Shiro Kyota is a Palauan politician and a former speaker of the House of Delegates of Palau[1] from January 1989 to November 1992.
Shiro Kyota | |
---|---|
Speaker of the House of Delegates of Palau | |
In office January 1989 – November 1992 | |
Preceded by | Santos Olikong |
Succeeded by | Surangel S. Whipps |
Personal details | |
Children | Hersey Kyota |
He was elected to Palau Legislature in 1960s[2] and 1970s.[3] He represented the State of Ngaremlengui.[4] He run for a seat in the Senate of Palau in 1980, but lost.[5]
He became finance officer for the Palau government.[1] He won a seat in the House of Delegates of Palau in 1980s. He represented the state of Ngaremlengui. He was vice speaker of House of Delegates of Palau by 1985. He was elected speaker in 1989 and served until his retirement.[1] He was succeeded as speaker by Surangel S. Whipps in January 1993.[6]
Kyota is of half-Japanese heritage,[1] being the son of a Palau-based Japanese trader and his Palauan wife.[7] He is the father of Hersey Kyota.
Bibliography
edit- Deimel, Claus, Jahrbuch der Staatlichen Ethnographischen Sammlungen Sachsen. Band 43, LIT Verlag Berlin-Hamburg-Münster, 2007, ISBN 3-8258-1484-X
References
edit- ^ a b c d "Jahrbuch der Staatlichen Ethnographischen Sammlungen Sachsen. Band 43" (in German). LIT Verlag Münster.
- ^ United States Department of State (1967). "Report to the United Nations on the Administration of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, Transmitted by the United States of America".
- ^ "Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands in 1974". Bureau of International Organization Affairs, Office of United Nations Political Affairs.
- ^ United States Department of State (1977). "Report to the United Nations on the Administration of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands".
- ^ Shuster, Donald R. "Islands of Change In Palau: Church, School, and Elected Government, 1891-1981". University of Hawaii.
- ^ Bureau of International Organization Affairs, Office of United Nations Political Affairs. "Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands - year 1992".
- ^ Deimel (2007), p. 225