词条 | Cabinet of Vanuatu | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
The Cabinet of Vanuatu (formally the Council of Ministers of Vanuatu) is the cabinet (executive branch) of the government of the Republic of Vanuatu. The Constitution of Vanuatu (Art. 39(1)) specifies that "[t]he executive power of the people of the Republic of Vanuatu is vested in the Prime Minister and Council of Ministers". The number of Ministers must not "exceed a quarter of the number of members of Parliament" (Art. 40(2)). The Prime Minister, who is directly elected by Parliament, appoints other Ministers from among the members of Parliament (Art. 42(1)). The Council is "collectively responsible to Parliament" (Art. 43(1)).[1]{{Politics of Vanuatu}}{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2012}} Current cabinet (2018–present)Follow the general election on 22 January 2016, Charlot Salwai was chosen by Parliament to form a government on 11 February. This initial Salwai Cabinet [2] was reshuffled on November 12, 2018 when the Honorable Prime Minister Charlot Salwai appointed three new State Ministers; replacing the previous Ministers responsible for MIPU, MoAFFLB and MoJ. Removal Orders for these offices were signed by Acting Prime Minister Bob Loughman on November 08, 2018, as per the powers conferred on him by subarticle 42(3) of the Constitution. This reshuffle resulted in the current Cabinet:
Previous cabinets (2008–16)Natapei Cabinet, 2008–10This Cabinet resulted initially from the September 2008 general election.[3] The following month, the Council was reshuffled to offer positions to the Union of Moderate Parties (UMP), which joined the ruling coalition.[4] In June 2009, the election to Parliament of Bakoa Kaltongga (the Minister for Foreign Affairs) was invalidated by the Supreme Court, leading to his dismissal from the Council of Ministers. On that occasion, Prime Minister Edward Natapei reshuffled his Cabinet again.[5][6] In December 2009, a new reshuffle[7] produced the following Cabinet:[8][9]
Kilman Cabinet, 2010–11On 2 December 2010, Edward Natapei's government was ousted in a vote of no confidence, and Parliament elected Sato Kilman to replace him.[10] Kilman's initial appointments to his Cabinet are given below.[11][12] A few days later, a reshuffle took place when members of the Union of Moderate Parties accepted positions in Cabinet in exchange for withdrawing their support from an immediate motion of no confidence in the new government. Charlot Salwai, vice-President of the UMP, replaced Yoan Simon as Minister for Education; and Serge Vohor, President of the UMP, replaced Harry Iauko (a dissident member of the Vanua'aku Pati[13]) as Minister for Infrastructure and Public Utilities. Simon became Minister for Justice, replacing Alfred Carlot, who lost his seat in Cabinet, while Iauko became Minister for Lands and Natural Resources, replacing Paul Telukluk (the only Namangi Aute MP), who was also removed from Cabinet.[14] On 10 February 2011, Vohor and Salwai both resigned, along with Minister for Agriculture Marcellino Pipite, of the Republican Party; all three wished to protest over their respective parties having fewer seats in Cabinet then they had asked for. (The Republican Party had lost one when Carlot was removed in the reshuffle.) Following Vohor and Salwai's resignation from the government, the UMP announced it was joining the opposition once again, supporting Edward Natapei in his bid to reclaim the premiership by ousting Kilman in a new motion of "no confidence".[15] On 18 February, there was another reshuffle, to consolidate the government's majority prior to an expected vote on a motion of confidence in Parliament. Backbencher Esmon Sae was appointed Minister for ni-Vanuatu business, replacing Ralph Regenvanu, who became instead Minister for Lands. Backbencher James Wango was appointed Minister for Agriculture, while Marcellino Pipite, who had rejoined the government, was appointed Minister for Education.[16] On 10 March, Kilman sacked Justice Minister Yoan Simon, who had "reportedly backed the opposition's plans for a motion of no confidence". To shore up the coalition, the Republican Party was invited to join the government once more. The Republican Party demanded the Lands Ministry, which Kilman consequently offered to Alfred Carlot. This meant reshuffling Lands Minister Ralph Regenvanu to the Ministry of Justice and Social Affairs.[17][18][19]
