2006 in Oceania
Incumbents
American Samoa
- *Governor – Togiola TulafonoAustralia
- * Monarch – Elizabeth II
- * Governor-General – Michael Jeffery
- * Prime Minister – John HowardCook Islands
- * High Commissioner – John Bryan
- * Queen's Representative – Frederick Goodwin
- * Prime Minister – Jim MaruraiEast Timor
- *President - Xanana Gusmão
- *Prime Minister - Marí Alkatiri, José Ramos-Horta Fiji
- * President - Ratu Josefa Iloilo
- * Prime Minister – Laisenia Qarase, Prime Minister of Fiji, Jona Senilagakali French Polynesia
- * High Commissioner - Anne Boquet
- * President of the Government - Oscar Temaru, Gaston Tong Sang Guam
- * Governor - Felix Perez CamachoHawaii
- * Governor - Linda Lingle
- * Senators - Daniel Inouye and Daniel Akaka
- * Representatives - Neil Abercrombie and Ed Case Kiribati
- *President - Anote TongMarshall Islands
- *President - Kessai NoteFederated States of Micronesia
- *President - Joseph UrusemalNauru
- *President - Ludwig ScottyNew Caledonia
- * High Commissioner - Michel Mathieu
- * President of the Government - Marie-Noëlle ThémereauNew Zealand
- * Monarch – Elizabeth II
- * Governor-General - Dame Silvia Cartwright, Anand Satyanand
- * Prime Minister – Helen ClarkNiue
- * Resident Commissioner - Sandra Lee-Vercoe
- * Prime Minister – Young VivianNorfolk Island
- * Administrator - Grant Tambling
- * Chief Minister - Geoff Gardner, David Buffett Northern Mariana Islands
- * Governor - Juan Babauta, Benigno Fitial Palau
- *President - Thomas Remengesau Jr.Papua New Guinea
- * Monarch – Elizabeth II
- * Governor-General - Sir Paulias Matane
- * Prime Minister – Sir Michael SomareBougainville
- * President - Joseph KabuiPitcairn Islands
- * Governor - Richard Fell, George Fergusson
- * Commissioner - Leslie Jacques
- * Mayor - Jay WarrenSamoa
- * O le Ao o le Malo – Malietoa Tanumafili II
- * Prime Minister – Tuilaʻepa Saʻilele MalielegaoiSolomon Islands
- * Monarch – Elizabeth II
- * Governor-General - Sir Nathaniel Waena
- * Prime Minister – Sir Allan Kemakeza, Snyder Rini, Manasseh Sogavare Tokelau
- * Administrator - Neil Walter, David Payton
- * Head of Government - Pio Tuia, Kolouei O'Brien Tonga
- * Monarch – Tāufaʻāhau Tupou IV, George Tupou V
- * Prime Minister – Prince ʻUlukālala Lavaka Ata, Feleti Sevele Tuvalu
- * Monarch – Elizabeth II
- * Governor-General - Filoimea Telito
- * Prime Minister – Maatia Toafa, Apisai Ielemia Vanuatu
- * President - Kalkot Mataskelekele
- * Prime Minister – Ham LiniWallis and Futuna
- * Administrator-Superior - Xavier de Furst
- * President of the Territorial Assembly - Apeleto Likuvalu
Events
February
March
- March 1: Fijian Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase announces that the 2006 Fiji general elections will be held in the second week of May from the 6th to the 13th.
- March 2: The Pitcairn Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal against the 2004 sexual assault trial. Randall Christian's appeal against indecent assault of a girl aged under 13 was upheld, but this doesn't affect his sentence of six years on other charges. The men will now appeal to the Privy Council in London.
- March 2: The United Nations working group on mercenaries asks Fiji and Papua New Guinea for permission to send a team to investigate the presence of former Fijian soldiers in Bougainville.
- March 3: Papua New Guinea Transport and Civil Aviation Minister Don Polye announces an open air policy, which would allow other airlines to compete with Air Niugini on international routes into and from Papua New Guinea. The policy will take effect in 2007.
- March 4: A fire damages the central Papeete power station, resulting in limited power for some areas of Tahiti for a couple of weeks.
- March 8: Fijian President Ratu Josefa Iloilo and Vice-President Ratu Joni Madraiwiwi are re-elected to another five-year term.
- March 9: The Pasifika Festival opens in Auckland New Zealand. The annual festival is the largest Pacific Islands community event. It lasts for a month, and covers cultural, sporting and business events.
- March 14: The Ka Loko Reservoir dam in Kauai, Hawaii bursts, killing one man and leaving six others missing.
- March 17: The US offers Japan the use of its military bases on Guam, after Japan refuses to pay for the relocation of 8000 marines and their families from Okinawa to Guam.
- March 21: Solomon Islands Labour Party leader Joses Tuhanuku alleges Prime Minister Allan Kemakeza is directly implicated in corrupt aid payments by Taiwan to local politicians.
- March 26: RFO television news in New Caledonia was cancelled for two days due to a strike in protest at the sacking of a technician.
- March 26: East Timor's Prime Minister, Mari Alkatiri, calls for calm after former soldiers looted shops and threw stones at opponents in Dili. 591 soldiers were dismissed from the army in the previous week after deserting their posts.
- March 29: A sewer pipe leak at Waikiki in Hawaii is repaired, but several popular beaches were left polluted.
- March 30: Hiro Tefaarere, the French Polynesian minister for small and medium enterprises, resigns due to disagreements with the ruling coalition, and his failure to gain support for two development projects.
- March 30: Feleti Sevele is confirmed as the new Prime Minister of Tonga.
April
Sport
Deaths
- February 9: Ahomee, Tongan noble, 35, heart failure
- February 24: Tūtoatasi Fakafānua, Tongan noble, 44
- July 5: ʻUluvalu, Tongan noble, 55, car accident
- September 10: Tāufaʻāhau Tupou IV, Tongan king, 88, old age