Designated Competent Authority(ies):
Prime Minister's Office, the Secretary to Government
Contact details:
| Address: |
Location: Prime Minister’s Office Taufa’ahau Road Nuku’alofa Tonga
Postal: Prime Minister’s Office P.O. Box 62 Nuku’alofa Kingdom of Tonga |
| Telephone: |
+676 24 644 |
| Fax: |
+676 23 888 |
| E-mail: |
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| General website: |
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PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Kingdom of Tonga

Geography
Area: 747 sq. km. (288 sq. mi.).
Cities: Capital--Nuku'alofa (pop. 34,000).
Terrain: 171 islands, mainly raised coral but some volcanic; 48 inhabited.
Climate: Tropical, modified by trade winds. Warm season (December to May), cool season (May to December).
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Tongan(s).
Population (2006 census): 101,169.
Age structure: 37.1% below 14; 4.2% over 65.
Annual growth rate (2002 est.): 1.94%.
Ethnic groups: Tongan 98%, other Polynesian, European.
Religions: Christian.
Languages: Tongan, English.
Education: Literacy (2004)--98.9%.
Health: Infant mortality rate (2004 est.)--20.4/1,000. Life expectancy at birth--68.56 yrs.: female--72.14 years; male--67.05 years.
Work force (2003) 36,500: Agriculture--65%.
Unemployment (2003): 5.2%.
Government
Type: Constitutional hereditary monarchy.
Constitution: 1875 (revised 1970).
Independence: June 4, 1970.
Branches: Executive--monarch, prime minister, and cabinet. Legislative--unicameral Legislative Assembly. Judicial--Court of Appeals (Privy Council), Supreme Court, Land Court, Magistrates' Court.
Administrative subdivisions: Three main island groups--Ha'apai, Tongatapu, Vava'u.
Political parties: People's Democratic Party, Friendly Islands Human Rights and Democratic Movement, Paati Langafonua Tu'uloa.
Suffrage: Universal at age 21.
Central government budget (2007/2008 est.): $116 million.
Economy (all figures in U.S. dollars)
GDP (2003/2004): $148.9 million.
Per capita GDP (2004 est.): $1,287.
GDP real growth rate (2006/2007 est.): -3.5%.
Natural resources: Fish.
Agriculture (25% of GDP): Products--squash, vanilla beans, root crops, fish, other marine products.
Industry: 17% of GDP.
Services (2006/2007 est.): 57% of GDP.
Trade (2006/2007): Exports--$10.37 million; squash, fish, vanilla beans, root crops. Major export markets--Japan, U.S., New Zealand, Australia, Fiji. Imports--$121.6 million; food, machinery and transport equipment, fuels, chemicals. Major import sources--New Zealand, Australia, Fiji, U.S., Indonesia.
Fiscal year: July 1 to June 30.
GEOGRAPHY
Tonga
is an archipelago directly south of Western Samoa. Its 171 islands, 48
of them inhabited, are divided into three main groups--Vava'u, Ha'apai,
and Tongatapu--and cover an 800-kilometer (500 mi.)-long north-south
line. The largest island, Tongatapu, on which the capital city of
Nuku'alofa is located, covers 257 square kilometers (99 sq. mi.).
Geologically the Tongan islands are of two types: most have a limestone
base formed from uplifted coral formations; others consist of limestone
overlaying a volcanic base.
The climate is basically subtropical with a distinct warm period (December-April), during which the temperatures rise above 32oC (90oF), and a cooler period (May-November), with temperatures rarely rising above 27oC (80oF). The temperature increases from 23oC to 27oC (74oF to 80oF),
and the annual rainfall is from 170 to 297 centimeters (67-117 in.) as
one moves from Tongatapu in the south to the more northerly islands
closer to the Equator. The mean daily humidity is 80%.
PEOPLE
Tongans,
a Polynesian group with a very small mixture of Melanesian, represent
more than 98% of the inhabitants. The rest are European, mixed
European, and other Pacific Islanders. There also are about 500
Chinese.
More than two-thirds of the
population of the Kingdom of Tonga live on its main island, Tongatapu.
An increasing number of Tongans have moved into Nuku'alofa, Tonga's
capital and only urban and commercial center, where increasingly
Western and indigenous Polynesian cultural and living patterns have
blended. For instance, the extended family lifestyle is declining, with
young couples choosing to live on their own. Nonetheless, village life
and kinship ties continue to be important throughout the country. The
Christian faith that has dominated Tongan life for almost two centuries
is still influential. All commerce and entertainment activities cease
on Sunday from midnight, and the constitution declares the Sabbath to
be sacred, forever. However, within the past five years, an
unsuccessful attempt was made in parliament to amend the Sunday law.
