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Tensions continue to wrack Fijian government
By Peter Byrne
22 February 2002
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Two recent court cases highlight the tensions wracking the
Fijian political establishment nearly two years after businessman
George Speight led elite soldiers and thugs in a coup that ousted
Mahendra Chaudhrys Labour Party-led Peoples Coalition government.
Both court cases had potentially explosive implications for Prime
Minister Laisenia Qarases unstable, racially-based government.
The first case involved a bid by Chaudhry to demand that he
and his Labour Party colleagues be allocated posts in Qarases
cabinet. Qarases government, which includes two members
of Speights racialist Matanitu Vanua (Conservative Alliance)
Party, is essentially carrying out the program of the May 2000
coup. Ethnic Fijian businessmen and land-owning chiefs are receiving
subsidies and privileges, while Indo-Fijians, who represent almost
half the population, are excluded from political power.
On February 15, the Court of Appeal upheld Chaudhrys
claim under the 1997 Constitution and, in effect, declared Qarases
government unconstitutional. The judges ruled that because Labour
obtained more than 10 percent of the seats in parliament at last
Augusts electionit won 28 of the 71 seatsit
was entitled to a proportional number of cabinet positions. They
declared that power sharing amongst all communities
in Fiji was a key concept in the Constitution.
The Constitution, adopted by 1987 military coup leader Major
General Sitiveni Rabuka at the behest of the regions major
powers, Australia and New Zealand, entrenches communalism by maintaining
separate voter rolls for Fijians of Indian descent and indigenous
Fijians, and providing for the leaders of the communities
to share office. It also protects the power of the chiefs, represented
by the Great Council of Chiefs, which appoints the President and
some Senators.
After last years election, Chaudhry, who was the countrys
first Indo-Fijian prime minister, asked to share power with Qarase,
whose Soqosoqo Duavata ni Lewe ni Vanua (SDL) party failed to
win an absolute majority. The SDL polled just 45 percent of the
vote, despite widespread use of government subsidies to buy votes
in rural villages. Nevertheless, Qarase brushed aside the constitutional
requirement and formed a government of indigenous businessmen,
chiefs and former government bureaucrats. No-one of Indian descent
was included.
While ruling that Qarase had breached the constitution, the
judgestwo from New Zealand, one from Australia and a British
judge from Tongagave him leeway to remain in office. He
was not ordered to immediately appoint Labour ministers, nor did
the judges declare the government illegal. Instead, they simply
offered a legal opinion and sent the case back to the High Courta
lower courtto decide.
Before the hearing, Qarase had stated several times that if
the case went against him he would ask President Josefo Iloilo,
another beneficiary of Speights coup, to dissolve parliament
and call fresh elections. Nonetheless, the day after the ruling
Qarase flatly rejected it and indicated he would stay in office
for a full five years. To give his response a fig leaf of legality,
Qarase announced an appeal to the Supreme Court, which is being
hastily reconstituted after being abolished by the military government
that assumed power following the May 2000 coup.
Qarases response reveals the instability of his government.
In the first place, it suggests that he rests on an extremely
narrow base, and could well lose an election. Secondly, it underscores
how far he is beholden to the nationalist and chauvinist elements
who backed, or were whipped up behind, Speights coup. Qarase
and his advisers fear that to allow Chaudhry to join the government
could trigger an ugly backlash from these quarters.
In an effort to shore up his position, Qarase has resumed the
SDLs agitation for changes to the Constitution to remove
the power sharing provisions and further entrench
the privileged interests of ethnic Fijian leaders. He has an openly
partisan ally in Chief Justice Timoci Tuivaga, who said he would
ask the Supreme Court to review the Constitution itself. The
1997 constitution has to be looked into. This constitution is
the cause of our problems. There is no question of it. Tuivaga
has appointed himself to the Supreme Court, and personally appointed
the other two judges, breaching a constitutional requirement to
consult the Judicial Services Commission.
If Qarase is prepared to flout the Constitution and defy a
court ruling to keep Chaudhry out of his administration, Chaudhry
is equally desperate to join the government. Just as in the 1990s,
when he sought an accommodation with Rabuka, his primary concern
is to shore up the fractured political system and restore profitable
conditions for investors. In the wake of the coup, foreign investment
has plunged, tourism has suffered severely, racial tensions are
simmering and thousands of Indo-Fijian teachers, doctors and technicians
have fled the country. Moreover, the coup badly split the central
institutions of rule, the military and the judiciary, and the
government has been dogged by revelations about its flagrant vote-buying.
Qarase, a former merchant banker, has striven to appease global
investors by cutting corporate taxes and fast-tracking investment
approvals, but his regimes protectionism and corruption
in favour of local entrepreneurs remain obstacles. Chaudhry advocates
taking steps to open and restructure the economy to satisfy the
financial markets.
