From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Secretariat of the Pacific Community, or
SPC (sometimes Pacific
Community), is a regional intergovernmental organisation
whose membership includes both nations and territories. It aims to
"develop the technical, professional, scientific, research,
planning and management capability of Pacific Island people and
directly provide information and advice, to enable them to make
informed decisions about their future development and
well-being."[1] The SPC
headquarters is in Nouméa, New Caledonia.
History
SPC was founded in 1947 as the South Pacific
Commission by six developed countries with an interest in
the region:
For reasons either of reduced development interest in the
Pacific Islands region or a desire to concentrate assistance in
other areas of greater poverty, two founding members have since
withdrawn from the SPC: the Netherlands (1962-) and the United
Kingdom (1995-98 and 2005-).
SPC's founding charter is the Canberra Agreement.[2][3] In the
aftermath of World War
II, the six colonial powers which created the SPC, arguably
intended it to secure Western political and military interests in
the postwar Pacific.[4][5][6]
From the start, SPC's role was constrained, and the invitation
from Australia and New Zealand to the USA, France, Netherlands and
the United Kingdom to participate in a South Seas Commission
Conference in 1947 included the statement that "the [South
Pacific] Commission to be set up should not be empowered to deal in
any way with political matters or questions of defense or
security"[7] This
constraint on discussion (particularly the constraint on discussing
nuclear weapons testing in the region) led, eventually, to the
creation of the South Pacific Forum (now Pacific
Islands Forum), which not only excluded the more distant
"metropolitan" powers of France, UK and USA, but also their Pacific
Island territories.
Present
Today, the SPC's role has expanded in service to its community.
The SPC work-area includes the following Pacific island countries
and territories, which since 1983 have been full members:
Apart from Tonga, these were all territories of the original
founder members of SPC, but most are now independent. Dutch
New Guinea, formerly represented in the SPC by the Netherlands, was
returned into Indonesia in 1969 and is no longer represented in the
SPC.
SPC today is the oldest and largest organization in the
10-member Council of
Regional Organisations in the Pacific (CROP), a consultative
process that is headed at the political level by the Pacific
Islands Forum Secretariat. Since the hand-over of co-ordination
of regional political issues from the SPC Conference to the South
Pacific Forum in the 1970s, SPC has concentrated on providing
technical, advisory, statistical and information support to its
member governments and administrations, particularly in areas where
small island states lack the wherewithal to maintain purely
national cadres of expertise, or in areas where regional
co-operation or interaction is necessary.
SPC was the first CROP organization to be headed by a woman,
Lourdes Pangelinan of Guam who left the organization end of January
2006. Dr Jimmie
Rodgers is the organization's current Director-General.
SPC
programmes and services
SPC’s technical programmes are co-ordinated under three
divisions, Land Resources, Marine Resources, and Social
Resources:
Land
Resources Division
The Land Resources Division, which is based in Suva, comprises
two programmes – sustainable management of forest and agriculture
systems, and biosecurity and trade facilitation. It provides
advice, expertise, technical support and training to members on all
aspects of agriculture and forestry, including:
- plant health
- animal health
- biosecurity and trade
- forest and agriculture diversification
- crop production
- animal production
- genetic resources
- information, communication and extension
- forest and trees
Marine
Resources Division
This division includes coastal, oceanic fisheries and maritime
programmes.[8]
The Coastal and
Oceanic Fisheries Programmes
These programmes of the SPC:
- assist Pacific Island fishing communities to participate in and
benefit from regional and national fisheries development and
management activities
- provide technical advice, assistance and training on developing
small-to-medium-scale commercial tuna fisheries
- conduct research and monitoring of the region’s tuna and reef
