Archive for December, 2007

Wishing you a Merry Christmas and a Prosperous New Year

December 24, 2007

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May the Almighty grant us our prayers and truly cleanse our God Forsaken Country in 2008 so we may have that clean and fair election in March 2009.

We are taking a break as some of use take to the Islands while others journey up to the highlands. Look after your family and remember this is the most important time of the year to be with your family and take time to seek and experience the true meaning of Christmas.

As a parting thought for 2007 we draw you attention to the British Royal Family. Exactly 50 years ago, the Queen made her very first TV Christmas Message. Today, the Monarch launched its official YouTube Channel and in it you can play and listen to this noble message of Christmas.

We would like to invite you all to play and listen to the message, because it’s relevance to us could not be more appropriate considering the turmoil we had to endure as a nation for the last 12 months.

I have quoted part of this beautiful message below:

That it is possible for some of you to see me today is just another example of the speed at which things are changing all around us. Because of these changes I am not surprised that many people feel lost and unable to decide what to hold on to and what to discard. How to take advantage of the new life without losing the best of the old.

But it is not the new inventions which are the difficulty. The trouble is caused by unthinking people who carelessly throw away ageless ideals as if they were old and outworn machinery.

They would have religion thrown aside, morality in personal and public life made meaningless, [honesty] counted as foolishness and self-interest set up in place of self-restraint” (Elisabeth ER 1957 Christmas Message).

God Bless Fiji.

Moce 2007! See you in 2008!!

Part 3 of the Charter Analysis by Vakatakilai

December 24, 2007

Part 3 -  Charter Analysis by Vakatakilai

Continuing  on page 6 para. 4 of the Charter, let’s look further at what this disastrous document mean to us as FIJIANS.

“. It is recognised that the nature and extent of reforms that are now needed necessarily have to be comprehensive in scope, and focussed on the critical constitutional, political, legal, economic, social, institutional and developmental problems with which Fiji has been persistently riddled since Independence in 1970 and in particular, in more recent years. It is further recognised that such reforms must be within an overall pragmatic framework, and that their implementation are appropriately phased and sequenced over the short, medium and long term time frame.”

            Reform  focused on – constitution; constitution will be changed. Current constitution recognize the Fijians as landowners or the indigenous race here. Proposed Charter does not have any special consideration for the Fijian race. Over the years the Indians have questioned the fact of us being tagged as the original inhibiters and hence given special privileges in the constitution. This is their chance to rid us of this recognition.

                - political; election format; common roll, I do not see how changing the election format to Common roll will be advantageous to them, but if they had put it in there, it means that they see a means of getting political control through this means, so Fijians beware. Ask around and let’s see thru this maze. Notice that PR has been given to former citizens, this may be the way of getting their numbers back up, may be not through those who apply now. We should ask, what would the status of their children if they are born when they are of PR status. This may be another long term plan by our neighbours. Let’s not be

                - legal, what will happen to laws protecting Fijian heritage

                - economic; Indians already in control of economy, Fijian land that are economically viable will be under the control of the state; eg Natadola – landowners want the land back because they had their own plans for it, NLTB leased it out without informing them. Now the landowner have the right to stop NLTB. When economy is priority, the state can overrule them because of economic reasons. Is’nt this the same Land Use Commission that MC championed during his reign and caused his downfall!

                        - social; compare with Nayacakalou’s reform, this time it will be worse for the Fijians, Why?

                - institutional; FAB, Min. of Fijian Affairs, Provincial Councils, GCC, Fijian Holdings

                - developmental; rural electrification, roadworks, communications etc

 

“. To chart out the course that such reforms must take and the details therein, a full stock-take or diagnosis is needed in regard to the nature and extent of the structural, constitutional, legal, economic, social, policy and institutional problems facing Fiji. Such a diagnosis should be independent, facts-based, policy and issues-oriented, and forward-looking. To generate fullest possible awareness and understanding, the findings of such a stock-take or diagnosis should be made available to Fiji’s people with full disclosure; with the dissemination of information being in forms that can be readily accessed, and understood by the wider community across the nation in Fiji.”

             . Fact based means records up to date, policy issues-oriented; issues raised by Fijians are mostly non-economic (Vanua etc), Fijian have very little plans in place. They know we have poor records so we would not have FACTS on what is required.

