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Signs of more political instability in Fiji
By Frank Gaglioti
29 January 2004
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An acrimonious struggle has broken out this month in Fijis
ruling circles between the head of the military Commander Frank
Bainimarama and sections of the government led by Prime Minister
Laisenia Qarase, threatening to reignite the festering conflicts
that remain unresolved following the failed coup attempt in 2000.
The conflict centres on who will head the Fijian military.
Bainimaramas commission is due to expire at the end of February
and the government wants to replace him. Bainimarama, however,
has indicated that he will not go until all those involved in
the 2000 eventswhich includes members of Qarases governmenthave
been dealt with in the courts.
Who controls the military is no small matter in Fijian politics.
The military successfully ousted an elected Labour government
in 1987 and replaced it with a regime headed by the army chief
Sitiveni Rabuka. In May 2000, George Speight and a group of special
forces soldiers seized parliament and held the entire Labour government
hostage for weeks. The army abrogated the 1987 constitution and
effectively seized power. Bainimarama ended the immediate crisis
by brokering Speights surrender and the installation of
the Qarase cabinet leaving the elected Labour government out of
power.
Last week tensions again appeared to reach breaking point with
media rumours of an imminent coup. While Prime Minister Qarase
rushed to make a televised address denying media speculation and
appealing for calm, there have been definite indications that
Bainimarama was threatening the government.
In an interview in the Review business magazine in early
January, he declared: We (the military) have decided we
must play our part in the governance of this country and provide
the government with continued advice on security issues with regards
to the rule of law. That is why I am being attacked by politicians
and ministers alike.
Later in the interview, he added that the military would only
resist the push in one direction; not in the governance of the
country. We stay away from that. Only when it touches security
and when we see people interfere in the rule of law being followed.
The significance of such statements would not have been lost on
the members of Qarases government who are well aware of
the role played by Bainimarama in 2000.
The interview was followed by constant media speculation of
an impending showdown between Bainimarana and the government.
Agence France Presse journalist Michael Field wrote on January
13: Fiji is slipping into an unusual kind of crisis that
is either a looming coup at worst, or a weird kind of bureaucratic
mess at best.
Rumours intensified after Radio Fiji reported on January 19
that Bainimarama had held a meeting of his senior officers asking
them to swear allegiance to him. Those who refused were directed
to take leave. The following day the Police Commissioner Andrew
Hughes was called to intervene in a commotion between
Bainimarama and Home Affairs Secretary Jeremian Waqanisau. Home
Affairs is the department in charge of deciding who will head
the military.
The same day Qarase was forced to break his silence on the
dispute and called a meeting of the National Security Council.
He later went on radio and television to allay any fears of an
impending coup. I can confirm to you that there is no basis
for a newspaper report which spoke about a security alert. There
is no such alert, Qarase declared, adding that the dispute
over the military commanders post should be kept out of
the public light and settled according to established legal procedure.
Qarases comments gloss over the fact, however, that the
record of the Fijian ruling elites in settling their disputes
according to accepted legal and constitutional norms is a very
checkered one. The immediate issue is how to deal with those responsible
for the 2000 coup attempt but this touches on more fundamental
concerns.
Some in the Qarase government have an obvious vested interest
in shutting down the trials. Vice President Ratu Jope Seniloli
and two government ministers were charged last year with sedition
and the junior partner in the ruling coalitionthe Conservative
Allianceincludes George Speights brother and others
who want to see him and his fellow coup plotters released.
Bainimarama, on the other hand, represents layers of the ruling
elite. They are just as mired ethnic Fijian chauvinism as Speight
but regard the trials as essential to prove to international investors
and the major powers that the legacy of the events of 2000 has
been overcome and full political stability restored.
These divisions go to the heart of the Qarase government. It
has been trying to attract foreign investment and aid but at the
same time rests politically on very conservative Fijian social
layers that are hostile to any changes to their entrenched privileges
based on a racially divided voting system and almost exclusive
ethnic Fijian ownership of the land.
Exacerbating these tensions is the fragile state of the Fijian
economy. It has restabilised to some extent since 2000 and foreign
investment is flowing in. The New Zealand-based National Business
Review reported last week that Fijis growth rate, which
was negative three years ago, was now running at more than 5 percent
with inflation low and falling. Chief executive of the Fiji Islands
Trade and Investment Bureau (FTIB) Lailun Khan said that $F1.2
billion investment was expected during 2002-2005, mostly from
tourism which is booming.
But as the events of 2000 graphically demonstrated the rosy
economic picture could rapidly change if there were any hint of
a coup. For some, Bainimarama is seen as the only guarantee of
future political stability. This is particularly the case when
other factors threaten to create social tensions. The sugar industry
which employs about a quarter of the workforcemany of them
ethnic Indians who make up nearly half of the populationsis
currently undergoing a major restructure. The change threatens
to undermine the income of the land-owning ethnic Fijian elite
and to drive thousands of Indian tenant farmers off the land.
The Pacific Islands Report website recently posted a
comment entitled Bainimaramas steady hand is Fijis
only hope by former director of the Fiji Trade and Investment
Board (FTIB) Narendra P. Singh. He warned that any economic gains
would be eradicated overnight if the nation is pushed into
mayhem once again. And this time Fiji will be staggering for a
long time and perhaps even will be forced to join the Pacific
neighbours, like the Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea, where
it would have to ask the developed partners to intervene and assist
in providing good governance.
Behind the scenes, it is virtually certain that the Australian
and New Zealand governments have been exerting their influence
to ensure that a political crisis in Fiji is averted. Both governments
played a major role in strengthening Bainimaramas hand at
the time of the 2000 coup and have supported efforts to ensure
that Speight and others were charged and tried. None of this had
anything to do with the democratic rights of the Fijian peopleneither
government insisted on the restoration of the elected Labour government.
Since last weeks fracas there has been growing pressure
on Qarase to maintain Bainimarama in his post. An editorial on
January 22 in the Fiji Sun entitled Fiji owes allegiance
to Bainimarama declared that there was a large reservoir
of trust for the army among the citizenry and praised the
military chief for restoring order after the 2000 coup as
the democratic process that put the nation back on the path of
stability it enjoys today. The newspaper also reported that
former coup leader Sitiveni Rabuka had also weighed in behind
Bainimarama.
Whatever the immediate outcome to the present political conflict,
none of the underlying issues have been resolved, paving the way
for future crises.
See Also:
Fijian Vice President
faces trial on coup charges
[26 June 2003]
Fijian military court
convicts 15 soldiers on mutiny charges
[26 November 2002]
Race-based regime
clings to power in Fiji
[27 November 2001]
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