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Fijian Vice President faces trial on coup charges
By Frank Gaglioti
26 June 2003
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Fijis Vice President Ratu Jope Seniloli, two government
ministers and four other leading participants in the May 2000
racialist coup mounted by George Speight, are due to re-appear
in court in the capital Suva on July 23, charged with engaging
in a seditious enterprise. They are also charged with taking an
illegal oath to commit a capital offence, and face possible life
imprisonment.
The prosecutions are extraordinary, not only due to the political
status of the accused, but also because their arrests were so
belated, coming three years after the offence. They are alleged
to have taken oaths of office to join Speights regime after
he stormed the parliament and took Prime Minister Mahendra Chaudhry
and most of his government hostage.
Speight and his closest associates were arrested in July 2000
and charged with treason. By contrast, several key figures, including
Seniloli, Speights choice as president, were permitted to
occupy senior posts in the government installed by the military
under merchant banker Laisenia Qarase.
Qarases government ludicrously protested that it did
not have the resources to investigate the crimes alleged against
Seniloli and his co-accused. Yet, Speights swearing-in ceremony
was filmed before a throng of international press photographers
and the defendants were well-known coup supporters.
During the lengthy trial in March this year of politician Timoci
Silatolu and journalist Joe Nata, both convicted of treason, a
crucial exhibit was a video of a ceremony in which Seniloli was
clearly seen swearing in Silatolu as a post-coup prime minister.
On the video, he also swore in as a minister one of his co-accused,
Ratu Rakuita Vakalalabure, who punched the air in defiance and
cried.
On May 8, Seniloli first appeared before court amid a tight
security cordon. With him were Youth, Sports and Employment Minister
Sireli Leweniqila, nationalist politician Viliame Savu, who is
currently serving a prison sentence on a coup-related charge,
and two former parliamentarians, Peceli Rinakama and Viliame Volavola.
Leweniqila was Speights attorney general, Rinakama was his
Education, Science and Technology Minister, and Volavola was Minister
of Works.
On June 11, Deputy Speaker Ratu Rakuita Vakalalabure and the
Lands Minister Ratu Naiqama Lalabalavu appeared before the court
as well. Vakalalabure was Speights Civil Aviation Minister
and Lalabalavu was the Housing and Urban Development Minister.
Despite the evidence against them, Qarase has moved against
the coup supporters in the most tentative manner possible. On
June 11, he refused to sack or even stand aside the arrested ministers,
arguing that a criminal charge is not proof of guilt.
In spite of the seriousness of the charges, the accused were immediately
released on bail of $US5,200 each.
Speights coup exposed deep rifts within Fijian ruling
circles, and split the military. By ousting Chaudhry, Fijis
first prime minister of Indian descent, Speight and his backers
sought to mobilise a Fijian chauvinist movement to strengthen
land-owning and business privileges for ethnic Fijian chiefs and
entrepreneurs.
Qarase has been reluctant to prosecute the coup leaders for
fear of provoking another coup. More fundamentally, his government
was itself a product of the coup, installed by the military, which
took control and refused to reinstate Chaudhrys elected
government. Qarases cabinet included known coup supporters
and largely implemented Speights anti-Indian program.
Seniloli was anointed vice president as part of the political
accommodation known as the Maunikau Accord between Speight and
the armed forces chief, Commodore Voreqe Bainimarama, which ended
the hostage crisis. The Accord also sought to meet the demands
of the regional powers, Australia and New Zealand, for an end
to the political turmoil.
The Howard government in Canberra, supported by the Clark government
in Wellington, endorsed the compromise. In order to stabilise
the situation in the South Pacifics most populous country
and largest economy, they accepted the formation of Qarases
military-backed government and tolerated its chauvinist program.
At the same time, they insisted that Qarase carry through severe
austerity programs and measures to re-open the economy to international
exploitation.
Australian intervention
It appears that the reversal of the decision not to prosecute
Seniloli has been made under pressure from the Howard government.
Having worked with the Qarase government for three years, Canberra
is now demanding that the prosecutions proceed in order to shore
up what remains a shaky political situation and as a warning to
any future coup plotters.
According to a recent article in the Bulletin magazine,
the Australian High Commissioner in Fiji Susan Boyd urged Qarases
government to ensure the arrests took place: Boyd has forged
a close relationship with Qarase and is said to be a trusted confidante...The
trial of the vice-president and his co-defendants is going ahead
with Australian assistance.
To ensure that the trials are not aborted, an Australian lawyer,
Peter Ridgway has become Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions,
taking charge of the prosecutions. On June 11, Australian Federal
Police Assistant Commissioner Andrew Hughes was appointed Fijis
new Police Commissioner.
These are only two of the more prominent and publicised placements
of Australian personnel in key government and military posts.
Half a dozen advisers have been attached to the Fijian military
and a similar number of officials installed in the criminal legal
system. Australian Federal Police officers are also working in
Fiji.
These developments represent an underlying shift in Australian
policy. Over recent years, the Howard government has taken an
increasingly bullying stance toward Fiji and other Pacific region
states, demanding that they adopt structural adjustment
programs, slashing public services and living standards,
privatising key facilities and removing barriers to investment.
These measures have only deepened the economic and social crisis
and political instability in these countries.
Now, in the name of preventing failed states, Canberra
is adopting more blunt and direct forms of intervention. The shift
flows from the Howard governments participation in the war
against Iraq as a junior partner of the Bush administration. Media
outlets such as the Bulletin, owned by Kerry Packer, are
openly heralding a new era of Australian dominance in Fiji and
throughout the region.
According to the Bulletin: Australia is
now indisputably the No.1 foreign power in Fiji and is asserting
itself in ways that were inconceivable during the Labor years
and even Prime Minister John Howards first two terms. Alarmed
by the steady degeneration of Australias island neighbours,
Howard is spearheading a concerted diplomatic effort to influence
and assist the government of Fijian Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase.
It signals a distinct shift in Australian policy in the South
Pacificnot just engagement but direct, hands-on intervention.
The Bulletin states that island leaders like Qarase
are ... more receptive, aware of the new realpolitik that
sees Australian power significantly enhanced by its role in Iraq
and closer relationship with the United States. In a region of
big-man politics, Howard also has fresh stature; having
been dubbed man of steel by the biggest man of all
[US President Bush].
By placing Seniloli and his co-accused on trial, Qarase hopes
to appease Australia and New Zealand, but the decision places
his government in a very tenuous position. His ruling coalition
includes the Conservative Alliance Matanitu Vanua Party (CAMV),
which backed Speights coup.
Unlike the Solomon Islands, where it has just announced plans
to dispatch a military and police force, the Howard government
has proceeded more cautiously in Fiji. But the insertion of Australian
personnel into key posts in Fiji is clearly aimed strengthening
Canberras role in the countrys state apparatus and
to prepare for any contingencies, including direct intervention.
See Also:
In the aftermath of Iraq
Australian government prepares intervention in Solomon Islands
[25 June 2003]
Fijian military court
convicts 15 soldiers on mutiny charges
[26 November 2002]
Zimbabwe, Fiji and
the hypocrisy of British Commonwealth leaders
[13 March 2002]
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