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Public servants strike deepens Tongas political
crisis
By John Braddock
19 August 2005
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In the largest ever protest rally in the Pacific Island kingdom
of Tonga, up to 10,000 public servants, their families and supporters
marched through the capital Nukualofa to the royal palace
on August 8. At the same time, an unprecedented general strike
by 3,000 government workers entered a third week, demanding wage
increases of up to 80 percent. The cabinet had earlier warned
strikers that if they failed to return to work, they would be
dealt with under the Public Service regulations, a thinly veiled
threat that they would be sacked or punished.
King Taufaahau Tupou IV failed to end the strike last
Friday with the promise of an independent audit of
the public service salary scales. The civil servants declared
they would continue the strike and over the weekend thousands
defied a government order to vacate their rallying point at Pangai
SiI, a park in central Nukualofa. The countrys
primary and secondary school teachers had earlier been instructed
to resume school for the third term on August 9. The teachers,
supported by parents and students, responded to the order by keeping
the schools closed and organising a second march on the day after
the main demonstration.
Tensions escalated further this week. On Thursday, four government-owned
vehicles were set alight and students threatened to burn government
buildings if authorities did not move to settle the strike. Buildings
in the centre of Nukualofa were scorched by the heat of
the burning cars. The previous day students at Tonga College smashed
cars belonging to strikebreakers brought into the school, and
ransacked the schools computer rooms and offices, protesting
the dismissal of the principal and senior staff.
While previously claiming that strikers had begun returning
to work this week, government officials are now moving to bring
in an arbitrator. Large crowds continue to gather every day in
the capital in support of the strikers. Meanwhile, members of
Aucklands Tongan community yesterday mounted a protest against
the Tongan king who is in New Zealand to celebrate a family engagement.
His visit is viewed as a sign of how little the royal family cares
for the grievances of the Tongan people.
The strike began on July 22, triggered by the governments
rejection of a request by the newly established Public Service
Association (PSA) to reconsider huge disparities in salary increases
in the budget. The upper echelons of the service were to get disproportionately
large increases, while low-wage earners were to receive as little
as one percent. Senior civil servants are currently paid $US20,000
a year, while other government workers receive as little as $1,300.
Despite PSA attempts to defer strike action, a mass meeting demanded
it commence immediately.
The strike began in the main government departments, effectively
bringing the agencies to a halt. The government is Tongas
biggest employer. The offices of the Ministries of Lands, Labour,
Fisheries, Marine and Ports, Works, the Civil Service Commission,
the Treasury and the Post office were all closed. The government
insisted there would be no change to the salary structure, prompting
an estimated 2,000 public servants to march on parliament to present
letters to the prime minister and speaker of the house.
The strike quickly spread. On July 23, the absence of staff
to clear and discharge cargo forced one ship to bypass Tonga.
The government then promised to address salary anomalies
and urged workers to return to work. The strikers were adamant
they receive greater pay increases. On July 26, public schools
throughout the country were forced to close after more than 1,400
teachers walked out. A week later, doctors, nurses, dentists and
support staff at the main Vaiola Hospital voted to strike as well.
By then the strikers demands had crystallised into a
universal call for across-the-board pay rises of 60, 70
and 80 percent for all public sector workers, and community
support began to grow. While the head of the Tonga Chamber of
Commerce and Industries denounced an 80 percent rise as suicidal,
and not realistic in terms of what the government can afford,
the civil servants had begun receiving donations and support from
many small businesses. Influential church leaders threw their
weight behind the strike.
Over the course of two weeks, workers rejected a series of
offers by the governmentstarting with a mediated settlement,
then an across-the-board 12.5 percent rise, a set of increases
between 10 and 20 percent and finally a 30 percent rise. In a
sign of increasing tensions, the manager of a private television
station said the power supply had been deliberately cut off ahead
of a planned broadcast of a PSA statement. The manager said he
had received threats from official circles to stop broadcasting
anti-government views or his premises would be bulldozed.
At an extraordinary meeting held at the Atele Indoor Stadium
on August 5, teachers rejected a $2 million offer from the Ministry
of Education to settle their wage demands separately. According
to reports, the minister and his director appeared very
pleased with themselves when they presented the new salary
structure, designed only for teachers, which provided increases
ranging from 60 percent at the top of the scale to 125 percent
at the bottom.
To clapping and cheers, the first speaker from the floor said
the offer was too late, that the glass of water has been
spilled and the only acceptable offer was the 60,
70, 80 percent for all public servants. The teachers declared
they would not be split from other striking public servants.
Two days earlier, over 100 Tonga College students had marched
through central Nukualofa singing songs. The march, led
by the head prefect, wound its way to Pangai SiI where it
was greeted by several thousand strikers. The prefect said that
since the strike began the students had felt homeless and
neglected because they did not hear their teachers voices
any more, but they had come to give the teachers and other
strikers their full support.
Political crisis
The strike takes place in the context of a deepening crisis
of political rule in the small island state of some 110,000 people.
In May, 4,000 demonstrators marched on the royal palace protesting
rising electricity prices and the monopoly control of the countrys
power supply by the Shoreline Group, a company owned by Crown
Prince Tupoutoa. Shoreline took over when the electricity
system was privatised three years ago.