fisheries
- assist Pacific Island governments in providing an enabling
environment for economically and ecologically sustainable
aquaculture
The
Maritime Programme
The Maritime Programme works with the maritime sector of member
countries and territories to:
- review, update and implement maritime legislation (critical to
compliance with international requirements)
- facilitate training to ensure that all seafarers meet
international standards, which in turn promotes safer ships and
cleaner seas, and helps to secure employment for Pacific Island
seafarers
Social
Resources Division
This division covers a broad range of areas and includes
the:
Programme Support
Services
- Communication
- Information and Communication Technologies
- Library
- Planning Unit
- Publications and Printery
- Translation and Interpretation
- Corporate Services (finance, personnel, administrative, and
property services)
SPC
corporate values
- Priorities are set by SPC member countries and territories
- SPC takes a people-first approach, providing practical
solutions to real problems
- SPC strives to provide excellent service
- SPC endeavours to make a positive difference in the lives of
Pacific Islanders through development of skills
- SPC aims to alleviate absolute poverty, poverty of opportunity
and vulnerability to poverty
- SPC strategically engages in providing options for responding
to current and future opportunities and challenges
- SPC promotes gender, cultural and environmental
sensitivity
- SPC operates with accountability and transparency
SPC
Executives
SPC Chief
Executives
The following is a list of the Secretaries-General and
Directors-General (the title of the Chief Executive was changed in
1997) of the Secretariat of the Pacific Community (the name of the
Organization was also changed in 1997, from South Pacific
Commission):
- Mr William D. Forsyth (Australia) 1 November 1948 - 3 June
1951
- Sir Leslie Brian Freeston (UK) 12 November 1951 - 12 November
1954
- Dr Ralph Clairon Bedell (USA) 1 March 1955 - 28 February
1958
- Mr Thomas R. Smith (NZ) 1 March 1958 - 2 March 1963
- Mr William D. Forsyth (Australia) 24 March 1963 - 31 December
1966
- Sir
Gawain Bell (UK) 1 January 1967 - 11 December 1969
- Afioga Afoafouvale Misimoa (W. Samoa) 1 January 1970 - 18
February 1971 (he died on official mission in Tarawa,
Kiribati)
- Mr John E. de Young (USA) 18 February 1971 - 31 October 1971
(he was Programme Director: Social who acted in the interim period
for the above)
- Hon. Gustav F.D. Betham (W. Samoa) 1 November 1971 - 30
November 1975
- Dr E. Maciu Salato (Fiji) 9 December 1975 - 30 June 1979
- Hon. M. Young
Vivian (Niue) 1 July 1979 - 3 June 1982
- Mr Francis Bugotu, CBE (Solomon Is) 1 July 1982 - 30 November
1986
- Mr. Palauni M. Tuiasosopo (A. Samoa) 9 December 1986 - 31
December 1988 (stood down)
- Mr Jon Tikivanotau Jonassen (Cook Is) 1 January 1989 - 15 June
1989 (he was Director of Programmes acting in the interim)
- Mr Atanraoi Baiteke, OBE (Kiribati) 16 June 1989 - 5 January
1993
- M. Jacques Iékawé (New Caledonia) (SG designate but died on 10
March 1992 before assuming office)
- Ati
George Sokomanu, MBE (Vanuatu) 6 January 1993 - 7 January
1996
- Dr Robert B. Dun (Australia) 8 January 1996 - 5 January 2000
(he restructured the organisation and changed the title of the
Chief Executive from "Secretary-General" to
"Director-General")
- Ms Lourdes T. Pangelinan (Guam) 6 January 2000 - 5 January
2006
- Dr Jimmie
Rodgers (Solomon Islands) 6 January 2006 - present
Directors of
Services or Deputy Directors General
- Helene Courte (New Caledonia) 1989-1992
- Fusi Caginavanua (Fiji) 1992-1995
- Lourdes Pangelinan (Guam) 1995-1999
- Yves Corbel (France) 2000-2006
- Richard Mann (Germany) 2006-present
Directors
of Programmes or Deputy Directors General
- Poloma Komiti (Samoa) 1989-1995
- Dr Jimmie Rodgers (Solomon Islands) 1995-2005
- Falani Aukuso (Tokelau) 2005-2008
- Fekitamoeloa ‘Utoikamanu (Tonga) 2009-
Directors
of Marine Resources or Fisheries Coordinators
- Bernard Smith (Australia) 1981-1991
- Julian Dashwood (Cook Islands) 1991-1997
- Dr Tim Adams (UK) 1997-2008
- Michael Batty (UK) 2008-present
Directors of Land
Resources
- Aleki Sisifa (Tonga) 2003-present
Directors of Corporate
Services
- Louni Hanipale Mose (Samoa) 1994-2008
- Leslie Walker (Australia) 2008-present
See also
- ^
Vision and Mission of the
Secretariat of the Pacific Community, retrieved 16 August
2008.