FHL which is the only Fijian institution with such forward-looking views has been targeted as “bad”. They intend to cut out all competition from the Fijians before this level playing field is opened. Remember that we have seen in part 2 that they want the PRIVATE Sector (which is controlled by Indians and FHL is the only Fijian threat to them in this area) to be the “ENGINE OF GROWTH”

“. The preparation of an independent Report on “The State of the Nation and the Economy” (SNE), and also the formulation and implementation of the way forward comprehensive reform agenda, will both be undertaken as national level efforts, involving the broad cross section of Fiji’s people, through processes that are meaningfully consultative and truly participatory.”

 

  .  Independent Report on Nation and Economy – I have always had my doubts on how fair or balanced these independent so called experts are considering that they do not have any knowledge whatsoever on Fijian way of life, our weaknesses economically and they do not care about our special position in this country as indigenous. Most of these people only have background in economics so are they really independent? An independent (balanced report would be one that considers all the factors and not only the economic one as the Charter seem to champion.

    . National level effort, broad cross-section;  this phrases give no special consideration for the Fijian who are the indigenous people of this country and are economically lagging behind. I paste below an extract on Chapter 2 part 6 j of the 1997 constitution to remind us of the total change in the nature of phrasing of the const. in comparison with this damning charter.

“(j) in those negotiations, the paramountcy of Fijian interests as a protective principle continues to apply, so as to ensure that the interests of the Fijian community are not subordinated to the interests of other communities;”

 

 “ . To achieve this, a 40-member National Council for Building a Better Fiji (NCBBF) will be set up by the President of Fiji. The composition of NCBBF will be broadly representative of Fiji society (including leaders and representatives from the civil society including NGOs, the private sector, religious and community organisations, employers/workers and youth organisations, and the political parties1).”

First of, the phrase “set up by the President of Fiji” to me is a mind game to convince us Fijian that a Fijian is setting this up. In reality, it is non-Fijians who are placing this chosen men in these positions and we all know that they will always be there to appease the Indian leadership as represented by FBai and his military council. The President will only endorse it (rubber stamp).

            council comprise :

                        leaders;  may include Fijian Chiefs and leaders, Joe Nawalowalo and the likes.

                        reps from CIVIL SOCIETY; from above statement, they include:

                           . NGO’s;  NGO’s are not representative of Fijians interest

                           . the private sector;  totally Indian controlled (Waradi may be their rep here) This is not representative of Fijians

                           . Religious organisation; Christianity may be represented by a Fijian but how many representative will be chosen from this group. The Methodist church which have been vocal about Fijian interests have snubbed the Charter but I am sure that they will find some Judases in this denomination to tow the line.

                           . Community organisation, Whether this is race based or not, I still doubt we can be represented by this group.

 

We see overall that this 40 (45) member council will not be any proper representation of our interest as Fijian indigenous people of THIS COUNTRY.

 

My advice still stands; REJECT this Charter, never even entertain the thought that it may be beneficial to us because IT IS NOT.

 

Finally, keep loving your neighbor but be frank with your views. Study this document and you will see thru the EVIL INTENT in it. TOTAL DESTRUCTION OF THE FIJIAN RACE.

As the pig is once again galavanting across the globe with Meri….

December 22, 2007

We thought we will remind you of this unresolved issue extracted from the leaked Auditor General’s report of 2005 and posted on this blog in October:

Other travel details provided without receipts included at least $75,000 worth of airfares, hotel accommodation and meals for the Commander and his wife on a personal visit to NZ to visit family members. This amount also included trips to Iraq via up to three weeks of stopovers in New York, London, Paris, Tel Aviv and Honolulu.

He wanted to clean up the SDL Coalition government but only unearth dirt about himself. This Pig is the mother of all hypocrites.

Idi Amin is a saint compared to this prick!

What is wrong with the idea of a People’s Charter

December 22, 2007

A very well written article written by Shailendra Raju in todays Fiji Times:

ON the face of it, there is nothing wrong with the idea of a people’s charter and a national council for building a better Fiji. I must say though that I prefer a people’s version of the Constitution, written and explained in terms that will inspire, educate and inform citizens and create a sense of shared nationhood.

But there seems little likelihood of this happening when the interim regime is so fanatically determined to make sure its People’s Charter becomes the dominant ideology for shaping Fiji’s destiny.

As the regime struggles to get the charter moving, it is coming up against some real problems, profound skepticism and a mounting volume of questions.

Not the least of these is the massive discrepancy between the aims of the charter, as so far explained, and the actual performance of the government.