Vohor Cabinet, April–May 2011On 24 April 2011 (Easter Sunday), Parliament ousted Prime Minister Sato Kilman by twenty-six votes to twenty-five in a motion of no confidence. The Opposition had not formally proposed a candidate to replace him, and Parliament elected Serge Vohor (Union of Moderate Parties) as new Prime Minister. It was Vohor's fourth accession to the premiership.[20] He quickly named his new Cabinet (detailed below). Other than Vohor himself, it included only one minister from the Union of Moderate Parties (Charlot Salwai, who was given the Education portfolio), whereas the Vanua'aku Pati received four ministries. Eta Rory, the only woman in Parliament, was appointed Minister for Agriculture.[21][22] However, Serge Vohor's election as Prime Minister, and therefore both his term in office and the tenure of his Cabinet, was voided by the Court of Appeal on 13 May. The Court deemed that his election was unconstitutional as he had only received votes from one-half of the members of Parliament (26 out of 52), rather than by an absolute majority.[23]
Kilman Cabinet, May–June 2011Following the voiding of Serge Vohor's brief premiership by the Court of Appeal on 13 May, the premiership reverted to its previous holder: Sato Kilman. Ralph Regenvanu stated that the ousted Kilman Cabinet was thereby fully restored: "Sato and his ministers remain the cabinet of Vanuatu and have always been. [...] [W]e have now taken back our offices."[23] Kilman's restored government, however, was supported only by twenty-four Members of Parliament, while Vohor was believed to have the support of twenty-seven, leaving Kilman's coalition in a precarious position.[24] Over the following days, the government's side was somewhat strengthened as two members of Parliament defected from the Opposition, and were given Cabinet portfolios. Stephen Kalsakau (of Vohor's Union of Moderate Parties) switched sides a day after the Kilman government was restored, and was appointed Minister for Lands. On 17 May, Willie Reuben Abel joined the government as Minister for Health, replacing Don Ken, who was reshuffled to the ministry of ni-Vanuatu affairs.[25][26] Willie Reuben Abel was a member of the Vanua'aku Pati, but did not recognise the party's leadership, choosing instead to follow dissident leader Harry Iauko.[27] This 17 May Cabinet lasted until the Kilman premiership was voided the following month. On 20 May, the government weathered a motion of no confidence, emerging with the support of 27 MPs—a majority of one. Kilman noted the potential for more instability if floor-crossing were to occur, adding that in that case, "we cannot have instability for the next twelve months, [so] it w[ould] be in the interest of the country to go back to elections, as soon as possible".[28] Kilman's term was also voided by a ruling from Chief Justice Vincent Lunabek on 16 June, finding that Kilman's election in December 2010 had not been in conformity with the requirements for a secret parliamentary ballot set out in Article 41 of the Constitution. Natapei was restored with instructions from the court to convene Parliament for the election of a Prime Minister.[29][30]
Natapei Interim Cabinet, June 2011With Sato Kilman's premiership having been declared null and void on 16 June 2011, Vanuatu briefly had an interim Prime Minister, Edward Natapei, tasked simply with convening Parliament for the election of a new Prime Minister.[29][30] Radio Australia noted that Natapei's "former ministers have become interim ministers until a new prime minister is elected".[31] Ironically, this included Sato Kilman as Deputy Prime Minister. See "Natapei Cabinet (2008-2010)", above. During his interim, Natapei notably ordered all those who had served as ministers under Kilman to refund their salaries, on the grounds that they had not lawfully held office.[32] On 20 June, Natapei reshuffled this caretaker Cabinet, producing the following:[33]
Kilman Cabinets, 2011–13On 26 June 2011, Sato Kilman was elected Prime Minister by Parliament, with twenty-nine votes to Serge Vohor's twenty-three, thus beginning his first lawfully recognised term as Prime Minister. He reinstated his previous Cabinet.[34] Four days later, Minister for Infrastructure Harry Iauko was convicted of aiding and abetting damage to property and aiding and abetting intentional assault, for an assault carried out on Marc Neil-Jones, publisher of the Vanuatu Daily Post. Sentenced to a fine, Iauko retained his Cabinet portfolios.[35] On 16 January 2012, Kilman sacked his Minister for Justice and Social Affairs, Ralph Regenvanu, accusing him of disloyalty. Regenvanu said he had not been given a specific reason for his dismissal, but that it might have been due to his voting in Parliament against the government's decision for Vanuatu to join the World Trade Organization.[36] Kilman appointed Charlot Salwai (UMP) in his place.[37] In February 2012, the Union of Moderate Parties expelled Steven Kalsakau and Charlot Salwai (along with backbencher Raphael Worwor) from the party for having joined Kilman's government in defiance of the party's position. They now sit as independent members.[38] On 20 March, Kilman sacked Health Minister Willie Reuben Abel, accusing him of under-performance in delivering better health services to the people.