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Tione
Chinula, new advocacy and communications officer for the Human Development
programme
Unified approach to human development.
The recent amalgamation of the Secretariat of the Pacific
Community’s (SPC) Women's and Youth Bureaus, Cultural Programme, and
Community Education and Training Centre into the Human Development
Programme (HDP) sets an interesting new direction, says the
programme’s new Advocacy and Communications Officer.
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Tione Chinula says
that with all the changes afoot, it's an exciting time to come on
board. ‘There’s a sense of renewal. It’s very motivating to be part
of the process. The programme has created a new drive and an
opportunity to tackle gender, youth and cultural issues and
community education more efficiently,’ Tione says.
One of her priorities is to portray this new way forward by
highlighting the HDP’s multi-sectoral approach. ‘I will concentrate
on bringing the programme’s four key areas together and presenting
them as interrelated fields that complement each other.’
Gender is a subject that is close to her heart. ‘I have witnessed
disparities between the sexes everywhere I have been but nowhere are
they more obvious than in the developing world. Although it can be
discouraging, I try to accentuate the positive. I admire and am
inspired by all the women and men who have enabled progress towards
a more balanced society.’
Having grown up in Southern Africa, she has always had an interest
in cultural issues. ‘Just as in the Pacific, culture is part and
parcel of life in Africa,’ Tione says. ‘In fact there are many
similarities between the two regions. African time is the equivalent
of Pacific time and the bush wireless in Africa operates along the
same lines as the coconut wireless here. On a more serious note
though, they have similar values such as hospitality and, in both
places, family, in the extended sense, is such an important
component of society.’
Youth is an area she is familiar with, having worked for UNICEF New
Zealand in 1996. ‘Working on issues relating to young people is
always very motivating. Young people are dynamic and always so keen
to learn and evolve, so it’s an area that involves a lot of energy,
new ideas and constant change.’
Working at SPC is not a totally new experience as Tione has been
involved with the organisation as a consultant in the past, working
in what was then the Pacific Women’s Bureau and for the HIV/AIDS &
STI project.
Tione takes over from Julie Middleton who left SPC in June to return
to New Zealand.
Background:
Tione describes herself as a bit of a global citizen. Her father is
Malawian (Southern Africa) and her mother is a New Zealander. She
was born and grew up in Malawi then moved to New Zealand at 16 to
study.
In 1996, she moved to Tahiti where she taught English. She returned
to New Zealand in 1998 to study journalism at Canterbury University
in Christchurch. For the past several years she has been based in
New Caledonia working as a travel writer and freelance journalist.
From 2001 to 2006 she wrote several guide books on the Pacific and
Africa for the international guide book publisher, Lonely Planet. In
the early 2000s, she was a stringer for Islands Business. Most
recently she was a correspondent for Radio New Zealand
International. She has produced material for magazines, newspapers
and websites around the Pacific and in Australia and New Zealand.
Between 2000 and 2006 she also taught English at the University of
New Caledonia and a number of other New Caledonian education
institutions.
Tione is married to a French man and has two daughters aged three
and three months.
Contact:
Tione Chinula can be contacted on 00 687 260 157 or at
TioneC@spc.int
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