A Coup that failed? Recent Political Events in Vanuatu
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Ambrose, David
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Canberra, ACT: Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, College of Asia and the Pacific, The Australian National University
Abstract
When Vanuatu conducted its fourth postindependence
general election, in November last
year, more was at stake perhaps than in any
previous election.
For the first twelve years of independence, the
country's anglophone majority had held
government through the same party, the Vanua'aku
Party (VP), and its constituents had enjoyed the
benefits that power and the scope for preferment
that being in office brings.
For many anglophone politicians and
constituents alike, therefore, the four years spent in
Opposition, 1991-1995, were a painful lesson in
the consequences of electoral defeat.
By contrast, the francophone minority, who
had endured more than a decade of, in their view,
disadvantage and discrimination under anglophone
rule, finally won office in 1991 and had begun to
redress those years of perceived injustice and
inequality
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