Primary education between
ages 6 and 14 is compulsory and free in state schools. The state owns
and operates 99% of the primary schools and 44% of secondary schools.
Higher education includes teacher training, nursing and medical
training, a small private university, a women's business college, and a
number of private agricultural schools. Most higher education is
pursued overseas.
HISTORY
The
word Tonga means "south" in numerous Polynesian languages. Some
scholars believe the inhabitants originally came from the islands now
known as Samoa. Archaeological evidence indicates that the Tonga
islands have been settled since at least 500 B.C., and local traditions
have carefully preserved the names of the Tongan sovereigns for about
1,000 years. The power of the Tongan monarchy reached its height in the
13th century. At the time, chieftains exercised political influence as
far away as Samoa.
During the 14th century,
the King of Tonga delegated much of his temporal power to a brother
while retaining the spiritual authority. Sometime later, this process
was repeated by the second royal line, thus resulting in three distinct
lines: the Tu'i Tonga with spiritual authority, which is believed to
have extended over much of Polynesia; the Tu'i Ha'atakalaua; and the
Tu'i Kanokupolu. The latter two had temporal authority for carrying out
much of the day-to-day administration of the kingdom.
Dutch navigators in 1616
were the first Europeans to sight the Tongan archipelago. The main
island of Tongatapu was first visited by the Dutch explorer Abel Tasman
in 1643. Continual contact with Europeans, however, did not begin until
more than 125 years later. Captain James Cook visited the islands in
1773 and 1777 and gave the archipelago the name "the Friendly Islands"
because of the gentle nature of the people he encountered. He, of
course, was never aware of the acrimonious debate that raged among
contending nobles over who should have the honor of attacking Cook's
tiny fleet and killing its sailors. In 1789, the famous mutiny on the
British ship, Bounty, took place in the waters between the Ha'apai and
Nomuka island groups.
Shortly after Captain
Cook's last visit, warfare broke out in the islands as the three lines
of kings contended for dominance. At about the same time, young Tongan
nobles serving as mercenaries took Tongan culture to Fiji's most
eastern island group, the Laus. The first missionaries, attached to the
London Missionary Society, arrived in Tonga in 1747. A second
missionary group followed in 1822, led by Walter Lawry of the Wesleyan
Missionary Society. They converted Taufa'ahau, one of the claimants to
the Tu'i Kanokupolu line, and Christianity began to spread throughout
the islands.
At the time of his
conversion, Taufa'ahau took the name of Siaosi (George) and his consort
assumed the name Salote (Charlotte) in honor of King George III and
Queen Charlotte of England. In the following years, he united all of
the Tongan islands for the first time in recorded history. In 1845, he
was formally proclaimed King George Tupou I, and the present dynasty
was founded. He established a constitution and a parliamentary
government based, in some respects, on the British model. In 1862, he
abolished the existing system of semi-serfdom and established an
entirely alien system of land tenure. Under this system every male
Tongan, upon reaching the age of 16, was entitled to rent--for life and
at a nominal fee--a plot of bushland (called "api tukuhau") of 8.25
acres, plus a village allotment of about three-eights of an acre for
his home (‘api kolo).
Tonga concluded a treaty of
friendship and protection with the United Kingdom in 1900 and came
under British protection. It retained its independence and autonomy,
while the United Kingdom agreed to handle its foreign affairs and
protect it from external attack.
During World War II, in
close collaboration with New Zealand, Tonga formed a local defense
force of about 2,000 troops that saw action in the Solomon Islands. In
addition, New Zealand and U.S. troops were stationed on Tongatapu,
which became a staging point for shipping.
A new treaty of friendship
and protection with the United Kingdom, signed in 1958 and ratified in
May 1959, provided for a British Commissioner and consul in Tonga who
were responsible to the Governor of Fiji in his capacity as British
Chief Commissioner for Tonga. In mid-1965 the British Commissioner and
consul became directly responsible to the U.K. Secretary of State for
Colonial Affairs. Tonga became fully independent on June 4, 1970, an
event officially designated by the King as Tonga's "reentry into the
community of nations."
King Taufa'ahau Tupou IV died in September 2006 and was succeeded by King Siaosi Tupou V.