The charter’s framework document circulated earlier in the year, places heavy emphasis on the ideals of good, open governance and accountability to the people. It identifies corruption as one of the nation’s ills while ignoring the international acknowledgement Fiji gained for its efforts to curb it.

The document also loses credibility when it lapses into Labour party propaganda about the so-called state of the nation. This immediately stamped it as politically partisan, rather than independent.

While the authors pontificate about building their utopia and the interim Prime Minister speaks endlessly about his vision of a new, well-managed Fiji, a very different story has unfolded since December 5 last year. It is one of extremely bad governance that bears no relationship to the lofty goals set out for the People’s Charter. This has led to a severe deficit of trust. There has been a consistent lack of transparency, abuse of human and constitutional rights, lawlessness, intimidation and the spreading of fear, failure to follow due process and interference with the process of the judiciary.

Blatant nepotism is also part of the new order. Coup supporters, including military personnel, have been appointed to key positions to reinforce the interim Government’s grip. This is particularly evident in the sugar industry now under the control of the Labour leader Mahendra Chaudhry.

Labour people were elevated to leadership of the Sugar Cane Growers Council after the shameful and cruel treatment of Jagannath Sami. A close associate of Mr Chaudhry, who did not appear to be qualified, went into the Ministry of Sugar.

Mr Chaudhry has been allowed by Commodore Voreqe Bainimarama to get away with a clear conflict of interest. He has held on to his post as general secretary of the National Farmers Union, a leading cane farmers organisation, while exercising ministerial authority for the entire sugar industry.

Mr Chaudhry has so far refused to resign from his NFU post in defiance of all the norms of good governance. His responsibility is to promote the overall interests of the sugar industry, as represented by the millers, farmers, landowners and the government.

How can he do this when he leads a union dedicated to the welfare of the farmers? What is in the interests of the farmers may not be best for the other stakeholders. Why is Commodore Bainimarama condoning such abuse of office by one of his senior ministers? Why is he not applying the standards of governance called for in the charter?

This is not the worst. Since July, the media have been running stories and editorials about serious tax evasion by a Cabinet minister, who is known to me.

This is not a minor, one-off lapse. There is evidence of significant and systematic tax avoidance. According to some reports, the minister, who holds a vital portfolio, accumulated bank deposits to the tune of $1.5million in Australia. Unexplained wealth disproportionate to earnings is always regarded as a sign of corruption. By any measure of accountability, the minister should step down from office and be subject to a full inquiry. There is also a strong argument that Commodore Bainimarama already has enough evidence to conclude that the minister is not a fit person to continue in office and should therefore, give him the choice of resigning or face dismissal.

If Fiji had been under parliamentary rule, the minister would have been out of office by now. It matters not that the minister may have settled with the Fiji Islands Revenue and Customs Authority (FIRCA). This is about integrity, suitability and fitness for a Cabinet position.

The question of the overseas deposits and where they came from must be dealt with. Members of the public, naturally, are concerned about the different and discriminatory treatment given to deposed Chief Justice Daniel Fatiaki over tax allegations levelled against him.

The Fiji Independent Commission against Corruption did not hesitate to act against Justice Fatiaki but it is apparently not taking any action against the minister, despite evidence provided to it. So far, Commodore Bainimarama has failed to provide the leadership required for dealing with the scandal. His response is to pass the buck to FIRCA, which says it can do nothing. If the Commodore wants to show he is serious about the good governance provisions envisaged in the charter, he must lead by example and act decisively to deal with this running sore on his government. If he does not, people will draw their own conclusions and the entire basis for the People’s Charter will be further eroded and probably fatally damaged. This issue is not about to go away.

The concept of the charter is already in trouble. It is the centre of suspicion and often bitter, disagreement. Important sections of society are expressing their opposition. In fact, it is unlikely the project will get majority support unless the interim regime transforms its approach and attitude. Without popular backing through the participation of influential elected leaders such as Laisenia Qarase, the charter will have no political validity.

