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New Zealand, Fiji renew five-year partnership

By Thomson Reuters Jul 15, 2026 | 9:54 PM

WELLINGTON, July 16 (Reuters) – New Zealand and Fiji signed a renewed five-year Duavata Partnership on Thursday, setting ​out cooperation priorities for 2026 ‌to 2030 across trade, security, democracy, social development and climate resilience, New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters said after talks in Auckland ‌with ​Fiji counterpart Sakiasi ⁠Ditoka.

• The agreement renews ⁠an earlier 2022-2025 framework and reaffirms both countries’ goal of lifting two-way trade to NZ$2 billion ($1.17 billion) by ​2030. It also deepens cooperation on policing, border and maritime security, ⁠defence ties, renewable energy, ⁠disaster preparedness and support for ​the Pacific as an “Ocean of Peace,” according ​to the joint statement and Peters’ ‌office.

• On security, the statement calls for expanded cooperation in community policing, immigration, customs, border security, cybersecurity, intelligence ⁠sharing, maritime security and humanitarian and disaster relief. (mfat.govt.nz)

• Peters said the ministers also discussed New ⁠Zealand’s ‌interest in exploratory discussions with ⁠Fiji and Australia on the ​Ocean ‌of Peace Alliance.

• Ditoka is ​also due ⁠to attend a trade and investment ministerial meeting hosted by New Zealand Trade Minister Todd McClay.

($1 = 1.7132 New Zealand dollars)

(Reporting by Lucy Craymer; Editing by ​Michael Perry)