In Spite of Mr Speight? Fijis road to the general elections
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Lal, Brij
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University of Canterbury and ANU
Abstract
George Speight's seizure of the Fiji parliament on 19 May 2000 now seems like
a bad, nightmarish dream. Contrary to all provocations and incentives to
violence, Fiji managed, but only just, to retrieve itself from the precipice of
national disintegration. A year later, Speight was tried for treason, and is
currently serving a seven-year sentence, though moves are afoot to have him
pardoned. In August 2001 the country went to the polls, returning Laisenia
Qarase's newly-formed Soqosoqo Duavata ni Levenivanua to government with
thirty-two seats. The Labour Party, his main rival, won twenty-seven. The
holding of the election was an important development, but instead of resolving
the country's many deep-seated problems it compounded them. Qarase
breached the constitution under which he was elected by refusing to have
Chaudhry in a multi-party cabinet. The constitution provides that any political
party with more than 10 per cent of seats in parliament is constitutionally
entitled to be invited into cabinet. Under a formula provided for in the Korolevu
Declaration, Qarase would have twelve cabinet positions and Chaudhry eight.
Labour challenged the government's decision. The Fiji Court of Appeal ruled in
Labour's favour, but the matter will be settled finally by the Supreme Court in
early 2003. Meanwhile, Fiji remains marooned in the shallows. Whether the
people of Fiji will accept the verdict of the court, whatever it might be, remains
to be seen.
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Arc of Instability?: Melanesia in the Early 2000s
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