Times of Tonga


The Times of Tonga also known as Taimi o Tonga is published by the Taimi Media Network Ltd from Nuku'alofa, Tonga. The Times is the online version of Taimi 'o Tonga, which started publication in April 1989. Taimi is published twice a week, while Times is updated daily and is edited by longtime free-lance writer Sione A. Mokofisi. The newspaper's owner and publisher is Kalafi Moala, a Tongan-American citizen who in the early 1990s, with the help of fellow editor Faka'osi Maama, established one of the most popular and controversial Polynesian media prints in Tonga and New Zealand. Times editor Sione A. Mokofisi served as U.S. correspondent on the Tongan Chronicle when privatized by the Tongan government and sold to Mr. Moala's Taimi Media Network, Ltd.
Times of Tonga editor Sione A. Mokofisi is also a Tongan-American writer who is a doctoral candidate for doctor of business administration at the University of Phoenix. He has earned an MBA degree from the same university, as well as a BS degree from Brigham Young University-Hawaii and a AA degree from Mesa Community College. He is a graduate of Liahona High School in Tonga. Editor Sione A. Mokofisi's writing has been published in various publications in the American and Tongan media. His doctoral dissertation is currently under research under the title Why Should Tonga Develop a Sustainable Remittance Industry?
Taimi 'o Tonga has been a frequent target of the Tongan government. In 1996 Moala and editor Filokalafi Akau’ola were imprisoned for 30 days for contempt of parliament after reporting on a motion in the Legislative Assembly which criticised a government minister. Their imprisonment was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, and they were later awarded US$26,000 in compensation.
In 2002 editor Mateni Tapueluelu was charged with sedition and forgery over the publication of a letter claiming king Taufa'ahau Tupou IV had a secret fortune.
In 2003 the newspaper was banned by the Tongan government for campaigning to overthrow the constitution. The ban was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, but the government repeatedly ignored the ruling and reinstated the ban. The ban was eventually lifted in June 2003. The failure of the ban caused the government to amend the constitution to limit judicial review of royal decisions.
In 2004, the newspaper was banned under a new Media Operators Act, which prohibited foreign owned publications. The law was later overturned by the Supreme Court, and the Times was issued with a media licence.
In 2005 Tonga's Crown Prince Tupoutoʻa ʻUlukalala claimed that the newspaper's legal problems were due to a personal vendetta by then Police Minister Clive Edwards.