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Oscar Temaru

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Oscar Temaru
President of French Polynesia
Assumed office
12 February, 2009
Preceded byGaston Tong Sang
President of French Polynesia
In office
September 13, 2007 – February 23, 2008
Preceded byGaston Tong Sang
Succeeded byGaston Flosse
President of French Polynesia
In office
March 3, 2005 – December 26, 2006
Preceded byGaston Flosse
Succeeded byGaston Tong Sang
President of French Polynesia
In office
June 14, 2004 – October 23, 2004
Preceded byGaston Flosse
Succeeded byGaston Flosse
Personal details
BornNovember 1, 1944
Faa'a, Tahiti, French Polynesia
Political partyTavini Huiraatira

Oscar Manutahi Temaru (born November 1, 1944, at Faa'a on the island of Tahiti) is French Polynesian politician. He has been President of French Polynesia (président de la Polynésie française), a French dependency with broad powers of self-rule, on three occasions: in 2004, from 2005 to 2006, and from 2007 to 2008.

He first served as the President of French Polynesia (président de la Polynésie française) from June 15, 2004 until his Government lost a no-confidence motion on October 8, 2004. He was the caretaker President for two weeks after that, but was forced to give up the presidency until March 2005, when he was reelected after parliamentary by-elections.

He is leader of the five party coalition Union For Democracy, which includes his pro-independence party Tavini Huiraatira (People's Servant Party) and other smaller parties that support autonomy for French Polynesia rather than independence. Those parties unexpectedly defeated supporters of long-time leader Gaston Flosse in the May 2004 parliamentary elections.

On October 8, 2004, his government was censured and ousted by the Parliament, the Assembly of French Polynesia (Assemblée de la Polynésie française) by a vote of 29 to 28. There were calls for the French Government to step in and hold new elections, and allegations by the French Socialist Party that his Government was subject to acts of "methodical destabilisation" on the part of the French government. Gaston Flosse was re-elected President by the Assembly in a simple majority vote on October 22. The President of the Assembly, Antony Géros, cast doubt on the legitimacy of this election saying the vote for President (président de la Polynésie française) should occur on October 25 (see French Polynesia political crisis 2004). As a compromise, by-elections were set for February 13, 2005 for certain seats, which Temaru's coalition won. He was re-elected president (président de la Polynésie française) on March 3 2005.

Temaru lost a vote of no confidence on 13 December 2006, after months of protests against the high cost of living in French Polynesia. Temaru had lost control of parliament due to defections. Gaston Tong Sang won the presidential election on December 26. [1]

Temaru ran for parliament in the 2007 elections, but failed to win a seat.

On September 14, 2007, Temaru was elected as President of French Polynesia for the third time in three years (with 27 of 44 votes). He replaced Tong Sang, who lost a no-confidence vote on August 31.[1]

On 12 February 2009, he was elected president yet again.[2]

Background

Oscar Temaru was educated in Faa'a and Papeete, where he received a thorough religious education. He was born to a Tahitian father and a Cook Island Maori mother[3], but he has admitted to also have Chinese ancestry.[4][5]

An early political influence was Jean-Marie Tjibaou, philosopher and former leader of the Kanak Socialist National Liberation Front (FLNKS), who was assassinated in New Caledonia in 1989.

Temaru entered the French Navy for three years in 1961 and participated in the Algerian War of Independence. On his return to French Polynesia, he sat the exam to become a customs officer in Tahiti. In 1983, he retired from this position.

Oscar Temaru has been a vocal campaigner against nuclear testing by France at Moruroa and Fangataufa Atolls since the 1970s. His main power base has been in the poor suburb of Faa'a on the outskirts of the capital Papeete.

In 1977, Oscar Temaru formed his political party, the Front for the Liberation of Polynesia (FLP). The party changed its name in 1983 to Tavini Huiraatira (People's Servant Party). The same year he was elected mayor of Faa'a, which position he continues to hold (as of 2004).

