Roniti Teiwaki
After the 1974 general election, he became member of the Cabinet of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands of Naboua Ratieta as Minister of Education, Training and Culture, then confirmed from March 1978 as Minister for Natural Resource Development in Ieremia Tabai’s cabinet of the Gilbert Islands, after being candidate to 1978 Gilbertese Chief Minister election. He temporarily retired from politics in 1982 for working at the University of South Pacific. He was the opposition candidate to Teatao Teannaki, his brother-in-law, for 1991 Kiribati presidential election.[1] He was also an unsuccessful candidate at the 1994 Kiribati presidential election.
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Roniti Teiwaki is an I-Kiribati politician.
Reference
- Trease, Howard Van (August 8, 1993). "Atoll Politics: The Republic of Kiribati". editorips@usp.ac.fj – via Google Books.
- Teiwaki, R. (1977). The constitutional convention and Gilbertese culture. Pacific Perspectives, 6(2), 6-8.
- Teiwaki, R. (1988). Kiribati: Nation of water. In R. Crocombe & L. Mason (Eds.), Micronesian politics (pp. 1-37). Suva, Fiji: Institute of Pacific Studies, University of the South Pacific.
gollark: I do not think anyone is claiming that they are except probably C4 sometimes.
gollark: I think the current figure is that climate change is something like 95% accepted among climate scientists.
gollark: Yes, incorrect beliefs on some things are probably correlated with incorrectness on others.
gollark: Over here, something like half of students go to university at 18?
gollark: Whether some "college educated" people believe anything is basically irrelevant to whether it's true, though.
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