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Iolu Abil

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Iolu Abil
7th President of Vanuatu
In office
2 September 2009 – 2 September 2014
Prime MinisterEdward Natapei
Sato Kilman
Serge Vohor
Sato Kilman
Edward Natapei (acting)
Sato Kilman
Moana Carcasses Kalosil
Joe Natuman
Preceded byKalkot Mataskelekele
Maxime Carlot Korman (acting)
Succeeded byPhilip Boedoro (acting)
Baldwin Lonsdale
Personal details
Born (1942-02-17) 17 February 1942 (age 82)
Lauaneai, New Hebrides
(now Vanuatu)
Political partyVanua'aku Pati
Alma materUniversity of the South Pacific

Iolu Johnson Abil (born 17 February 1942) is a Vanuatuan politician. He was elected and sworn in as the president of Vanuatu on 2 September 2009.[1][2]

Biography

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Personal life

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Abbil is from Tanna island, which is located in Vanuatu's southernmost Tafea Province.[1] He was born in the village of Louaneai on Tanna in the New Hebrides in 1942 to parents George Yaviniau and Nassuaiu.[3] His father originally owned his own store, but closed the business after Iolu later suggested the family join a business cooperative.[3]

Abbil holds the chiefly title of Yaniniko, which means chief's spokesman on the island of Tanna.[3] His hereditary title was granted to him by his grandfather, Joe Yautim, who was a Yaramara, or chief, on Tanna.[3] Abil's father, George Yaviniau, was also a chief, but had not been granted the right to be a chiefly spokesperson as of the early 1980s.[3]

Abbil attended the local Lenakel village elementary school on his home island of Tanna.[3] He next enrolled at Lenakel Senior Primary School, which he attended from 1956 until 1958.[3] He graduated from Onesua High School.[3]

He is an elder in the Presbyterian Church in Vanuatu.[4]

Career

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Abbil joined the British National Service as a cooperative inspector in 1964.[3] He also took a job with the New Hebrides Cooperative Department in 1964, a position he held for the next sixteen years.[3] He enrolled in cooperative development training courses in Papua New Guinea and Fiji during the 1960s.[3] He then became a student at the Loughborough International Co-operative College in the United Kingdom for two years.[3]

Abbil completed three months of administration and management courses at the University of the South Pacific in Suva, Fiji, in 1973.[3]

He served in the Cabinet member in the first post-independence government of Prime Minister Walter Lini,[1] thereby becoming Vanuatu's first Secretary of the Ministry of Lands.[3]

Mr. Iolu Abbil moved to politics in the late 1990s to later become the Member of Parliament for Tanna. In that capacity he also became the State Minister for Internal Affairs for a complete term before retiring from politics in the 2003.

Iolu Abbil was appointed as the interim Ombudsman of Vanuatu in November 2004,[5] following the departure of Hannington Alatoa, whose term in office had expired in June 2004.[5] Abil served as interim Ombudsman until April 2005 when Peter Taurakoto was appointed to a five-year term by President Kalkot Mataskelekele.[5]

Abbil has also held a number of positions within the private sector, including as chairman of Air Vanuatu.[4]

President of Vanuatu

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Abil was elected president by Vanuatu's 58-member electoral college on 2 September 2009.[1] Abil was elected on the electoral college's third round of voting in two days.[1] No candidate had garnered the required two-thirds of the vote in electoral college in previous two rounds of voting.[1]

Several members of parliament within Prime Minister Edward Natapei's governing coalition had supported former President Kalkot Mataskelekele in the first two rounds of the election.[1] Mataskelekele's five-year term as president had ended on 16 August 2009, and he had been renominated for a second term.[1] However, all members of Natapei coalition had unanimously agreed to support Abil in the third round on 2 September 2009.[1]

Abil defeated six other candidates who had been nominated for president in the electoral college's third round. With the support of Prime Minister Natapei, he secured 41 votes within the 58-member electoral college, which won the presidency of Vanuatu.[1] He was sworn in as President of Vanuatu on the evening of 2 September 2009.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Iolu Abil elected as Vanuatu's President". Radio New Zealand International. 2 September 2009. Retrieved 2 September 2009.
  2. ^ a b "Iolu Abil elected as Vanuatu's new president". People's Daily. 2 September 2009. Retrieved 2 September 2009.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Macdonald-Milne, Brian; Thomas, Pamela (1981). "Some People of Vanuatu: Iolu Abbil". Yumi Stanap, "Some People of Vanuatu," pages 62–64. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
  4. ^ a b "Vanuatu's newly elected President continues long public role". Radio New Zealand International. 3 September 2009. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
  5. ^ a b c "From the President's Desk" (PDF). University of Alberta. June 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 September 2009. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
Political offices
Preceded by President of Vanuatu
2009–2014
Succeeded by