Cook Islands
The Cook Islands are a group of islands in the southern Pacific. They form an independent state, but have strong ties with New Zealand. The 15 small islands have a total land surface of 240 square kilometers. About 18.000 people live on the islands, most of them from tourism. The largest island, Rarotonga, also holds the territory's capital, Avarua.
The nation also has a distinctive Polynesian language known as Cook Island Maori, which is closely related to the Maori language of New Zealand and to the Tahitian language.[1]
Foreign relations: Relations with the United States were started in 2023. Relations with China were started earlier.
History: The Rarotonga Treaty was signed in 1986; Cook Islands is (as of the 2020s) still in an area that is supposed to be without any nuclear weapons.
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A beach on Rarotonga
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A photo taken from Aituaki
References
change- ↑ "Regions and territories: Cook Islands". 8 December 2010. BBC News. Retrieved 12 March 2011.