| Flag of Niue |
European involvement in Niue began in 1774 with Captain James Cook's sighting (landing was refused) of what he named "Savage Island". Legend has it that Cook so named the island because the natives that "greeted" him were painted in what appeared to Cook and his crew to be blood.
The next major arrival was the London Missionary Society in 1846. Niue was briefly a protectorate, the UK's involvement being passed on in 1901 when New Zealand annexed the island. Independence in the form of self-government was granted by the New Zealand parliament in the 1974 constitution.
In January of 2004, Niue was hit by the fierce tropical storm Cyclone Heta which killed two people and caused extensive damage to the entire island.
Niue has licensed the .nu top-level domain on the internet to a private company, but the company and the government of Niue now dispute the amount and type of compensation that Niue receives from the licensor.
The Niue Constitution Act 1974 (NZ) vests executive authority in Her Majesty the Queen in Right of New Zealand and the Governor-General of New Zealand. The constitution specifies that in everyday practice, it is exercised by a Cabinet of the Premier of Niue and three other ministers. The premier and ministers must be members of the Niue Assembly, the nation's legislative assembly.
The assembly consists of twenty democratically elected members, fourteen by the electors of village constituencies. The remaining six are elected the same way, except several constituencies are combined for each seat. Electors must be New Zealand citizens, resident for at least three months, and candidates must have been electors, resident for twelve months. The speaker is elected from among the members.
Niue is a 260 km² island located in the southern Pacific Ocean, east of Tonga. The geographic cordinates of Niue are .
There are three geographically outlying coral reefs within the territorial waters, that do not have any land area:
Niue is one of the world's largest coral islands. The terrain of Niue consists of steep limestone cliffs along the coast with a central plateau rising to about 60 metres above sea level. A coral reef surrounds the island, with the only major break in the reef being in the central western coast, close to the capital, Alofi. A notable feature of the island is the number of limestone caves found close to the coast.
The island is roughly oval in shape (a diameter of about 18 kilometers), with two large bays indenting the western coast (Alofi Bay in the centre, and Avatele Bay in the south). Between these is the promontory of Halagigie Point. A small peninsula, Tepa Point (or Blowhole Point) is located close to the settlement of Avatele in the southwest. Most of the island's population reside close to the west coast, around the capital and in the northwest.
The island has a tropical climate, with most rainfall occurring between November and April.
However, in August 2005 an Australian mining company Yamarna Goldfields has suggested that Niue might have the world's largest deposit of uranium. It has permission to drill on the island to confirm geological data that suggests the presence of a very large deposit. It will require government permission, however, to convert its prospecting licence to a mining lease.
Foreign aid, principally from New Zealand, has been the island's principal source of income. Tourism generates some revenue but there is very little industry on the island. Remittances from Niuean expatriates generally from New Zealand constitute a significant proportion of Niue's income as well.
Government expenses usually exceed revenue to a substantial degree, with aid from New Zealand subsidising public service payrolls. The government generates some limited income also from the sale of its postage stamps to foreign collectors and domain names, with its top level domain .nu. The Government briefly flirted with the creation of "offshore banking" but under pressure from New Zealand agreed to end its support for schemes designed to minimise tax in countries like New Zealand.
Niue's economy suffered from the devastating tropical cyclone of 2002.
Freely associated states | New Zealand-Pacific relations | Niue | Oceanic dependencies | Polynesia
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