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WSWS : News
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& South Pacific : Fiji
Fiji remains tense after new coup threat
By Frank Gagliotti
16 January 2006
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Bitter divisions in ruling circles in the small Pacific island
state of Fiji have resurfaced after the countrys military
commander, Commodore Voreqe Bainimarama, last week threatened
to stage a coup if the government proceeded with its planned Reconciliation,
Tolerance and Unity Bill. The legislation, which would provide
amnesty for the leaders of a May 2000 coup attempt, is due to
be passed in February when the parliament resumes.
Bainimarama, who made similar threats last August when the
Bill was introduced, declared on January 8: [I]f they [the
government] lack the moral strength and the courage to continue
the good fight the military is willing to return and complete
for this nation the responsibilities we gave this government in
2000 and 2001.
In May 2000, coup leader George Speight, an ethnic Fijian businessman,
and a handful of special forces troops took over the parliament
at gun point, detaining the first elected Fijian-Indian Prime
Minister Mahendra Chaudhry and members of his Labour-led government
for 56 days. The military led by Bainimarama imposed martial law
and installed the current Prime Minister, Laisenia Qarase, as
an unelected caretaker, then brokered a deal with Speight to end
the standoff at parliament house.
With the backing of the ethnic Fijian establishment, Qarase
formed a government sympathetic to the Speights communalist
aims. He placed a number of Speights backers in his cabinet
and implemented much of their racist agenda for measures favouring
ethnic Fijians. A year later, his government was elected amid
an ongoing communalist campaign against ethnic Indians.
After pressure from Australia and New Zealand, Speight and
some of his closest supporters were eventually tried and jailed,
but none of the tensions that gave rise to the coup have been
resolved. The Reconciliation Bill panders to Qarases communal
constituency. Incapable of resolving the countrys deep social
crisis, sections of the ruling elite have repeatedly stirred up
animosity toward ethnic Indians, who form nearly half of the population,
as a means of diverting anger over widespread poverty and joblessness.
When he declared military rule in 2000, Bainimarama represented
sections of the ruling elite that were just as mired in Fijian
chauvinism but more mindful of the demands of the regional powers,
Australia and New Zealand, as well as the United States, for political
stability and more open markets to allow profitable investment.
In the current crisis, he has accused the government of using
racist policies and programs to justify its existence to
the indigenous community and to influence the community
at large to support the cause of the opportunists [Speight and
his backers]. He expressed concerns that the release of
Speight and others would jeopardise investment.
Others in ruling circles, however, including within the military,
are concerned that the continued sparring between the Bainimarama
and the government has the potential to spiral out of control.
Qarase placed a gag on government members speaking out on the
issue and the Fijilive website reported that on January
12 Qarase summoned Police Commissioner Andrew Hughes before the
National Security Council to discuss Bainimaramas threats.
The military commander was not invited to the meeting.
On the same day, the military headquarters at Queen Elizabeth
Barracks in Suva were locked down and placed on heavy guard by
military police, while naval vessels took to the harbour, fuelling
speculation of an imminent coup. On January 13, the Fiji Times
reported that the Police Tactical Response Group had set up roadblocks.
With the possibility the situation could escalate even further,
Qarase called Bainimarama to a special meeting today with acting
President Ratu Joni Madraiwiwi and Home Affairs Minister Josefa
Vosanibola at Government House in an attempt to broker a deal
and defuse the immediate crisis. Neither Qarase nor Bainimarama
would comment after the two-hour meeting, although Qarase said
an official statement would follow.
Qarase previously indicated that he may modify the Reconciliation
Bill on its reintroduction to parliament, stating that I
must confirm that we plan to make a few amendments. Whatever
cosmetic changes are ultimately made to the Bill, Qarase intends
to make ethnic Fijian chauvinism a central plank of his campaign
for elections due in September.
There are indications of significant divisions within the military.
On January 12, Bainimarama held a meeting with senior army and
warrant officers to answer concerns on the continued tensions
with the government. The Fiji Times reported that a group
of senior officers, led by Acting Land Force Commander Lieutenant
Colonel Jone Baledrokadroka, confronted Bainimarama, demanding
he stop making public statements against the government.
Bainimarama later dismissed Baledrokadroka from his post, telling
newspapers that the colonel refused to follow orders and had threatened
to shoot him. Bainimarama also claimed that some government officials
had held a meeting with Baledrokadroka to instigate a revolt against
him.
For his part, in an interview with the New Zealand Herald
on January 15, Baledrokadroka said he had confronted Bainimarama
to demand that he stop taking treasonous and illegal
acts, which would have taken the country down the road of
instability. Baledrokadroka also made a pitch for foreign
support, saying Bainimarama should step down to make way for a
New Zealand or Australian officer to take charge, in order to
apoliticise the military.
The regional powers have indicated their disquiet over the
continuing instability. New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters
said the New Zealand Government reiterates its position
that all parties should remain calm and resolve their differences
through dialogue. Acting Australian Prime Minister Mark
Vaile called on the military to stay out of politics. There
is a democratically elected government in position, in operation,
governing Fiji that should be left to do its job, he told
Australian Broadcasting Corporation radio.
Like Bainimarama, Canberra and Wellington had pressed for Speight
and his co-conspirators to be put on trial and jailed as part
of their efforts to impose political stability. Canberra also
pressured Qarases regime to allow Australian officials to
oversee government operations, including the treasury, the legal
system and the police. The current Police Commissioner Hughes
is a former Australian Federal Police officer.
Far from resolving the issues that led to the 2000 coup attempt,
the trials began to involve figures close to the government, including
Vice-President Ratu Jope Seniloli. In response, Qarase pushed
for his Reconciliation, Tolerance and Unity Bill. While not supportive
of Qarases legislation, Australia and New Zealand do not
want another military coup and more political instability that
will cut across their economic and strategic interests in Fiji
and the Pacific region.
Sensitive to the possibility that the situation could escalate,
Fijis two daily papers called on the government to act against
the military and bring it to order. The January 13 Fiji Sun
editorial stated that the government must come out with
a definitive statement taking the strong position that the army
must stay out of politics. The Fiji Times editorial
headed an ageing dinosaur in white called on Bainimarama
to voluntarily decommission himself and resign as
military head.
Although all the warring parties have called for calm, nothing
has been resolved.
See Also:
Threats of a new military
coup in Fiji
[11 August 2005]
Fijian government
moves to pardon coup plotters
[16 June 2005]
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