The march followed revelations by a former Shoreline employee
that the prince was paying himself and two business partners annual
salaries of about $US400,000 each. Dismissing the criticisms as
jealousy, the prince contemptuously declared: Everybody
in this country is in business. It just so happens that most of
them grow taro [a staple food]. I am in power generation instead
of growing taro.
The marchers demanded that electricity generation to be returned
to the government, but numerous banners indicated broader political
discontent, with some calling for democracy while others protested
about selfish leaders. Another march to parliament
earlier in the year protested against the imposition of a new
15 percent consumption tax on all goods and services.
Public unrest intensified this year over the business activities
and ostentatious wealth of the kings childrenTupoutoa
and Princess Salote Pilolevu Tuita. Besides his personal control
of the electricity network, the prince also owns the only brewery,
a cell phone company and Tongas Internet domain name. His
sister controls Tongas sovereign geo-stationary satellite
slots through a Hong Kong registered company and leases them out
to Chinese companies, garnering millions.
Popular resentment over social and economic inequities has
resurfaced in the current strike. Statements have referred to
the injustice exercised by the distribution of the nations
wealth by His Majestys cabinet. Others have criticised
the millions of dollars given away to Shoreline and Royal Tongan
Airlines, which collapsed last year with debts of $US12 million.
According to the PSA, the total required to meet the salary claims
for the least privileged is $20 millionbut this
is proving too difficult for them to give.
The Tongan royal family, established in the nineteenth century
under the tutelage of British Methodist missionaries, wields almost
absolute power. The monarch, now 87 years old and the ruler since
1965, appoints both the prime minister and deputy prime minister
for life, as well as the entire cabinet, the Privy Council and
the Supreme Court. The constitution guarantees that the unelected
elite controls the 30-seat parliament. Twelve seats are reserved
for the appointed cabinet ministers and nine are selected by the
countrys 33 nobles, who acquire their life titles
by descent. Only nine MPs are elected by popular vote.
The principal critic has been the Human Rights and Democracy
Movement (HRDM). According to its mouthpiece, the Matangi Tonga
newspaper, the traditional leaders are all tied up in their
own business interests, making it difficult to separate
their business and national interests.
While appealing to popular discontent, the HRDM primarily represents
a layer of local and expatriate business and professional entrepreneurs
who are seeking to break up the monarchys stranglehold on
economic and political power. A prominent convert to their ranks
is former Police Minister Clive Edwards, who is currently leading
a court challenge to have power generation returned to the Tonga
Electric Power Board.
Opportunist manoeuvering
In recent elections, the HRDM captured the majority of commoner
seats in the parliament. Earlier this year, however, the pro-democracy
faction split, resulting in the establishment of a new party,
the Peoples Democratic Party. There were no issues of principle
separating the two with each claiming to represent the pro-democracy
movement.
Their manoeuvering was exposed immediately after the March
elections when the king persuaded two of the peoples
representatives to resign and join the cabinet, effectively
reducing the strength of the opposition from nine seats to seven.
One of the kings recruits, long-standing democracy advocate
Feleti Sevele, was promoted to acting prime minister to deal with
the popular groundswell against the governing elite.
Efforts have been made to confine the public sector strike
to narrow official channels. The PSA gave over the platform of
the August 8 march to the kings nephew Prince Tuipelehake,
who used the occasion to claim the title of the Peoples
Prince. The PSA worked with the prince to turn the march
into a supplication to the king. Outside the royal palace, a petition
was ceremonially handed to Princess Piloevu Tuita amid prayers
and the singing of the national anthem. One media report described
the prince as having cemented a personal relationship with
the strikers.
However, the issues raised by the strikeabove all the
deep divide between rich and poorare explosive ones. Poverty
is widespread in the country, with ordinary households depending
heavily on money remitted from islanders living and working overseas.
Three years ago the government launched a $US10 million program
of privatising public utilities, downsizing the public service,
tax changes, encouraging free trade, introducing an open
skies policy to boost international air flights and tourism,
and seeking WTO membership. While the program has been criticised
for failing to deliver services or boost the economy, the policies
have widened the gap between the tiny privileged elite and ordinary
Tongans.
An Asian Development Bank report, released in March, into hardship
and poverty in Tonga found that 23 percent of the 16 communities
surveyed across 6 of the main islands were living below the poverty
line of $T28.18 ($US14.72) per week. It also noted the countrys
deteriorating economy, pointing to the rising cost of living,
the falling value of the Tongan paanga (dollar) and the
wastage of public funds.
The document described how poor families had to make daily
choices between buying food and paying school fees. Other hardships
included: widespread dependency on relatives for food, money and
shelter; inability to meet basic family needs; supporting too
many dependents in one household; and limited access to resources,
particularly land, and inability to meet traditional obligations.
The only reason more people were not in the category of poverty
was that they were able to grow subsistence crops.
Tongas neighbours are closely observing the strength
and intensity of the strikeand broad support it has won.
New Zealand parliaments foreign affairs select committee
recently concluded a special inquiry into Tonga with a series
of recommendations to provide an impetus for change.
The recommendations included targeting aid programs to prevent
corruption, promoting public sector reform, facilitating
democratic changetargeting in particular the
judiciary, legislature and public serviceand increasing
trade opportunities.
While the committee stopped short of recommending more direct
intervention, Wellingtons recent military deployments to
other so-called failed states, such as the Solomon
Islands, have established a clear precedent for such actions to
assert New Zealands economic and strategic interests in
the Pacific.
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