GOVERNMENT
Tonga
is the South Pacific's last Polynesian kingdom. Its executive branch
includes the prime minister and the cabinet, which becomes the Privy
Council when presided over by the monarch. In intervals between
legislative sessions, the Privy Council makes ordinances, which become
law if confirmed by the legislature. The unicameral Legislative
Assembly is dominated by the royal family and nobles. It consists of
nine nobles who are elected by the 33 hereditary nobles of Tonga; nine
people's representatives elected by universal adult suffrage for 3-year
terms; and the cabinet of 12-14 ministers, appointed by the monarch.
The governors of Ha'apai and Vava'u are appointed to their offices and
serve as ex officio members of the cabinet. The Legislative Assembly
sits for 4 or 5 months a year.
Tonga's court system
consists of the Court of Appeal (Privy Council), the Supreme Court, the
Magistrates' Court, and the Land Court. Judges are appointed by the
monarch.
The only form of local
government is through town and district officials who have been
popularly elected since 1965. The town official represents the central
government in the villages; the district official has authority over a
group of villages.
Principal Government Officials
Monarch--King Siaosi Tupou V
Prime Minister--Feleti Vaka'uta Sevele
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Sonatane 'Tu'akinamolahi Taumoepeau-Tupou
Ambassador to the United States--Fekitamoeloa ‘Utoikamanu
Tonga maintains an embassy at
250 East 51st Street, New York, New York 10022 (tel: 917-369-1136; fax:
917-369-1024). In addition, Tonga has a Consulate General in San
Francisco.
POLITICAL CONDITIONS
For
most of the 20th century Tonga was quiet, inward-looking, and somewhat
isolated from developments elsewhere in the world. The Tongans, as a
whole, continue to cling to many of their old traditions, including a
respect for the nobility. However, an increasingly popular
pro-democracy movement is articulating a rising demand for more rights
for the common people and curbs to the influence of the nobility.
Tonga's complex social structure is essentially broken into three
tiers: the king, the nobles, and the commoners. Between the king,
nobles, and commoners are matapule, sometimes called "talking chiefs,"
who are allied with the king or a noble, and who may also hold estates.
Obligations and responsibilities among the groups are reciprocal, and
although the nobility are able to extract favors from people living on
their estates, they likewise must extend favors to their people. Status
and rank play a powerful role in personal relationships, even within
families.
Tongans are beginning to
confront the problem of how to preserve their cultural identity and
traditions in the wake of the increasing impact of Western technology
and culture. Migration and the gradual monetization of the economy have
led to the breakdown of the traditional extended family. Some of the
poor, traditionally cared for by the extended family, are now being
left without visible means of support. The rapidly increasing
population is already too great to provide the constitutionally
mandated 8.25-acre plot of land or api tukuhau due each male at age 16.
Population density reached 132 persons per square kilometer in 2002,
fueling the growing population shift from farm and village to urban
centers, where traditional societal and political structures are
undergoing steady change. Increasing educational opportunities,
expanded media penetration and foreign influences via the country's
extensive diaspora have raised the political awareness of Tonga's
commoners and stimulated dissent against the current system of
government. In the past two decades, calls for political reform have
gained wide-ranging support and momentum.
Historically, political
reform has been slow in the kingdom. In a departure from this, the late
King of Tonga announced in late 2004 that he would henceforth include
people's representatives in the 12-member appointed cabinet. Following
elections in March 2005, the king appointed two of nine recently
elected people's representatives and two nobles' representatives as
cabinet ministers. In April 2005, Tonga's first official political
party, the People's Democratic Party, was formed, and its candidate was
one of those elected to parliament in special May by-elections held to
fill the two people's representational seats vacated by the king's
cabinet appointments. The by-election also resulted in the election of
the first woman to sit in the Tongan parliament in 24 years. When the
princely prime minister resigned from office in early 2006, the king
appointed People's Representative Feleti Sevele as the first commoner
prime minister in modern times.
In November 2006, days of
political demonstrations deteriorated into a riot, leaving the central
business district of Nuku'alofa in ruins. The government declared a
state of emergency to restore law and order to the capital. The state
of emergency was repeatedly extended, and was still in place in April
2008.
In recent years, the king
has repeatedly expressed support for political reforms. In August 2007,
a tripartite committee of cabinet, nobles', and people's
representatives issued a report to the Legislative Assembly
recommending major changes to the political system that would result in
a sizable majority of people's representatives in the Assembly, with
the Assembly then choosing a prime minister from among its members. The
prime minister would in turn select a cabinet from among the Assembly
members. The Assembly endorsed the committee's report "in general,"
prior to adjourning in October 2007, but delayed implementation of the
recommended reforms until 2010.