Commodore Bainimarama is aggressively resisting this idea because his judgement is clouded by his dislike of Mr Qarase. My advice to the Commodore is that it is time now for some constructive engagement with the man he overthrew. I am very much aware that Mr Qarase is quite prepared for dialogue. This would be welcomed by the majority of the people of Fiji as well as the international community and Pacific Islands Forum that are monitoring Fiji’s progress back to elections. If he sets his mind to it, Commodore Bainimarama may find that meeting with Mr Qarase may not be that difficult. He has an opportunity here to show some true statesmanship and repair his image and that of his government. Given agreement for Mr Qarase’s membership of the NCBBF, the prospects of a national consensus on the charter would be immediately enhanced. This would pave the way for a broad-based political settlement to Fiji’s crisis. If this is not accomplished, Commodore Bainimarama’s dream of the charter becoming the authoritative doctrine and vision for Fiji’s future will not be realised.

From Mr Qarase’s perspective he will require the support of his SDL Party which gained just more than 80 per cent of Fijian votes last year, to join the NCBBF. He will be aware of the danger of alienating his constituency by seeming to be too accommodating to Commodore Bainimarama. I know Mr Qarase has the skill and judgement to get the right balance.

Resistance to the charter was always inevitable given the deep division, unhappiness and resentment created by Commodore Bainimarama’s takeover by force of a legally elected government, and some of his regime’s subsequent unpopular decisions. Any proposal from the Commodore will inevitably attract significant opposition.

These difficulties are being compounded by the regime’s mismanagement of the project. It keeps shooting itself in the foot. The self-inflicted damage relates to confusing and conflicting public comments, and the ominous language and sentiments of the charter’s framework document.

The information I received from sources is that, as a result, many citizens have genuine fears about the true purpose of the charter. One has only to study the news media to get a general sense of this disquiet. Much of the blame must be laid at the door of the interim Prime Minister and the army.

Some of their statements have created the impression that they see the charter as a means of imposing their will on the people. Military spokesman Lt-Colonel Mosese Tikoitoga was very clear about this in The Fiji Times of November 14. He saw the need, in the process of gaining acceptance of the charter, of “forcing people to change their mindset”. He did not spell out exactly how it would be achieved.

It is easy to laugh at such thoughts but in Fiji’s situation they cannot be dismissed, especially in light of the military’s power in government, its obsessive preoccupation with the charter and apparent readiness to suppress dissent.

I remind myself Commodore Bainimarama has said the military is all-powerful. As an extension of this thinking, it would appear the military council is the real source of authority in Fiji at the moment.

Lt-Col Tikoitoga should also clarify what he meant in The Fiji Times that the charter would prohibit “allegedly corrupt people” from contesting the next election.

He spoke of leadership by “the right people with the right mind”, presumably referring to those who meet the approval of the military.

How exactly would the charter “prohibit” those suspected of corruption from becoming candidates and ensure that only leaders with the “right” mind were elected? What legal power will the charter have to accomplish this? There is more than a hint the military sees the charter as a substitute for the Constitution despite its claim that the supreme law of the land will not be abrogated.

The army could help to calm public unease and smooth the path of the charter if it gave a firm commitment that it would not interfere in the deliberations of the NCCBF and will, from now on, respect and accept the election verdicts of the people.

When he is talking about the charter from a script, Commodore Bainimarama tends to sound relatively reasonable and mildly conciliatory, even though conciliation does not come naturally to him. In a written statement recently he was virtually pleading for people with doubts about the charter, to take part in its work. He said he wanted to hear opposing views on it and to have wide consultations but when he makes comments off the cuff, a different and more threatening personality often emerges, one that is dictatorial and intolerant of dissent. Then he tends to lash out angrily at critics of the charter and of his government generally.

Indicative of this trait was his comment that the regime “dictates terms and no one is going to tell us what to do”.

I assume this will not be his attitude in the discussions of the NCBBF. His statement that Mr Qarase and his SDL Party would not be allowed to contest the election sparked wide concern in Fiji and abroad. The Commodore had to backtrack on this threat when he faced a united front of Pacific leaders at the Pacific Islands Forum in Tonga but shortly after, in an impromptu remark to reporters, he insisted that Mr Qarase would not be allowed to become a candidate because he would be automatically removed from the election by the charter. Commodore Bainimarama has never given a satisfactory explanation of his remark. It has become another shot into the regime’s foot, heaping confusion on uncertainty and further increasing public concerns. Those who accept invitations to join the NCBBF will undoubtedly want new assurances that the People’s Charter will not supersede the Constitution and become an instrument of coercion.

Even the origins of the charter have become controversial. Questions were raised by Mick Beddoes, the former Opposition leader, about the authors of the charter. He felt the charter gurus were John Samy, a former Fiji economist and Francis Narayan, previously an accountant with the Fiji Electricity Authority.

