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Tongan monarchy defies mass protests and tightens media controls
By John Braddock
29 October 2003
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Tongas parliament last week passed controversial changes
to the countrys constitution that will increase state control
of the media and increase the power of the near-absolute monarch,
King Taufaahau Tupou IV. The amendments were moved, at the
behest of the king, in the 30-seat Legislative Assembly after
earlier efforts this year to ban the New Zealand-published Taimi
o Tonga [Times of Tonga] newspaper failed. The Supreme
Court had declared the bans unconstitutional.
After several weeks of debate, the assembly passed by 16 votes
to 11 the changes to Clause 7 of the constitution, which previously
guaranteed freedom of speech. The changes will enhance the dictatorial
powers of the monarch, giving him unilateral powers over media
activities and the right to express dissent. All 12 cabinet ministers,
who hold life appointments from the king and are not elected,
voted for the changes while all eight commoner MPs
who were present voted against. In a highly unusual move, three
representatives of the so-called nobles also voted
against.
Ten days earlier, thousands of people had marched to protest
the impending changes, although protest marches are rare in Tonga,
which has a population of just 104,000. In the capital, Nukualofa,
8,000 marchersthe largest demonstration in the Pacific kingdoms
historytook a petition to the assembly. Church leaders,
teachers, doctors, mothers with babies were among those to take
to the streets, carrying banners opposing the new laws. A Catholic
bishop led the main march and presented the petition containing
7,600 signatures, about a third of which had been collected among
the expatriate Tongan community in New Zealand.
In April, the government declared the Taimi o Tonga
a prohibited import in response to a long-running campaign over
corruption centring on the royal family. The government was thrown
into crisis after the Supreme Court ruled that ordinances to enforce
the ban, which were made by the king in the Privy Council, were
unlawful and unconstitutional. When the government went to the
Appeal Court over one of the Supreme Court decisions, the appeal
was also dismissed. The government subsequently defied the court
to try to keep the newspaper out of the country, but was finally
forced to back down. It then moved to change the constitution,
giving it the legal power to enforce the ban and stifle further
dissent.
The campaign against the constitutional change was led by the
commoner MPs. In the legislature, 12 seats are reserved
for cabinet ministers appointed by the king and led by his youngest
son, Prime Minister Ulukalala Lavaka Ata. Nine MPs are selected
by the countrys 33 nobles, who acquire their
life titles by descent, and only the remaining nine are elected
by popular vote. Seven of the commoner MPs are members
of the Human Rights and Democracy Movement (HRDM), to which the
Taimi o Tonga is closely allied.
The papers Auckland-based publisher, Kalafi Moala, said
the march signalled the peoples growing anger at the constitutional
change and the gathering strength of the pro-democracy movement
in Tonga. People are feeling that their freedom is going
to be infringed on, not just the media, but their freedom to speak.
There was a lot of passion from people at the march. The
march was an indication of a rising tide of resistance to
the monarchy. As a result of the vote, however, Moala said
he expected his newspaper to be permanently banned, and that there
would be no further legal recourse.
Demonstrating the schism opening up within Tongan ruling circles,
the Matangi Tonga newspaper editorialised that the changes
were madness. [They] will damage the reputation
of this country beyond our wildest nightmares. [They go] against
the principles of the civilised world. The editorial went
on to warn the government that it would not win respect by changing
the laws simply because it had lost court cases against its critics.
When the bill was taken into parliament for its second reading
three days after the demonstrations, the government simply dismissed
the protests. Government spokesperson Eseta Fusitua said opponents
did not understand the changes to Clause 7 and that
parliament should note that a majority of citizens did not join
the march. She said the protests mainly represented Catholics
and that people had only marched because their church leaders
or relatives had told them to.
The mass demonstration had, in fact, taken place in the face
of a concerted campaign by high-level officials to prevent it.
A team, including the Acting Deputy Prime Minister Clive Edwards
and five other ministers, held a number of village meetings to
try to shore up popular support for the law change. At the meetings,
which were later televised, many people challenged the need for
the change and support for the government was very low, even among
the more conservative village leaders. In desperation, Edwards
responded by accusing the HRDM politicians of treason.
The banning of the New Zealand-published newspaper and the
moves to alter the constitution have deep-seated causes, lodged
in the profound social and economic tensions now raging in the
Pacific. A recent report posted on the University of Hawaiis
Pacific Islands Report website notes that Pacific nations
have the worlds highest suicide rates.
In Tonga poverty is widespread, with ordinary households depending
largely on money remitted from expatriate islanders living overseas.
Tourism provides the only other significant source of hard currency.
Unemployment is into double figures, with only about a quarter
of the 2,000 young people who leave school each year able to find
jobs.
In 2001, the government attempted to divert anger over deteriorating
economic conditions by victimising Chinese shopkeepers. Hundreds
were earmarked for deportation on expiry of their work permits
on the grounds that they were creating ill-feeling
by dominating the economy. Meanwhile the royal family
lives in ostentatious luxury, controlling lucrative business activities
and requiring ordinary Tongans to pay tithes from their village
plantations.
Against this background, the HRDM has emerged, receiving political
support from the New Zealand government and the Commonwealth,
to challenge the entrenched monarchy in order to modernise
the economy and governance of the state. The HRDMs
program, however, has nothing to do with improving the lot of
ordinary Tongans. It primarily represents the interests of a layer
of local and expatriate business and professional entrepreneurs
who seek to reform the monarchy along British lines
and take over the levers of power, establishing commercial ventures
and control of international foreign investment and trade.
See Also:
Newspaper ban exposes growing
conflict in Tongan ruling circles
[6 June 2003]
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