In 1986, Tavini Huiraatira obtained two seats in the territorial assembly, four seats in 1991, eleven in 1996, and thirteen in 2001. In 2004 the Union for Democracy Coalition won 27 of the 57 seats.

Oscar Temaru's coalition government program in 2004 included the gradual increase of the minimum wage to 150.000 Fcfp, work days that don’t start before 9am, an improvement of social services, political decentralisation, educational reform, and a revision of the new autonomy statute after French Polynesia was declared a French Overseas Country (pays d'outre-mer) in March 2004.

He pledged there would be no immediate moves to independence.

When asked by an Australian Broadcasting Corporation reporter "Most people call this place French Polynesia. What do you call it?" he replied "This is French-occupied Polynesia. That is the truth. This country has been occupied."

Racist comments controversy

The pro-independence movements in French Polynesia have long pointed the finger at the European community. In 2007 Oscar Temaru was found guilty of "racial discrimination" by the criminal court of Papeete for having referred to the Europeans living in French Polynesia as "trash", "waste".[6] Temaru has appealed his conviction for racial discrimination.[7]

More recently, the Chinese community which controls many businesses in French Polynesia has been targeted in verbal attacks by the newly allied Gaston Flosse and Oscar Temaru in their political fight against Gaston Tong Sang, whose Chinese origins they emphasize in contrast with their Polynesian origins, despite the fact that they both have mixed origins (European and Polynesian for Flosse; Polynesian and Chinese for Temaru).[8]

2007-2008 Presidential Cabinet

Oscar Temaru announced his new presidential cabinet on September 19, 2007, shortly after his election as President of French Polynesia.[9] The sixteen cabinet members include three women.

  • Vice-President; Minister of Finance, Housing, Lands, Outer Island Development, in charge of the reform of French Polynesia's Statute and of the relations with the Legislative Assembly and the Economic Social and Cultural Council, government spokesman: Antony Géros
  • Minister for public utilities, land and maritime transport: James Salmon
  • Minister for economy, labor, employment and vocational training, Minister for public service: Pierre Frébault
  • Minister for education, higher education and research: Jean-Marius Raapoto
  • Minister of health, in charge of prevention, food security and traditional medicine: Charles Tetaria
  • Minister for agriculture, forestry and livestock: Léon Lichtlé
  • Minister for sea, fisheries and aquaculture: Keitapu Maamaatuaiahutapu
  • Minister for inter-island maritime and air transports: Dauphin Domingo
  • Minister for tourism and air transports: Marc Collins
  • Minister for development and environment: Georges Handerson
  • Minister for small and medium enterprises, Minister for industry: Gilles Tefaatau
  • Minister for posts and telecommunications, culture: Jacqui Drollet
  • Minister for the pearl farming sector: Michel Yip
  • Minister for solidarity, family affairs and the struggle against social exclusion: Patricia Jennings
  • Minister for youth and sports: Tauhiti Nena
  • Minister for women's affairs, arts and crafts: Valentina Cross
Template:Incumbent succession box
Political offices
Preceded by President of French Polynesia
2004
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of French Polynesia
2005 – 2006
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of French Polynesia
2007 – 2008
Succeeded by

See also

References

  1. ^ BBC NEWS, French Polynesia gets new leader
  2. ^ http://www.radioaustralianews.net.au/stories/200902/2489892.htm?desktop
  3. ^ Portrait du Président Oscar Manutahi TEMARU
  4. ^ Logiques « autonomiste » et « indépendantiste » en Polynésie française
  5. ^ Ron Crocombe. Asia in the Pacific Islands. University of the South Pacific, Institute of Pacific Studies. p. 103. ISBN 9820203880.
  6. ^ French Polynesia: Former president fined over racial slur
  7. ^ French Polynesia’s Temaru appeals racism ruling
  8. ^ Politique : Toujours pas de gouvernement
  9. ^ "President Temaru Announces New Cabinet". Pacific Magazine. 2007-09-19. Retrieved 2007-09-27.