Both of them now live in New Zealand but visit Fiji and are thought to be influential with the interim regime and the military council. It appears that Mr Narayan has just been appointed chairman of the Fiji Trade and Investment Bureau another example of nepotism, inconsistent with the principles Mr Narayan advocates in the People’s Charter. If Mr Narayan and Mr Samy were the first authors of the charter, they should take responsibility for some of the bizarre and arrogant thinking in the document. The Prime Minister’s office downplayed their role, saying the charter came from its office. Meanwhile, Lt-Col Tikoitoga said on radio that the charter was the Commodore’s brainchild. He initiated it and brought the idea to the military council where it was debated. The people of Fiji are entitled to know precisely how the charter proposal came into being.

Those who wrote the draft, whoever they were, and developed the thinking for the charter which was distributed in May, must be accountable for some of the difficulties it faces.

From the way it is written, the authors consider it to be a binding commitment for future governments. This is completely anti-democratic and authoritarian. There is also reference to a timeframe of 15 to 20 years for the measures in the charter to become an established part of Fiji’s national life. Again this totally ignores the rights of elected governments and leaders to bring into effect their own plans for the governance of Fiji. It is not the function of an interim administration to try to set out a 20-year plan for the nation. Let the NCBBF confine itself to broad principles guided by the Constitution and put these forward as recommendations to be debated by Parliament and accepted if they get majority support. That is how democracy works.

There are many other doubts about the intent of the council and the charter. What is meant, for instance, by the oft-repeated expression ‘a non-racial Fiji’? It appears members of the council may be expected to give their approval to some form of social and cultural engineering designed to eradicate race from the face of Fiji. This sounds ominously like a new kind of ethnic cleansing.

Mr Chaudhry disclosed his thinking when he wrote about a homogeneous Fiji. He is confused. A homogeneous society is one in which everybody is the same. That is absolutely not the case in Fiji. Our country is made up of many ethnic groups. We are multi-racial, as many countries are. So how, specifically, would Mr Chaudhry propose to change this? The interim Prime Minister contradicts the Chaudhry doctrine when he talks about a culturally vibrant country. Culture is connected to ethnicity and origin. If Commodore Bainimarama sees a country built on cultural vibrance he must, by definition, see a Fiji of different ethnic origins. That would not be homogeneous and “non-racial”.

It is clear to me that the charter thinking on ethnicity, at this stage, is inexcusably flawed.

Fiji is reminded regularly, by the interim Prime Minister and the army that the charter’s aim is to build a “truly democratic Fiji”. But not once have they tried to describe what they mean by this. The structures and methods of democracy vary. How it is practiced in Samoa, for instance, bears no relationship to our own democratic system. The common feature of all democratic processes, however, is that they are freely supported by the people without coercion and intimidation. The voters have the right to elect and change a government.

The framework document has no reference to the future role of the military. This is a remarkable and telling omission. How can the NCBBF perform any kind of useful role without a full and searching debate about the army and its coup culture? This issue is pivotal to where Fiji goes from here. Surely, this could not have escaped Messrs Samy and Narayan and others who developed the concept.

I find it astonishing that there is no reference to the new age of politics that was ushered in by the formation last year of Fiji’s first multi-party, multi-ethnic Cabinet genuinely representative of all of Fiji’s communities. This historic breakthrough has been ignored and cast aside completely by the authors of the charter and the military. People are entitled to ask, why?

The public is being led to believe that the council and the charter will somehow change the electoral system. This has been strongly hinted at on a number of occasions but the council would have no power at all to effect such change. Any move to do this would have no demonstrated popular support and be against the law.

The Sugar Industry: Time for the Truth

December 21, 2007

Chaudhry spent too long trying to assert his control over the sugar
industry and not enough time trying to fix the problems, which were all
well known and for which solutions had been developed, before his illegal
seizure of power.

The proof of the pudding is in the eating and there is a lot less to eat
now. Last season there were 3.2 million tones of cane, producing about
320,000 tonnes of sugar. This season it has shrunk to 2.6 million tonnes
of cane with a sugar output of 260,000 tonnes.

Naturally, when Chaudhry was held responsible for this by Qarase, he
blames Qarase, forgetting that he spent all year blaming the weather.

^
Now the question is: what is Chaudhry going to do and how is he going to
do it without the EU assistance package.