[39] On 10 April, however, he was reinstated.[40] On 12 April, Kilman gave Harry Iauko ministerial responsibility for Air Vanuatu as a specific portfolio in addition to his Infrastructure and Public Utilities portfolios. Iauko was a former Chairman of the Board of Management of Air Vanuatu.[41] Following a general election on 30 October 2012, Kilman retained the confidence of the new Parliament to remain Prime Minister, formed a new coalition and appointed a new Cabinet.[42] On 8 December, the Minister for Agriculture (and Vice-President of the People's Progress Party) Dunstan Hilton stepped down and was replaced by Kalfau Moli, Independent MP for Luganville. Kilman acknowledged that his deputy's consented "sacrifice" was intended to shore up the government's parliamentary majority by securing Moli's support.[43] On 10 December, Minister for Infrastructure Harry Iauko died suddenly.[44] Tony Nari, Iauko Group MP for Pentecost, was appointed to replace him on 2 January 2013.[45] On 20 March 2013, Minister for Justice and Social Welfare Thomas Laken and Minister for Ni-Vanuatu Business Marcellino Pipite crossed the floor to join the Opposition, along with six government backbenchers.[46] Lacking a majority with which to govern, Prime Minister Kilman resigned the following day, before a motion of no confidence could be brought against him.[47]
Carcasses Cabinet, 2013–14On 23 March 2013, following Sato Kilman's resignation, Parliament elected Moana Carcasses Kalosil as Prime Minister.[48] Carcasses named the following Cabinet. He abolished the Ministry of Civil Aviation, re-established the pre-existing Ministry of Youth Development and Sports, merged the Ministry of Ni-Vanuatu Business Development and the Ministry of Trade into a new Ministry of Tourism and Commerce, and created a new Ministry of Planning and Climate Change, in line with his being the country's first government leader from the Green Confederation.[49]
In May 2013, Carcasses sacked his Finance Minister, Willie Jimmy, "amid reports the veteran politician was in talks with the opposition about a possible defection", which Jimmy denied. Maki Simelum, who had been Minister for Justice, replaced him, while Silas Yatan (Greens, MP for Tanna) was given the Justice portfolio.[50] On 5 July, Yatan himself was shuffled out of the ministry, a day after having publicly suggested that the death penalty should be reinstated to deter murderers. Carcasses rejected the suggestion, and made Yatan his parliamentary secretary, entrusting the Justice portfolio to Green MP Daniel Toara. The change was reportedly made to "lend balance to the regional distribution of portfolios, to ensure Shefa Province had a portfolio".[51] On 11 July, Trade Minister Marcellino Pipite was sacked, for having reportedly supported a failed motion of no confidence against the government that he was a part of.[52] On 3 August, Daniel Toara was reshuffled to the vacant position of Minister for Trade, Tourism and Commerce, and Jonas James, until then the first deputy Speaker, was appointed Minister for Justice.[53] On 27 December 2013, Interior Minister Patrick Crowby died, after several days in hospital for unspecified causes, at the age of 55.[54] On 20 February 2014, backbencher Christophe Emelee (MP for Torba; head of the Vanuatu National Party) was sworn in to replace him.[55] On 26 February, following the defection of government MPs to the Opposition (including Justice Minister Jonas James[56]), Carcasses reshuffled his Cabinet to offer positions to Opposition members. Four Opposition MPs joined his government, in exchange for Cabinet positions. Stephen Kalsakau (Reunification of Moderate Parties) was appointed Minister of Climate Change. Paul Telukluk (Reunification of Moderate Parties) became Minister for Internal Affairs, replacing Christophe Emelee, who was reshuffled to the position of Minister for Justice. Daniel Toara was dismissed from his position as Minister for Trade, to make way for Willie Jimmy (Liberal Party). Tony Wright (Union of Moderate Parties), who had been Minister for Youth and Sports before defecting to the Opposition, regained his position upon re-defecting to the government.[57] Thus, this was Carcasses' final Cabinet line-up before the fall of his government on 15 May 2014:
Natuman Cabinet, 2014–15On 15 May 2014, several parties (including the Vanua'aku Pati and the Land and Justice Party) defected from the Carcasses coalition, and joined the Opposition to bring down the government through a motion of no confidence. Parliament then elected Joe Natuman as Prime Minister, with forty votes out of fifty-two. He named the following Cabinet:[58]
