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Fiji PM links climate change to fatal cyclone by Staff Writers Suva, Fiji (AFP) April 3, 2018 Fiji's Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama on Tuesday blamed climate change for a deadly cyclone over the weekend, saying his South Pacific nation had entered a "frightening new era". Cyclone Josie caused severe flooding when it passed Fiji's main island Viti Levu, with Bainimarama confirming Tuesday that the death toll from the storm had risen to five. "Once again, Fijians are mourning the loss of some of our loved ones to an extreme weather event," he told a function in the capital Suva. Bainimarama said climate change meant powerful cyclones were battering Pacific island nations with increasing frequency. "We are now at an almost constant level of threat from these extreme weather events that are becoming more frequent and more severe because of climate change," he said. He added: "As a nation we are starting to build our resilience in response to the frightening new era that is upon us." Fiji took a leading role in global climate talks last November when Bainimarama became president of the UN's COP23 negotiation in Bonn. The Fijian leader said Cyclone Josie underscored the urgency of dealing with climate change. "We need to get the message out loud and clear to the entire world about the absolute need to confront this crisis head on," he said, describing climate change as "a fight for our very survival". Fiji was hit by Cyclone Winston in 2016, which killed 44 people and wiped out one-third of the country's economic production. It escaped the worst of Cyclone Gita in February but areas of neighbouring Tonga and Samoa were devastated.
New Zealand cools on climate refugee plan Wellington (AFP) March 16, 2018 New Zealand says it will not adopt world-first plans to allow climate change refugees without approval from the Pacific island nations the measure is intended to help. Both the ruling Labour Party and its Green coalition partner went into last year's election with a platform of allocating refugee places for islanders displaced by rising seas. The initial plans were modest, about 100 places a year, but regarded as ground-breaking because the UN's refugee covenant does not currently recognise the ... read more
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