Pacific Islands – Emergency Contact Directory A–Z | Aspie Answers

Pacific Islands – Emergency Contact Directory (A–Z)

Fast, simple access to emergency contact numbers across the Pacific Islands — plus a tidy country directory you can expand as your Crisis Support Hub grows.

If this is an emergency: Call your local emergency number now, or go to the nearest emergency department.
If talking is hard: show your screen, use short sentences, or ask someone to speak for you.

Emergency Numbers (Quick Access)

These are the most common emergency access numbers used across different Pacific nations and island regions. Emergency systems can vary — if unsure, contact your local police station, hospital, or operator.

🌍 Common / Often Used

  • 111 — New Zealand (NZ emergency services)
  • 000 — Australia (emergency services)
  • 112 — Works on mobile networks in many regions (where supported)

📞 What to say when you call

  • Your name (if safe to share)
  • Your location (island / village / landmark)
  • What’s happening right now
  • Who needs help (you / someone else)
  • Police / ambulance / fire needed?

💬 If talking is hard

  • Show your screen message: “I need help now.”
  • Use short sentences: “Not safe. Need ambulance.”
  • Point to your location on maps if possible
  • Ask someone nearby to call for you

Pacific Islands – A–Z Directory

A starter directory of Pacific nations and island regions. Each card includes emergency details where confirmed. You can expand this later into island-by-island details (and add crisis + text services inside the Mental Health Crisis Hub).

Fiji Emergency: 911 (often listed) / 917 (often listed) Use for: Police / Ambulance / Fire Verify locally if unsure
Kiribati Emergency: Check locally (numbers vary) Tip: Contact nearest clinic / police station Directory expanding
Marshall Islands Emergency: Check locally (numbers vary) Tip: Use local operator / hospital contact Directory expanding
Micronesia (FSM) Emergency: Check locally (numbers vary by state) Tip: Find the nearest urgent clinic / police Directory expanding
Nauru Emergency: Check locally (numbers vary) Tip: Contact hospital / police station Directory expanding
New Caledonia Emergency: Check locally (France emergency systems apply) Tip: Use local operator / emergency department Directory expanding
Papua New Guinea (PNG) Emergency: Check locally (numbers vary by region) Tip: Contact local hospital / police Directory expanding
Samoa Emergency: 911 Use for: Emergency response Confirmed emergency number
Solomon Islands Emergency: Check locally (numbers vary) Tip: Find nearest clinic or police post Directory expanding
Tonga Emergency: Check locally (numbers vary) Tip: Contact local hospital / police Directory expanding
Tuvalu Emergency: Check locally (numbers vary) Tip: Contact local operator / urgent clinic Directory expanding
Vanuatu Police: 22222 Fire: 22333 Ambulance: 22100 Confirmed numbers

Calm Corner (30–60 seconds)

  • Grounding: 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 for 2… out for 6 (repeat 3 times)
  • One sentence script: “Hi, I need urgent help. I’m not safe / I’m overwhelmed.”
  • Reminder: You don’t need to do everything. One next step is enough.
Note: This page 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.