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Manasseh Sogavare : ウィキペディア英語版
Manasseh Sogavare

Manasseh Damukana Sogavare (born 17 January 1955) is the Prime Minister of Solomon Islands. His most recent term began on 9 December 2014, and he had served two terms between 2000 and 2001 and between 2006 and 2007. Before becoming Prime Minister, Sogavare served in the National Parliament as Member for East Choiseul Island beginning in 1997.〔(Page on Sogavare at Solomon Islands Parliament website ).〕
==Biography==
Sogavare was Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Finance from February 1994 to October 1996. Prior to his election to Parliament, he served as the Commissioner of Inland Revenue, Director of the Central Bank of the Solomon Islands, and Chairman of the Solomon Islands National Provident Fund. He was first elected to the National Parliament from East Choiseul in the 6 August 1997 election.
Under Prime Minister Bartholomew Ulufa'alu, Sogavare became Minister for Finance and Treasury in 1997〔 but was dismissed from that post by Ulufa'alu in mid-July 1998. Sogavare said that he was shocked at the dismissal, as he could see no reason for it and no reason was given, and he demanded an explanation.〔"Solomon Islands finance minister "shocked" by dismissal", Radio New Zealand International (nl.newsbank.com), 16 July 1998.〕 A few days later, Ulufa'alu said that the decision was motivated by the need for the government to keep the numbers to stay in power.〔"Solomon Islands premier says need to maintain numbers behind reshuffle", Radio New Zealand International (nl.newsbank.com), 21 July 1998.〕 In early August 1998, Sogavare withdrew his support for Ulufa'alu and his government, accusing Ulufa'alu of authoritarian and hypocritical leadership and of emphasizing stability only to protect himself.〔"Solomon Islands: Sacked finance minister withdraws support for premier", Radio New Zealand International (nl.newsbank.com), 4 August 1998.〕
Sogavare was chosen as deputy leader of the opposition in late September 1998, with Solomon Mamaloni as leader.〔"Solomon Islands: Former premier back as opposition leader", Radio New Zealand International (nl.newsbank.com), 30 September 1998.〕 Following Mamaloni's death in January 2000, Sogavare was elected as leader of the opposition late in the month. He received the votes of all ten members of the opposition who were present.〔"Solomon Islands opposition gets new leader, renames party", Solomon Islands Broadcasting Corporation radio (nl.newsbank.com), 28 January 2000.〕
He was elected as Prime Minister by parliament on 30 June 2000, with 23 votes in favor and 21 against, after Ulufa'alu was captured by rebels and forced to resign.〔"Solomon Islands lawmakers elect new prime minister", Associated Press (nl.newsbank.com), 30 June 2000.〕〔"Lawmakers elect opposition leader Solomon Islands prime minister", Associated Press, 30 June 2000.〕 He served as Prime Minister until 17 December 2001. His party won only three seats in the election held on 5 December 2001, but Sogavare was re-elected to his seat in Parliament.〔
In Parliament, Sogavare was a member of the Bills and Legislation Committee in 2002 and again from 2005 to April 2006.〔
Sogavare, who had led the People's Progressive Party, led the Solomon Islands Social Credit Party into a coalition to oust Prime Minister Allan Kemakeza's chosen successor Snyder Rini, but there was much disagreement about who should be its candidate for prime minister. On 18 April 2006, he received 11 of 50 votes to become prime minister, placing him third. He then switched his support to Rini, allowing Rini to become Prime Minister while Sogavare became part of the coalition and was named Minister for Commerce, Industries and Employment.〔
Following Rini's resignation on 26 April 2006, Sogavare decided to attempt again to become prime minister. This time the opponents of Kemakeza and Rini united behind him, and in 4 May parliamentary vote, he received 28 votes, defeating the government candidate Fred Fono, who received 22 votes. Sogavare was immediately sworn in.〔"Solomon Islands prime minister sworn in", Radio Australia (nl.newsbank.com), 5 May 2006.〕 His main tasks included organizing the recovery from rioting that took place during Rini's time as Prime Minister.
On 11 October 2006, Sogavare survived a no-confidence vote in parliament; the motion, introduced by Fono, was supported by 17 members of parliament, while 28 voted against it.〔("Solomons Prime Minister Wins No-Confidence Vote" ), VOA News, 11 October 2006.〕 The no-confidence vote was prompted by deteriorating relations with Australia. Sogavare had expelled the Australian High Commissioner Patrick Cole in September and defended the Solomons' suspended attorney general, Julian Moti, whom Australia wants extradited to face child sex charges there. Moti presently faces charges in the Solomons for illegally entering the country.〔("Sogavare Survives Vote" ), Special Broadcasting Service (Australia), 12 October 2006.〕 On 13 October, Sogavare threatened to expel Australia from an assistance mission in the Solomons,〔("Australia-Solomons diplomatic row escalates" ), Gulfnews.com, 15 October 2006.〕 and a week later Australian peacekeepers from the Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands raided Sogavare's office (when he was not present) looking for evidence related to the Moti case.〔Phil Mercer, ("Solomon Islands PM offices raided" ), BBC News, 20 October 2006.〕
On 13 December 2007, Sogavare was defeated in a parliamentary vote of no confidence; the motion against him received 25 votes, with 22 opposed to it. He remained in office in a caretaker capacity until the election of a new prime minister,〔Tom Allard, ("Solomon Islands Prime Minister ousted" ), smh.com.au, 14 December 2007.〕 on 20 December, when opposition candidate Derek Sikua was elected, defeating Patteson Oti who had been Foreign Minister under Sogavare.〔("Solomon Islands MPs elect new PM" ), Xinhua, 20 December 2007.〕 On the same date, Sogavare became Leader of the Opposition.〔
In 2010, Sogavare and eight other MPs established the Ownership, Unity and Responsibility Party.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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