The I for illegal government boasted that they would solve the impasse
over renewal of sugar leases. What have they accomplished? NOTHING!!!!
They are all talk and no action.

Gusuvaika was making a lot of noises about land and leasing, talking about
market rents, length of leases etc but giving no details and doing
nothing, his standard modus operandi.

The fact is that thirty year leases are a problem that has to be faced
squarely and discussed with the Fijian community as well as cane farmers.
Insulting the BLV is not a good way to try to do that.

Asking landowners to surrender their land for that long without adequate
rent adjustment provisions is insulting to them.

Let’s recall some basic facts. In 1966 the Agricultural and Landlord
Tenant’s act created 10 years leases with provision for two renewals of
ten years if tenants could show to a tribunal that they needed the land
more than the landowners.

The ALTA, which replaced ALTO in 1978, extended the ten years
automatically by 20 years. This was a major concession and Ratu Mara as
leader of the Fijian community spent a lot of his accumulated political
capital to bulldoze approval for that legislation through the BLV.

The problem is that $50 man has no political capital. He is politically
bankrupt. It looked for a while like he thought he was hoping to set up a
BLV of his own creation. But he has now come clean and admitted that “for
leases under ALTA because that could only be done with a two thirds
majority of an elected parliament” (Fiji Times 19 Dec.) We have an elected
Parliament and we had a multi-party Cabinet. If these had remained in
place we may have been closer to a solution to the problem. As it is now,
a solution is further away, not closer.

One person who is never going to contribute to a solution is Mahendra Pal
Chaudhry. Compromise is not in his nature. He will continue to mislead
farmers into believing that he can get them extended leases without any
change in the rent formula. Shorter leases or stronger rent adjustment
provisions are the only options. Would any landlord in Fiji lease a
building to tenants for thirty years without provision for regular, fair,
market rate adjustments?

In the CSR days cane farmers reserved the right to withhold their cane
because they wanted what they believed to be a fairer share of sugar
revenue. The Fijian landowner surely has the same right to his land.
Perhaps there could be mediation by an independent expert, as there was
with Lord Denning.

The leadership to solve the lease extension problem will only be found
from among leaders that are trusted and respected by each of the
communities. It will be found in democratic elections and restoration of
the rule of law. It will not be found in a “Charter” drawn up at gun-point
and forced down the throats of an unwilling people.

Fiji Democracy Now

Acting PM Rt Naulukau, while I’m away……

December 21, 2007

Since the Pig has decided to temporarily run away from what he started given the heat back at home due to his half baked project to reshuffle the cabinet and the current courts case losses to his illegal amatures government, therefore partly depriving us of our daily pound of flash, we have decided to publicise a little note found by the cabinet tea lady. This was obviously hurriedly scribbled by Vore for Naulukau.

frank_note2.jpg

Another International Buturaki of the Punch Drunk Illegal Government looms

December 21, 2007

picvic.jpg

Victor Lal, one of the strongest critic of the Illegal Interim Government and someone with the current rare opportunity to finally have Mahend Chaudary by the “balls” have been invited to an Illegal Government verbal bashing opportunity at a CHOGM gathering.

Wonder how pissed off his no. 1 enemy must be given that Victor gets to address an esteemed audience while Mahen twiddles his thumb at home and at the same time Victor gets the enjoyment to spoil Mahen big time without the latter having the opportunity to defend himself.

Come on Mahen, this is so untypical of you to restrain and walk away from a good verbal stoush. What’s the matter all your greeds caught up with you??? ;-)

Victor Lal to speak on Fiji at post-CHOGM meeting

The Oxford based academic and Fiji Sun’s regular columnist Victor Lal will be speaking on developments in Fiji at a post Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting, to be held at Cumberland Lodge, Windsor, in the United Kingdom, on Friday 18 January 2007.

The Commonwealth Secretary-General Don McKinnon will give the keynote after-dinner speech on the evening of Thursday 17 January.

The two-day meeting is being hosted by the editorial board members of the The Round Table, one of Britain’s oldest international affairs journal, which provides analysis and commentary on all aspects of international affairs.

The journal, founded in 1910, is the major source for coverage of the policy issues concerning the contemporary Commonwealth and its role in international affairs, with occasional articles on themes of historical interest.

The meeting will be attended by a range of individuals with an interest in the Commonwealth, including members of the Round Table editorial board, but also selected guests, from the worlds of academia, journalism, government, business, etc.

