Kiribati country brief - DFAT
1 min readoceania
Kiribati country brief - DFAT
Key points on Kiribati from the DFAT country brief:
- Politics and governance
- Independent since 12 July 1979; 45-member unicameral Parliament (44 elected, 1 appointed by the Rabi Council for Banaba descendants in Fiji’s Rabi).
- MPs serve four-year terms; after elections, Parliament nominates 3–4 presidential candidates. President (Te Beretitenti) is elected by popular vote (first-past-the-post).
- Speaker is elected ex-officio by MPs, must meet MP qualifications but
Keep reading
Economics
Structural Shifts in Zimbabwe’s External Relations: An NDS 2 Analysis
Summary: The article analyzes Zimbabwe’s National Development Strategy 2 (NDS 2), launched on 27 November 2025, as a pivotal shift in its foreign policy. NDS 2 reframes diplomacy as an instrument of economic development, turning embassies into strategic economic hubs to attract investment, boost value chains, and integrate with regional and global markets. It emphasizes diversification of partnerships, re-engagement with traditional partners and international organizations, a
Economics
World Bank Approves New Partnership Framework with Yemen, $285 Million in Funding - Yemen Online |
Summary: - The World Bank approved a new Country Partnership Framework (CPF) for Yemen covering 2026–2030, with $285 million in funding. - The funds target health, water, basic services, and governance to strengthen service delivery, institutional resilience, and accountability amid Yemen’s ongoing humanitarian and economic crises. - The CPF emphasizes inclusive stakeholder consultation, alignment with Yemen’s recovery needs, and long-term development goals while supporting s
Economics
Analysis: Yemen’s future after the separatist STC’s expansion eastwards | Conflict News | Al Jazeera
Summary: - The Al Jazeera analysis argues Yemen’s conflict cannot be viewed as a simple government–Houthis clash. An overlapping map of influence now exists, with the STC emerging as a dominant power in the south and parts of the east, challenging central authority and complicating security, resources, and representation. - The STC’s expansion, backed regionally, coincides with widespread economic strain and a weakened central government, raising questions about the IMF’s sus