In early May 2015, Natuman dismissed Youth and Sports minister Don Ken from the Cabinet, and replaced him with John Lum, Nagriamel MP for Espiritu Santo. This was intended to strengthen Nagriamel's support for the government.[59] In early June 2015, Natuman sacked Foreign Affairs Minister Sato Kilman, for having said publicly that he could support a motion of no confidence against the government.[60] He subsequently announced that he had also removed Justice Minister Alfred Carlot, appointing Opposition MP Hosea Nevu (Iauko Group, MP for Santo Rural) in his place. Opposition MP Kalvau Moli (Independent MP for Luganville) was appointed as Foreign Affairs Minister. The two newly appointed ministers duly withdrew their names from the Opposition's intended motion of no confidence against the government.[61][62] Nonetheless, the government fell to a motion of no confidence on 11 June. Kilman Cabinet, 2015–16On 11 June 2015, three government MPs crossed the floor, enabling the Opposition to oust Joe Natuman's government through a motion of no confidence. Natuman's previously sacked Foreign Affairs Minister Sato Kilman, who had been Prime Minister from 2011 to 2013, was chosen by Parliament to serve as Prime Minister again. He appointed the following Cabinet.[63]
In August 2015, legal proceedings were initiated against 18 government MPs accused of corruption—specifically, of having accepted bribes. Among them were five government ministers, including Deputy Prime Minister Moana Carcasses. Finance Minister Willie Jimmy pleaded guilty when brought to court on 2 September ; the other accused all pleaded not guilty.[64] On 9 October, 14 government MPs were convicted of bribery; among them, Deputy Prime Minister Moana Carcasses Kalosil, Foreign Affairs Minister Serge Vohor, Lands Minister Paul Telukluk, Public Utilities Minister Tony Nari, Climate Change Minister Thomas Laken, and parliamentary Speaker Marcellino Pipite. Pipite, as Acting President (President Baldwin Lonsdale being out of the country at the time) swiftly issued a full pardon for himself and his colleagues (with the exception of Willie Jimmy).[65] While President Lonsdale promised to address the situation, and Prime Minister Kilman remained silent several days after the pardons, Education Minister Alfred Carlot defected to the Opposition along with backbenchers Don Ken and Isaac Hamariliu, to support a motion of no confidence against Kilman's government.[66] On 16 October, Lonsdale revoked the pardons, citing their unconstitutionality (pardons may only apply to a sentence, not to a conviction), and Pipite's breach of the leadership code of good conduct.[67] Ministers Telukluk, Nari, and Laken were promptly arrested on a charge of conspiracy to defeat the course of justice, for having pushed Pipite to issue the pardons. Upon their arrest, they were removed from government by Kilman. Pipite himself was also arrested on that charge, along with government backbenchers Silas Yatan, Tony Wright, John Amos, Arnold Prasad, Sebastian Harry, Jean-Yves Chabot and Jonas James.[68] The Kilman government nonetheless challenged in court the legality of Lonsdale's revocation of the pardons.[69] The court dismissed the challenge, confirming that Pipite's pardons had been invalid (due largely to a conflict of interest), and that Lonsdale had acted legally in revoking them.[70] On 22 October, the Supreme Court sentenced Carcasses to four years in gaol, and Vohor, Pipite and the other convicted MPs to three years. Jimmy received a 20-month suspended sentence.[71] Don Ken, returning to the government benches after having briefly defected to the Opposition, was sworn in as the new Minister for Public Infrastructure and Public Utilities, as Sato Kilman resisted calls to resign.[72] On 11 November, Dunstan Hilton was reshuffled to the position of Minister for Trade, and was replaced as Minister for Justice by Robert Bohn, brought in from the back benches. Christopher Emelee, the Minister for Agriculture, was appointed Deputy Prime Minister.[73] Havo Molisale (Nagriamel) replaced Serge Vohor as Minister for Foreign Affairs.[74] Salwai Cabinet, 2016–18Follow the general election on 22 January 2016, Charlot Salwai was chosen by Parliament to form a government on 11 February. He announced the following Cabinet.[2]
