Matafeo George Latu (born January 1, 1965) is a Samoan lawyer and former dual international rugby union player who has played as a prop for both the Samoa national rugby union team and the Tonga national rugby union team. Since ending his rugby career he has worked as a lawyer in Samoa. He is the brother of lawyer and diplomat Leota Kosi Latu,[1] and the husband of former Samoan Attorney-General Taulapapa Brenda Heather-Latu
Early life
Latu was born to a Tongan father and Samoan mother. He was educated at New Plymouth Boys High School in New Zealand and later at the University of Canterbury, where he studied law.[2] After graduating he returned to Samoa to take up a state solicitor role in the Samoa Attorney General's Office.
Rugby career
Latu played for the university of Canterbury rugby team while at university. He played a few games at representative level for Canterbury, and played the 1996 NPC season for Southland in Invercargill.[3] He later captained the Vaimoso Rugby Club.
From 1993 to 1994 he played six matches for the Tonga national rugby union team.[2] In 1994 he was selected for the Samoa national rugby union team, playing his first match against Tonga on 4 June 1994. He was selected for the Manu Samoa squad for the 1995 Rugby World Cup,[4] where he played three matches, replacing injured rugby legend Papali’itele Peter Fatialofa. His last international cap was during the Manu Samoa tour of the British Isles in 1997.
Since retiring as an international Latu has served as an honorary solicitor for the Samoa Rugby Union and as a Judicial Officer for the International Rugby Board. In 2015 he was elected secretary of the Samoa Rugby Union, and from 2016 to 2018 was its vice-chairman. In 2016 he was appointed as Samoa’s representative on the Oceania Rugby Executive Board[2][5] and attended the World Rugby Congress in London in 2018.
He is currently the Managing Partner of Latu Lawyers, where he works with his wife Taulapapa Brenda Heather-Latu.[9] He was a legal representative for the FAST party during the 2021 Samoan constitutional crisis, and assisted with the swearing-in of the Samoan Parliament on 24 May 2021.[10] In July 2021 the HRPP regime attempted to have him prosecuted over his role in the ceremony,[11] but the issue was resolved by the Samoan Court of Appeal's July 2021 ruling that the ceremony was legal and binding.[12]
He is the holder of the following chiefly titles : Togia from Lefaga; Matafeo from Asaga, Punafelutu from Lano and Namulauulu from Fogapoa.
References
^Peggy Fairbairn-Dunlop (1998). Tamaitai Samoa: Their stories. Suva: University of the South Pacific. p. 140.
^"George Latu". New Zealand Rugby History. 2017-05-18. Retrieved 2019-10-05.
^Mick Cleary (21 May 1995). "Rugby World Cup '95: The four pools of plenty - Mick Cleary runs the rule over the sixteen squads in pursuit of the ultimate goal, and finds it difficult to back against Australia making a successful defence of the Webb Ellis Trophy". The Observer – via Gale OneFile.