"Tonga: Power to the People"
.
Sunday Star Times
. 14 November 2010
. Retrieved
29 December
2020
.
- ^
U.S. Department of State
(31 October 2011).
"Background Notes, Tonga"
. Retrieved
10 February
2013
.
External links
[
edit
]
Wikinews has related news:
See also
[
edit
]
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Background
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By persecutor
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By country
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By institution
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By incident
| 17th century
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18th century
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19th century
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20th century
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21st century
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By victim
| 19th century
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20th century
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21st century
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Slurs
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Related
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