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Ratu Tevita plans 'pro-democracy' diplomatic tours in US, Pacific


Fiji fugitive Ratu Tevita Uluilakeba Mara at the Papatoetoe Town Hall on Saturday night. Photo: Alex Perrottet/PMC

Alex Perrottet, Pacific Media Watch

25 July, 2011

RATU MARA WOOS NZ-BASED SUPPORT
Ratu Tevita Mara has been on a five-day flag-waving tour of New Zealand for a return to "democracy" in Fiji. Pacific Media Watch contributing editor Alex Perrottet was on hand at the reformed coup soldier's Auckland meeting and reports on Mara's speech and backgrounds the event.

Former Fijian lieutenant-colonel and now political fugitive Ratu Tevita Uluilakeba Mara is departing New Zealand for Tonga today, and plans to make a whirlwind tour to the US and around the Pacific over the next month to promote "democracy".

He is planning to visit Samoa, Vanuatu, the Cook Islands, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, before returning to Auckland for the Pacific Islands Forum in early September.

Speaking at the Papatoetoe Town Hall at a meeting organised by the Fiji Democracy and Freedom Movement New Zealand on Saturday night, Ratu Mara said he was still garnering support from other Pacific nations for his cause of bringing democracy back to Fiji.

'Unelected, illegal and corrupt'
He had particularly harsh words for the Prime Minister of the Solomon Islands, Danny Philip, who has supported Bainimarama resuming chairmanship of the Melanesian Spearhead Group.

“The Prime Minister of the Solomon Islands conveniently forgets that many Fijian soldiers gave their lives for that country during World War Two and now is he siding with an unelected illegal and corrupt regime,” he said.

“With the support of the Solomon Islands, [the regime] has resumed chairmanship of the MSG and its plan is to use it as a front against Australia and New Zealand.”

Ratu Mara plans on visiting Samoa first, after being invited by Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi when they met in Australia last month.

The former military officer, who fled Fiji in May after being charged with sedition, called on the 400-strong audience and all people to unite against what he repeatedly referred to as the “illegal regime”.

Paraphrasing the American Declaration of Independence, he said: “Whenever any form of government becomes destructive it is the right of the people to abolish it.”

He criticised the scaling back of freedom of movement, freedom of association and of the press, and said Fiji had deteriorated considerably since Bainimarama took power in 2006.

“It was not too long ago that the official tourist slogan for Fiji was ‘Fiji: the way the world should be’,” he said.

“I feel so sad and disillusioned to tell you that Fiji is now the way the world should not be.

“A fundamental right of every citizen is the right to free speech, the right to dissent. That right no longer exists. Citizens who speak out against the ruling regime’s excesses and abuse of office are arrested by the military, not the police and are taken to military headquarters, where they are beaten, kicked, and even tortured.

“And not only men, but women as well. And not only Fijians, but Indians and general voters as well.”

More 'tyranny' to come
Ratu Mara lamented the dissolution of the Great Council of Chiefs, the militarisation of the public service, as well as the Methodist Church and the new ‘Land Use Bank’, which is being developed in the wake of last year’s Land Use Decree.

“The Fijians are worried they will lose what they inherited from their forefathers,” he said.Former Land Forces Commander Jone Baledrokadroka with Ratu Mara. Photo Alex Perrottet/PMC

He spoke of “heinous and tyrannical acts” on the horizon such as the establishment of a munitions factory in Fiji, which he said would have serious consequences.

He then accused the Attorney General, Aiyaz Sayed Khaiyum, of planning to rig the 2014 elections, with the use of voting machines.

“This is another sinister plan,” he said.

“I doubt elections will be held in 2014, but in case they are held, you can imagine what the illegal regime has in store with rigged voting machines.”

Ratu Mara said it was unrealistic that Bainimarama was attempting to change attitudes in Fiji with regard to voting and racial issues.

“That changes with time, and will only happen under a democratic system,” he said.

He supported the “Transitional Plan for Democracy in Fiji” explained by former Land Forces Commander Jone Baledrokadroka, who is a visiting research fellow at Canberra’s Australian National University, and was present at the meeting.

Baledrokadroka said the two most important points were to pressure the regime to drop the Public Emergency Regulations and to withdraw the military from the public sphere.

Mara preaches to the 'old guard'

About the authors

PMC profile photograph

Alex Perrottet

PMW contributing editor

Alex Perrottet is a Masters/Postgraduate Diploma in Communication Studies student at AUT University.

PMC profile photograph

Pacific Media Watch

PMC's media monitoring service

Pacific Media Watch is compiled for the Pacific Media Centre as a regional media freedom and educational resource by a network of journalists, students, stringers and commentators.
(cc) Creative Commons


Comments

Ratu Tevita's true message

It is clear from this speech that Ratu Tevita is falling back on the old formula and framework for a functioning democracy in Fiji. It has been argued quite cogently and emphatically that democracy is only allowed to function in Fiji so long as it continues to allow power in perpetuity to the entrenched elite of the time. Once this is shaken with a change in govt, a coup follows. This has been democracy - Fiji Style! Power through force rather than the ballot box.

The rationale and justification has always been provided by the "Indian Threat" argument. That held true at one stage, then acquired the proportions of a bogey over time - now it has no traction because Indo-Fijians make up barely 33% of Fiji's population. Moreover, enough people no longer think/vote strictly along ethnic lines, especially in the urban areas. Ratu Tevita is rationalizing along these tired old lines - it is this very type of thinking that needs to change in Fiji for the besieged country to finally have true democracy. Isn't this what everyone wants? Or are we looking at continuing ostrich-mentalitied duplicity as seen in Australia's granting of celebrity refugee status to the opportunistic coup-monger Simione Kaitani.

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