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Kiribati, which was known as the Gilbert Islands when it was a British colony, has been an independent nation since 1979. Tong has been considering other unusual options to combat climate change, including shoring up some Kiribati islands with sea walls and even building a floating island. He said this week that the latter option would likely prove too expensive, but that he hopes reinforcing some islands will ensure that Kiribati continues to exist in some form even in a worst-case scenario. "We're trying to secure the future of our people," he said. "The international community needs to be addressing this problem more." Tong said he hopes that the Fiji land will represent just one of several options for relocating people. He pointed out that the land is three times larger than the atoll of Tarawa, currently home to more than half of Kiribati's population. Although like much of the Pacific, Kiribati is poor -- its annual GDP per person is just $1,600
-- Tong said the country has plenty of foreign reserves to draw from for the land purchase. The money, he said, comes from phosphate mining on the archipelago in the 1970s.
[Associated
Press;
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