Chaudhrys other main concern is to channel continuing
social unrest into legal manoeuvres and parliamentary politics.
As a result of the coup, thousands of Indo-Fijian small farmers
have been evicted, while the living and working conditions of
ordinary people have declined. While the Labour Partys constitutional
challengesthis was the second in two yearshave not
modified Qarases program, let alone removed him, they have
helped deflect popular discontent. In his initial response to
the Court of Appeal ruling, Chaudhry said: Conflict should
be resolved through the courts and I am happy we have been able
to do so.
Upon being rebuffed by Qarase yet again, Chaudhry restated
his willingness to enter into a coalition with Speights
Conservative Alliance party, which would hold a majority in parliament.
Demonstrating that there are no lengths to which he will not go
to return to office, he has called for reconciliation
with the coup leader and swapped preferences with Speights
party in a recent by-election.
Speights case
The second court case, Speights long-delayed treason
trial on February 18, also underscored Fijis political fragility.
The trial was shut down as the result of a deal struck with
Speight and his backers to protect the organisers of his coup,
who are known to include leading government ministers, chiefs,
businessmen and military officers. Speight pleaded guilty in order
to prevent any evidence being heard in the case. He was formally
given a mandatory death sentence, but within hours President Iloilo
commuted the sentence to life imprisonment.
In a piece of political theatre, Justice Michael Scott put
on a black wig to announce the death penalty, but alluded to the
plea bargaining deal that had been worked out. By pleading
guilty you have done the right thing ... and I am certain you
will be given credit for the course you have taken.
The next day, the prosecution dropped treason charges against
10 of Speights 12 co-accused, who pleaded guilty to unlawfully
detaining persons and received jail terms of between 18 months
and three years. Among them were two key figures in the military-intelligence
apparatusthe armys former Counter-Revolutionary Warfare
commander Colonel Ilisoni Ligairi and ex-intelligence chief Metsisela
Mua. Two defendants, Timoci Silatolu and Josefa Nata, refused
to plead guilty to a lesser charge. They were remanded to March
14 for trial on charges of treason.
Last year, the prosecution told a preliminary hearing that
Speights trial would reveal the identities of those who
masterminded and bankrolled the coup. Cabinet ministers in Qarases
government, five Great Council of Chiefs members, 10 Indo-Fijian
businessmen, several army officers and key public servants were
under police investigation for involvement in the coup, as were
Rabuka and Lieutenant-Colonel Filipino Tarakinikini, the militarys
spokesman in the months following the coup. The prosecution also
stated that Chaudhry, who was held hostage for 56 days by Speights
forces, would testify to reveal the real coup leaders. In the
lead up to the trial, Speight too threatened to name names.
After his sentence was commuted, Speight told the Fiji Sun,
in a written reply to questions, that he had no intention of exposing
anybody, but if he did, 10 times the number of prison cells
in the whole of Fiji would still not be enough to hold everyone
involved. In return for his silence, Speight is confident
that he will be released from prison within a few years. One of
his lawyers, Ron Cannon, said the authorities had told him that
life imprisonment would possibly mean seven years.
Petitions and protests demanding a full pardon have begun in the
west of Fijis main island.
The Murdoch-owned Fiji Times commented in an editorial
that Speights guilty plea meant the truth behind the coup
would never be known. The reward for his silence and acquiescence
is already a commuted jail sentence. A pardon may come later,
it said. A precedent exists for a presidential pardon. One was
granted to Rabuka, who ousted Chaudhrys Labour Party predecessor
Timoci Bavadra and remained prime minister until 1999.
Chaudhry welcomed the outcome of the triala further indication
of his willingness to appease the racialists. He praised Speight
for pleading guilty, adding that the gunman who had held him hostage
was being made a scapegoat for people with wealth and power.
Speights plea, however, ensures that these people remain
anonymousa situation that suits Chaudhry. If the trial had
exposed the high-level backing for the coup, it would have made
Chaudhrys approaches to Speights party more difficult,
as well as opening up further ruptures in the political, business
and military establishment.
It is no secret that the regime felt obliged to formally convict
Speight in order to appease the Western powers, which have been
demanding a return to more stable and constitutionally legitimate
rule. Foreign Minister Kaliopate Tavola said the sentencing of
Speight had put Fijis international reputation in
a better position. The military administration originally
signed an accord with Speight to end his hostage taking, granting
him and all his supporters immunity, but later repudiated the
pact under international pressure.
Australian media reaction to the outcome of the two cases has
been mixed. Editorials generally backed the cynical deal with
Speight, expressing relief that political tensions had not erupted,
while urging Qarase to consider a rapprochement with Chaudhry
for the sake of political stability. The Australian government
seems likely to keep working with the Qarase regime, as it has
been over the past year, in the hope that it can restore order
and pave the way for the resumption of lucrative investments.
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