Kieren Keke

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Kieren Aedogan Keke (born 1971 in Yaren[citation needed]) is a Nauruan politician and medical doctor. He is currently the Minister of Foreign Affairs and has previously been speaker of the island's parliament.

Contents

[edit] Background

He is currently a leading figure of the Naoero Amo party and is one of the few medical professionals on the island. (Others are Dr. Mark Kun, Dr. Ludwig Keke—Kieren's father, a dentist, Dr. Godfrey Waidabu, and Dr. Kiki Thoma.)

In 2004 he was not allowed to take his parliamentary seat. The speaker of Parliament, Russell Kun claimed that Keke is not a Nauruan citizen. Keke was also arrested along with David Adeang and Fabian Ribauw in April 2004 and charged with sedition after a protest at Nauru's airport, but the charges were soon dropped. The charges were dropped following a resolution of Parliament moved by Keke and others charged that the charges be dropped. The DPP was not consulted by the Parliament and the motion was in contravention of the Constitution and the Rule of Law.[citation needed] Keke was reelected to Parliament in October 2004, and retained his post as health minister.

Keke resigned from the government, along with Frederick Pitcher and Roland Kun, in late 2007 over allegations of misconduct on the part of Adeang and Scotty's unwillingness to act against Adeang. He led the opposition to Scotty in a no-confidence motion on November 13, 2007; although a majority of those voting supported the motion (eight in favor, seven opposed), it fell short of the necessary nine votes.[1]

[edit] Stephen Administration

[edit] 2007

After Scotty was ousted in another vote on December 19 and Marcus Stephen (a cousin of Kieren Keke) was elected President, Keke was named Minister of Foreign Affairs, Telecommunications, and Transport.[2][3]

Keke had previously been regarded as a reformist, both through his participation in the Administration of Ludwig Scotty, and because of the reformist discourse of the Nauru First Party, of which Keke is a prominent member. The outgoing Scotty Administration, which had won a landslide election victory only weeks before Keke and others resigned and participated in successive votes of no confidence, enjoyed wide popular support, and was broadly seen in the years 2004-2007 as offering a stable contrast to a previous period of very frequent use of the vote of no confidence, when governments would fall over issues which sometimes reflected relations between personalities rather than the exigencies of the wider national interest. Others would argue that allegations against former minister David Adeang, around which the November and December 2007 no convidence votes against President Ludwig Scotty were centred, consitituted an issue important enough to justify the use of such a Parliamentary device, with its far-reaching consequences.

[edit] 2008

In 2008, Keke's Foreign Affairs department was preparing for the June 2008 meeting of the International Whaling Commission in Santiago, Chile, owing to Nauru's interest in whaling issues as a Pacific maritime nation and in the related issue of tuna fishing stocks, given the country's tuna fishing activities. The change of stance on whaling adopted by the government of Australia was likely to cause resonances for Keke's Department.

In February 2008 Keke announced that the Nauruan Government was studying the possibility of developing service and maintenance facilities for fishing vessels from countries in the region [4].

In March 2008, the Speaker of the Parliament of Nauru, David Adeang, attempted to have Keke expelled from Parliament, by summoning a Parliamentary session, allegedly without informing members of the government, which resulted in the passing of a law forbidding Members of Parliament to hold dual citizenship. President Stephen argued that the law was unconstitutional; Adeang said it was not.[5] On March 28, Adeang ordered Keke and another minister, Frederick Pitcher, to vacate their seats in Parliament, since they both hold dual Nauruan and Australian citizenship.[6] The two ministers refused to do so, and Adeang suspended the sitting.[7]

In April 2008 Keke was reelected to the Parliament of Nauru and was retained as a leading member of the Administration of President Marcus Stephen [8].

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Rebel faction fails to oust Nauru govt", AAP (Sydney Morning Herald), November 14, 2007.
  2. ^ "Six new ministers named in Nauru cabinet line up", Pacnews (Marianas Variety), December 21, 2007.
  3. ^ "Nauru's new cabinet has been named", ABC Radio Australia, December 20, 2007.
  4. ^ "Nauru eyes becoming a fishing trawler service centre", Radio New Zealand International, February 29, 2008
  5. ^ "Nauru government rejects citizenship ruling", Radio New Zealand International, March 26, 2008
  6. ^ "Nauru braces for more political uncertainty", ABC Radio Australia, March 31, 2008
  7. ^ "Nauru Speaker fails to stop two ministers from entering Parliament", Radio New Zealand International, March 29, 2008
  8. ^ 'Nauru president broadens support following snap election', Radio New Zealand International, April 29, 2008

[edit] Link

(Photo:)

Kieren Keke and other Nauru First Party members profiled in November 1, 2001 Pacific Magazine

Kieren Keke cited in media justifying his part in the demise of President Ludwig Scotty's Administration

Australia's stance in 2008 on whaling: