New Zealander appointed to Amnesty International Board
Amnesty International (AI) members from around the world
have elected new Directors to their International Board at
the AI Annual Global Assembly this month.
Among those is New Zealander and AI Aotearoa New Zealand Chair, Tiumalu Peter Fa’afiu.
The Asia Pacific region now holds three out of nine positions on the Board. The International Board has oversight of Amnesty International's global human rights strategy, its financials (with an annual income of nearly NZ$600 million), a Secretariat with 650 staff across the globe, and is custodian of the vision and strategy on behalf of its nearly eight million supporters. The headquarters is located in London.
Previously a New Zealand diplomat and trade negotiator with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT) in Wellington and Jakarta, Peter is currently a Partner with management consultancy, Navigator Limited. As Interim Chief Executive Officer at the Tāmaki Regeneration Company (a Crown company), he was one of the youngest New Zealand Crown company chief executives in 2014 at age 36.
Fa’afiu says the thorough interview process took
three months to complete and included a few 3am webinars
with final approval coming from the Chairs of each of the 65
country offices (Sections).
"I have a particular set of
governance and executive skills. When the nominations
committee started the search for the gaps they saw on the
Board and skills needed over the next 3-4 years, it aligned
nicely with what I had to offer.”
The Samoan-born Kiwi
says he is looking forward to working with his fellow Board
colleagues at such an important time for human
rights.
“These are watershed years for human rights
activism. Today, if we looked at negotiating the 1948 UN
Declaration of Human Rights, we wouldn’t get to the
negotiating table. Abuses are on the rise and are acute in
some parts of the world where governments are shrinking
civil society spaces. We need Amnesty International to be a
strong and assertive advocate.”
Fa’afiu is also Chair of the Pacific Media Network (multi-media Crown entity) which owns Pacific radio stations 531, Pacific Radio News and Niu.
The AI tenure is for four years. The step-up will see him resign as the Chair of AI Aotearoa New Zealand.