"In May 2006 Fiji held its tenth general election since independence in 1970. In a country with an unenviable history of electoral trauma, the mood was apprehensive - not least because of controversial public statements against the incumbent Qarase government being made by the commander of Fiji's military forces. Despite a record number of parties and candidates, the winners were the heavily church-backed SDL, the party of choice of the majority of indigenous Fijians; and the Fiji Labour Party, the party preferred by most Indo-Fijians. Although the result was ethnically polarized, for the first time in Fijian history the successful candidates came together to share power in a constitutionally ordained multiparty Cabinet, with Qarase retaining the prime ministership. But the fragile collaboration was short-lived. On 5 December, Commodore Bainimarama ordered a military take-over, ousting the elected government and replacing it with an 'interim' government of his choice. With contributions from ex-Vice President Ratu Joni Madraiwiwi, ousted Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase, leader of the Fiji Labour Party and now interim Minister for Finance Mahendra Chaudhry, and an impressive array of leading commentators on Fijian affairs, this book provides a comprehensive, penetrating analysis of the lead-up to, the outcome and the aftermath of Fiji's historic 2006 election - including the December coup. Shedding light on the complex weave of traditional chiefly systems, race relations, economics, constitutionality, the military ethos and religion, From Election to Coup in Fiji is essential reading for anyone with an interest in Fiji, the South Pacific and the politics of divided societies."--Publisher.
Fiji: Coups in Paradise : Race, Politics, and Military Intervention
39 See The Fiji Times, 23 September 2000, and letters to The Fiji Times on 25 September and 30 September 2000. See also 'Pacific People Building Peace', Update No. 12, email circular, 20 December 2006. 40 The Fiji Times, 7 December 2006 ...
It was a public holiday and many people had clearly decided to get the voting over and done with to free up the rest ... the correct queues in the first instance would have prevented people from lining up for the wrong polling station.
9 Statements by Chaudhry and Raman cited in Michael C. Howard, 'The Evolution of Industrial Relations in Fiji and the Reaction of Public Employess' Unions to the Current Economic Crisis,' 144. 10 Fiji Sun, 22 December 1984.
Fiji: Politics of Illusion, the Military Coups in Fiji
By rights, the island nation of Fiji should be thriving.
"Written in secret during the 1987 political turmoil, "Fiji : shattered coups" presents the first detailed analysis to emerge from Fiji of the political events which shook the South Pacific....
Fiji falls victim, yet again, to the prejudice and greed of a section of its people. This book gathers together a handful of memoirs of those tragic events in Fiji.
"On 14 May 1987, Colonel Sitiveni Rabuka led a raid on Fiji's Parliament House in the nation's capital, Suva, to remove a government dominated by Fijian Indians. The coup sent...
Since independence in 1970, Fiji had endured four coups and four constitutions. Each of the four constitutions prescribed different electoral systems.