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Keyword: gastonflosse

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  • French anti-corruption leader views Tahiti as classic case of corruption (French - any surprise?)

    02/14/2005 4:50:41 AM PST · by NZerFromHK · 6 replies · 545+ views
    Tahiti Presse ^ | 02/12/2005 at 10:54 AM | news
    French anti-corruption leader views Tahiti as classic case of corruption (Tahitipresse) - As some 110,000 Windward Islands potential voters prepare for Sunday’s by-election, a visiting French anti-corruption leader described Tahiti as a “good example” of political corruption. Tahiti is a good example because even though it is smaller than France, when examined under a magnifying glass, “one encounters all that one finds elsewhere—cronyism, rigged markets, fictitious employment, financial channels and even pressures that one can exert on civil servants or judges,” Eric Halphen said Friday. Halphen, a former powerful and controversial examining judge in France who has turned to politics,...
  • Temaru triumphs in French Polynesia elections

    02/14/2005 4:25:42 AM PST · by NZerFromHK · 5 replies · 330+ views
    Expatica ^ | Feb 13 | news
    PAPEETE, Feb 13 (AFP) - The pro-independence party of Oscar Temaru swept to victory in initial by-elections in the French Polynesian islands of Tahiti and Moorea that residents hope will end a 10-month political crisis, officials said Sunday. The vote was called after France's state council - the highest administrative court - last year annulled the results of May 2004 elections in the two islands, citing irregularities in some polling stations. The islands send 37 members to the 57-seat territorial assembly. New elections will be held throughout the sprawling Pacific territory. Temaru's Union for Democracy (UPLD) took 46.94 percent of...
  • Tahitian poll: Trouble in paradise [Troubles for France's Pacific dependencies]

    02/13/2005 9:12:40 PM PST · by NZerFromHK · 4 replies · 335+ views
    CNN International ^ | Monday, February 14, 2005 | AP
    PAPEETE, Tahiti (AP) -- Voters in Tahiti and nearby Moorea cast ballots in a partial election that islanders hope will resolve a months-long political crisis that has broken the calm of French Polynesia and divided politicians all the way to Paris. Political tumult has torn the French territory in the South Pacific since May when conservatives -- in power since 1982 -- suffered an unexpected defeat in legislative elections. The narrow loss gave an extra seat in the Assembly of French Polynesia to the pro-independence party, triggering a bitter political crisis that the 112,000 eligible voters were being asked to...
  • Power struggle in Tahiti (something big to happen in France's Pacific territory?)

    11/08/2004 7:18:30 PM PST · by NZerFromHK · 5 replies · 738+ views
    New Zealand Herald ^ | 09.11.2004 | -
    PAPEETE - After years of battling to gain power in French Polynesia, newly elected Oscar Temaru could not sleep the first night he set foot in the presidential residence. It wasn't because he was overexcited. Temaru was horrified at the grandiose interior of golden curtains and inlaid furniture, crystal chandeliers and yellow walls. "It looked like the city hall in Paris." Temaru had never seen inside the three-year-old $85 million complex before he narrowly won the May election and formed a coalition with a majority of one seat. Now Temaru and his supporters are illegally occupying the presidential buildings and...
  • Ousted president pursues French Polynesia elections (political chaos in French Pacific territory)

    10/29/2004 10:38:41 PM PDT · by NZerFromHK · 24 replies · 565+ views
    National Business Review (New Zealand) ^ | 29-Oct-2004 | by Stuart McMillan
    The positions over the situation in French Polynesia are becoming increasingly entrenched. Although a strong argument can be made that this is a political crisis rather than a constitutional or legal crisis, if two men claim to be the president of French Polynesia and if the main opposition party refuses to concede that it has lost power then a major constitutional crisis is in the making. Oscar Temaru, the leader of the Union for Democracy (UPLD), appears to have lost most of the legal battles he has waged. He wanted new elections to be held immediately after he lost two...
  • Polynesia voters set stage for showdown with Paris (France = imperialist)

    06/15/2004 9:09:56 PM PDT · by ellery · 10 replies · 181+ views
    Telegraph UK ^ | 16/06/2004 | Nick Squires
    One of France's farthest-flung and most exotic colonial possessions, French Polynesia, elected its first pro-independence leader yesterday in a blow to the government in Paris. The new head of state, Oscar Temaru, replaced a long-time political ally of President Jacques Chirac as president. The new man favours independence for the South Pacific archipelago, also known by the name of its main island, Tahiti. The high tension of the past few weeks is at odds with French Polynesia's reputation as the epitome of South Seas tranquillity and romance, an image first fostered by 18th century explorers such as Capt James Cook....
  • Former NZ freezing worker becomes French Polynesia's president (French territory wants independence)

    06/14/2004 11:04:30 PM PDT · by NZerFromHK · 24 replies · 192+ views
    New Zealand Herald ^ | 15.06.2004 | By AUDREY YOUNG, political editor
    UPDATE - Independence campaigner, anti-nuclear testing protester and former Westfield freezing worker Oscar Temaru has been confirmed as the new president of French Polynesia. The elevation of Mr Temaru, 59, will end the 20-year rule of Gaston Flosse, 72, a close friend of French president Jacques Chirac. Elections were held three weeks ago and legal action by Mr Flosse to have the elections nullified were unsuccessful. At last count, Mr Temaru, leader of the Tavini Huiraatira Party, had formed a coalition with 30 seats in the 57-member Assembly. Mr Temaru has not set a deadline for independence from France but...