- ^
The Governments of Australia, the French Republic, the Kingdom of the Netherlands,
New Zealand the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and the United States of
America (August 1984 (Fourth edition)). "CONSOLIDATION OF AGREED
PROVISIONS AND PRACTICES RELATING TO THE ESTABLISHMENT AND
OPERATION OF THE SOUTH PACIFIC COMMISSION, INCLUDING THE CANBERRA
AGREEMENT OF 1947 AS AMENDED" (in en-GB). Australian Treaty
Series 1948 No. 15. Australian Government Publishing
Service. http://www.spc.int/coastfish/canberra.htm. Retrieved
2008-08-11].
The fourth
edition of the document hosted on the Secretariat of the Pacific
Community web site.
- ^
The Governments of Australia, France, New Zealand, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern
Ireland and the United States of America (August 1984
(First edition)). "Agreement establishing the
South Pacific Commission (Canberra, 6 February 1947)" (in
en-GB). Australian Treaty Series 1948 No. 15. Australian
Government Publishing Service. http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/other/dfat/treaties/1948/15.html. Retrieved
2008-08-11.
The first edition
document hosted on the Australasian Legal Information Institute web
site.
- ^
Stearns, Editor, et al., Peter N. (June
2002). "The Pacific Region,
1944-2000: The Islands, 1946-2000: 1947" (in en-US). The
Encyclopedia of World History: Ancient, Medieval, and Modern.
www.bartleby.com. http://www.bartleby.com/67/4283.html. Retrieved
2008-08-13.
A licensed
reproduction of Peter N. Stearns, et
al., ed (2001). "H, 1, 1947" (in en-US). The Pacific Region,
1944-2000: The Islands, 1946-2000: 1947. The Encyclopedia of
World History: Ancient, Medieval, and Modern. Boston: Houghton
Mifflen Company. pp. =xxvii, 1243p.; maps; 25 cm.. ISBN
0-39565-237-5.
- ^
"Secretariat of the Pacific
Community" (in en-US). Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/556331/Secretariat-of-the-Pacific-Community#tab=active~checked%2Citems~checked&title=Secretariat%20of%20the%20Pacific%20Community%20--%20Britannica%20Online%20Encyclopedia. Retrieved
2008-08-16.
Supports SPC's
formation "to advise on economic, social, health matters affecting
the South Pacific Island territories..."
- ^
South Pacific Commission (1988). "South Pacific Commission:
History, aims, and activities" (in en-GB). Pacific Islands
Internet Resources. Michael R. Ogden, PhD. http://www2.hawaii.edu/~ogden/piir/pacific/spc.html. Retrieved
2008-08-16.
"The
establishment of the Commission was a response by the then colonial
powers to assure the economic and social stability of the Island
countries and avoid a repeat of the World War II experience by
creating mechanisms for meaningful relations among governments." In
other words, the SPC fosters regional socio-economic stability and
it provides a channel for intergovernmental relations. Regional
stability and intergovernmental relations serve not only the people
who live in the Pacific, but they also ultimately serve the
military and political interests of the Western countries which
helped found it.
- ^
A.H. McLintock, Editor, ed (originally
published 1966) (in en-GB). Te Ara - The Encyclopedia
of New Zealand, updated 2007-09-18. International
Relations: The South Pacific Commission. ISBN
978-0-478-18451-8. http://www.teara.govt.nz/1966/I/InternationalRelations/TheSouthPacificCommission/en. Retrieved
2008-08-16.
"From the outset
political and security matters were excluded from consideration;
the proposed Commission was to act in a consultative capacity on
questions of welfare of the peoples in the area and social and
economic development."
- ^
Secretariat of the Pacific Community. "Marine Resources Division" (in en-US, fra).
Secretariat of the Pacific Community web site. Secretariat
of the Pacific Community. http://www.spc.int/mrd. Retrieved
2008-08-11.
- ^
UNESCO (27 July 1998). "RELATIONS WITH THE PACIFIC
COMMUNITY AND DRAFT AGREEMENT" (in en-GB). United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0011/001129/112928e.pdf#page=2. Retrieved
2008-08-12.
Though it refers
to organizing the 2000 New Caledonia Festival of Pacific Arts and
is dated, page two documents SPC involvement with Festival of
Pacific Arts and other cultural initiatives.
External
links
| Secretariat of the
Pacific Community |
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