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|work=Radio New Zealand International |accessdate=22 September 2011}} 30. ^1 [https://web.archive.org/web/20110628043710/http://www.governmentofvanuatu.gov.vu/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=94&Itemid=65 "Supreme Declared Natapei, Acting Prime Minister "], government of Vanuatu, 16 June 2011 31. ^"Natapei interim PM in Vanuatu government change", Radio Australia, 16 June 2011 32. ^"Prime Minister orders Kilman "ministers" to refund salaries", Vanuatu Daily Post, 27 June 2011 33. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.rnzi.com/pages/news.php?op=read&id=61294 |title=Vanuatu interim leader appoints cabinet ministers ahead of prime ministerial vote Thursday |date=20 June 2011 |work=Radio New Zealand International |accessdate=22 September 2011}} 34. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.rnzi.com/pages/news.php?op=read&id=61430 |title=Vanuatu's new PM reinstates cabinet |date=27 June 2011 |work=Radio New Zealand International |accessdate=22 September 2011}} 35. ^"Iauko pleads guilty, fined Vt15,000 by court"{{dead link|date=July 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}, Vanuatu Daily Post, 1 July 2011 36. ^"PM terminates minister" {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120330073111/http://www.dailypost.vu/content/todays-dailypost-frontpage-tuesday-17-january-2012 |date=30 March 2012 }}, Vanuatu Daily Post, 17 January 2012 37. ^"Vanuatu: Salwai given sacked Regenvanu's justice portfolio", Radio New Zealand International, 18 January 2012 38. ^"UMP Congress expel their rebels" {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120326041304/http://www.dailypost.vu/content/ump-congress-expel-their-rebels |date=26 March 2012 }}, Vanuatu Daily Post, 1 March 2012 39. ^"Vanuatu Health Minister dumped from Cabinet", Radio New Zealand International, 20 March 2012 40. ^"Vanuatu health minister Abel reinstated", Radio New Zealand International, 11 April 2012 41. ^"PM reallocates Air Van portfolio to Iauko" 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prime minister", Radio New Zealand International, 23 March 2013 49. ^"Nation's interest first: Carcasses" {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130329020142/http://www.dailypost.vu/content/nations-interest-first-carcasses |date=29 March 2013 }}, Vanuatu Daily Post, 26 mars 2013 50. ^"Sacked Vanuatu Finance Minister feels betrayed by PM", Radio New Zealand International, 10 May 2013 51. ^"Vanuatu's PM replaces Justice Minister", Radio New Zealand International, 5 July 2013 52. ^"Vanuatu trade minister sacked for siding with opposition", Radio New Zealand International, 17 July 2013 53. ^"Vanuatu Justice Minister changes again while PM is away", Radio New Zealand International, 4 August 2013 54. ^"Décès à Nouméa d’une figure francophone de la politique vanuatuane", Tahiti Infos, 27 December 2013 55. ^"Emelee is new Internal Affairs Minister", Vanuatu Daily Post, 20 February 2014 56. ^"MP tells supporters not to worry", Vanuatu Daily Post, 24 February 2014 57. ^"Chaos reigns in Vanuatu politics. Again", Radio Australia, 26 February 2014 58. ^"Natuman names cabinet line-up" {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140517152203/http://islandsbusiness.com/news/vanuatu/5385/natuman-names-cabinet-line-up/ |date=17 May 2014 }}, Vanuatu Digest, 16 May 2014 59. ^"Vanuatu PM shores support with reshuffle", Radio New Zealand International, 6 May 2015 60. ^"Vanuatu foreign minister Kilman sacked", Radio New Zealand International, 4 June 2015 61. ^"Vanuatu PM sacks ministers to stabilise coalition", Radio New Zealand, 5 June 2015 62. ^"Two new Vanuatu ministers pull out of motion", Radio New Zealand, 5 June 2015 63. ^"Vanuatu announces new cabinet after new prime minister Sato Kilman is elected", Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 12 June 2015 64. ^"Vanuatu finance minister Willie Jimmy pleads guilty to charges of bribery in trial implicating 18 MPs", Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 3 September 2015 65. ^"Vanuatu's acting president uses interim executive powers to pardon himself and 13 others convicted of bribery", Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 11 October 2015 66. ^"Carlot, Ken and Hamariliu defect in Vanuatu", Radio New Zealand, 16 October 2015 67. ^[https://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/oct/16/vanuatu-president-revokes-pardons-passed-by-maverick-speaker "Vanuatu president revokes pardons passed by maverick speaker"], The Guardian, 16 October 2015 68. ^"Vanuatu ministers removed from cabinet following arrests", Radio New Zealand, 16 October 2015 69. ^"Legality of Vanuatu pardons tested", Radio New Zealand, 20 October 2015 70. ^"Vanuatu court rules against speaker Pipite for pardoning himself while acting as president", Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 21 October 2015 71. ^[https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-34600561 "Vanuatu court sentences 14 MPs to jail for corruption"], BBC News, 22 October 2015 72. ^"Calls for Vanuatu PM to step down in wake of MPs' jailing", Radio New Zealand, 23 October 2015 73. ^"Christopher Emelee is new Vanuatu deputy PM", Radio New Zealand, 11 November 2015 74. ^"New Vanuatu deputy speaker dies", Radio New Zealand, 24 February 2016 3 : Government of Vanuatu|Government ministers of Vanuatu|National cabinets |
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