Oceania – Emergency Numbers Directory (A–Z)

Oceania – Emergency Numbers Directory (A–Z) | Aspie Answers

Oceania – Emergency Numbers Directory (A–Z)

Browse emergency contact numbers across Oceania by country. This is designed for quick access, especially when you feel overwhelmed.

If you are in immediate danger: call your local emergency number now, or go to the nearest emergency department.

Jump by letter

A

Australia

National emergency number

000
You can ask for Police / Ambulance / Fire.

B

(Coming soon)

More Oceania countries will be added here.

We’ll keep building this directory.

C

Cook Islands

Emergency number (add confirmed number)

Coming soon
Add local police / ambulance numbers when confirmed.

F

Fiji

Emergency numbers (add confirmed number)

Coming soon
Add police / ambulance / fire when confirmed.

N

New Zealand

National emergency number

111
Police / Ambulance / Fire (urgent).
Niue

Emergency numbers (add confirmed number)

Coming soon
Add local emergency contacts once confirmed.

P

Papua New Guinea

Emergency numbers (add confirmed number)

Coming soon
Add emergency details once confirmed.

S

Samoa

Emergency numbers (add confirmed number)

Coming soon
Add police / ambulance / fire once confirmed.
Solomon Islands

Emergency numbers (add confirmed number)

Coming soon
Add local emergency contacts once confirmed.

T

Tonga

Emergency numbers (add confirmed number)

Coming soon
Add local emergency details once confirmed.
Tuvalu

Emergency numbers (add confirmed number)

Coming soon
Add local emergency details once confirmed.

V

Vanuatu

Emergency numbers (add confirmed number)

Coming soon
Add local emergency details once confirmed.

Calm Corner (30–60 seconds)

  • Grounding: Name 5 things you can see, 4 you can feel, 3 you can hear, 2 you can smell, 1 you can taste.
  • Breathing: In for 4… hold 2… out for 6 (repeat 3 times).
  • One sentence script: “Hi, I need urgent help. I feel unsafe and I need support.”
Note: This directory is for general guidance and quick navigation only. It does not replace professional medical advice. If you are in immediate danger, call your local emergency number or go to the nearest emergency department.