ECONOMY
Tonga's
economy is characterized by a large non-monetary sector and a heavy
dependence on remittances from the more than half of the country's
population that lives abroad, chiefly in Australia, New Zealand, and
the United States. Much of the monetary sector of the economy is
dominated, if not owned, by the royal family and nobles. This is
particularly true of telecommunications and electricity generation and
supply. Many small businesses, particularly in the retail sector on
Tongatapu, are owned by recent Chinese immigrants who arrived under a
cash-for-passports scheme ended in 1998. Royal-owned and Chinese
businesses were among those targeted in the November 2006 rioting.
The manufacturing sector
consists of handicrafts and a few other very small-scale industries,
which together contribute only about 3% of GDP. Commercial business
activities are to a large extent dominated by large trading companies
found throughout the South Pacific. In September 1974, the country's
first commercial trading bank, the Bank of Tonga, opened. Following the
destruction of the capital's commercial center in the November 2006
riots, government, business, and international donors have combined
forces to support the reconstruction of Nuku'alofa.
Rural Tongans rely on
plantation and subsistence agriculture. Squash pumpkins, vanilla beans,
and root crops such as cassava and yams, coffee, and noni are the major
cash crops. Pigs and poultry are the major types of livestock. Horses
are kept for draft purposes, primarily by farmers working their api.
More cattle are being raised, and beef imports are declining. Fisheries
are also a growing export sector, with tuna, beche de mer, and seaweed
being the major marine export products.
Tonga's development plans
emphasize a growing private sector, upgrading agricultural
productivity, revitalizing the squash and vanilla bean industries,
developing tourism, and improving the island's communications and
transportation systems. Substantial progress has been made, but much
work remains to be done. A small but growing construction sector is
developing in response to the inflow of aid monies and remittances from
Tongans abroad. Government, international development agencies, and
major donor nations have together identified a number of promising
means to diversity the Tongan economy. One hope is seen in fisheries;
tests have shown that sufficient skipjack tuna pass through Tongan
waters to support a fishing industry. Another potential development
activity is exploitation of forests, which cover 35% of the kingdom's
land area. Plantation coconut trees past their prime bearing years also
provide a potential source of lumber.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Tonga
maintains cordial relations with most countries and has close relations
with its Pacific neighbors. It is a member of the Pacific Islands
Forum. In 1998, it recognized China and broke relations with Taiwan
In 1972, Tonga laid claim
to the tide-washed, isolated Minerva Reefs, some 480 kilometers
southwest of Nuku'alofa, to forestall efforts by a private
Anglo-American group to establish an independent Republic of Minerva on
the reefs. The reefs are regularly patrolled by the Tonga Defense
Services.
DEFENSE
The
Tonga Defense Service (TDS) is a 450-person force. The force is
comprised of a headquarters platoon and a light infantry company. A
coastal naval unit of four small patrol boats and amphibious landing
craft operates as a component of the TDS. The force's mission is to
assist in maintenance of public order, to patrol coastal waters and
fishing zones, and to engage in civic action and national development
projects. The main base of operations is the capital, Nuku'alofa.
The TDS is partially
supported by defense cooperation agreements with both Australia and New
Zealand, which support the TDS with small in-country detachments of
military technicians. The United States military provides training to
the TDS and conducts humanitarian civic action projects in Tonga. Since
2002, TDS soldiers have been deployed as part of a multi-national
regional peacekeeping force in the Solomon Islands. Tonga's third
contingent of TDS soldiers deployed to Iraq departed for Baghdad in
February 2008. Since the November 2006 riots, TDS have had authority to
maintain law and order and assist the police within a declared
restricted area of Nuku'alofa.
U.S.-TONGA RELATIONS
The
United States and Tonga enjoy close cooperation on a range of
international issues. Officers of the American Embassy in Suva, Fiji,
are concurrently accredited to Tonga and make periodic visits since the
United States has no permanent consular or diplomatic offices in Tonga.
Peace Corps Volunteers teach and provide technical assistance to
Tongans. Tonga has no embassy in Washington, DC, but has a permanent
representative to the United Nations in New York who also is accredited
as ambassador to the United States. A large number of Tongans reside in
the United States, particularly in Utah, California, and Hawaii.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--Larry M. Dinger
Deputy Chief of Mission--Ted Mann
Political/Economic/Commercial Affairs--Brian J. Siler
Consul--Debra J. Towry
Management Officer--Ila Jurisson
The U.S. Embassy in Suva, Fiji is located at 31 Loftus Street (P.O. Box 218), Suva (tel. (679) 331-4466, fax (679) 330-2267).