Cook Islands:
New Zealand recently suspended millions of dollars in budget funding to the Cook Islands, as the relationship between the two constitutionally linked countries continues to deteriorate amid the island group’s deepening ties with China.
- The Cook Islands are a group of 15 small islands that are spread over 2 million sq. km in the South Pacific Ocean.
- The islands are situated in the center of the Polynesian Triangle–about halfway between Hawaii and New Zealand.
- The Cook Islands are located to the east of Niue, Tonga, and Samoa; to the northeast of New Zealand; to the south of Kiribati and to the west of French Polynesia.
- Named after Captain Cook, who explored them in 1773, the islands were once autonomous, home to tribes of mixed Polynesian ancestry.
- The islands cover a total land area of 240 sq. km.
- They are divided into a northern group of six islands and a southern group of nine islands.
- Northern Islands: These are mostly low-lying and sparsely populated coral atolls; and include the islands of Manihiki, Nassau, Penrhyn, Pukapuka, Rakahanga, and Suwarrow and are covered in light vegetation and equipped with stunning white sand beaches.
- Southern islands: These generally consist of much larger, higher islands that are volcanic in origin and more densely populated.