The meeting wants to hear Victor Lal’s views on Fiji and the Commonwealth, as part of a session on suspended or lapsed member states - “Problem States”. Two other speakers will talk about Pakistan and Zimbabwe.

“I have a long association with the Round Table journal for over 25 years, and have presented papers and talks on Fiji to those involved with Commonwealth issues, so I look forward to offering my personal views on post-coup developments in Fiji, and possibly on the proposed Peoples Charter,” Mr Lal said.

Mr Lal read law and international relations and politics at the University of Oxford, where he specializes in race, politics, conflict and constitutionalism in multi-ethnic states. He is also the author of, among other studies, Fiji: Coups in Paradise-Race, Politics and Military Intervention.

Get on with the job you useless people

December 20, 2007

Yesterday it was Mahendra Chaudary blaming Qarase with the decline in the Sugar Production this year when throughout the year he head been blaming the weather, the outdated production method and mill equipment stating how desperate we needed the EU Funding.

Today we have the illegal A-G Aiyas blaming SDL for the declined in the prison systems.

Tomorrow, maybe they will blame Peceli Kinivua for Netani Sukanaivalu’s continued failure to find a wife! Whats next?

Our advise to them is just shut the trap up and get on with the job. The blame game is for small minded people with no creativity or sense of direction to take the next step. You wanted to take on the mantle of leadership then show us your 2 cents worth, if not then kindly ship out! Sega na Isa!!

By the way, the pressure is on them again.

1. They lost the court case yesterday when Judge Conventry ruled against the Illegal Government in the court challenge initiated by the nurses regarding the nurses strike.

2. The all those charged with planning to assassinate the Pig got bailed out for a mere $1,000 and had the charges of conspiring to incite mutiny dropped from the charge sheet. Someone suggested that the $1,000 bail amount without surety indicates how weak the DPP’s case is on the charge of conspiring to murder the pig.

3. Today Judge Jitoko rule against them in the case taken up by the FTA and FPSA (typcially chodo techique so now they can try and grab the glory when it was FTA that initiated the case) challenging the Illegal cabinet’s decision to lower the civil service retirement age from 60 to 55.

The third case amuses us. I mean as lay people we even know that it is against the law to discriminate a person base on age as per sec 38(2)(a) of the Constitution and that just recently the Fiji Human Rights Commission successfully challenge the Suva City Council for retiring an employee on this ground. Shaista was part of the FHRC legal team that challenge the SCC in what became known as the Tilly Martin Case.

Why Shaista failed to alert her buddy Vore or Aiyas of the legal precedent established in this case is a total mystery. Or maybe it is another of her typical conniving and calculated moves that will reveal itself very soon.

The above two cases also indicates the type and quality of legal advise given by the Illegal Incompetent and Stupid A-G to the Illegal Cabinet.

So instead of deflecting issues by blaming the SDL government, please Illegal A-G, do something positive for a change and read the 1997 Constitution from cover to cover during the Christmas Break. Hopefully, after doing this you will be able to give better legal advises to the mentally challenged illegal cabinet next year.

What a wonderful thought to to think that in 2008 there will be less compensation payout and more money for our hospital as we see a marked improvement in Aiyas because he had become more informed about our constitution.

Oh and please bloggers pray for the protection of all citizens given recent history and the current pressure on these thieves right now, we are getting really worried who they going to arrest, bash, and lock up this festive season just to divert some pressure and attention off them as their lack of decision making ability which was once again show up by the courts this week.

All PM kill plot suspects out on Bail

December 19, 2007

as reported by the media today.

Peceli Rinakama has had all charges dropped and the rest, bar the Qaranivalu who is still in hospital, have had the charge of conspiracy to incite mutiny dropped against them.

The only charge left standing are conspiracy to committ murder.

Now even to us lay people , we know that the above case lacks any solid evidence and it must be proven beyond all reasonable doubt that these people were planning to do this. I am begining to salivate in anticipation of enjoying the circus of NAZI Nasir Ali being crossed examined again under litigation on this one. Remember how he was torn to pieces by Kevueli Tunidau in the Agricultural Scam trial? Imagine the Qaranivalu’s QC up against this moron?

Oh and we told you from the begining that this whole charade was a sham from the begining to divert attention away from the constant f…k ups this government was committing one after the other!

They will all walk free and then  turn around and sue the government. My only bone of contention here is that any compensation need to come out of those responsible for this rather then out of the official purse.

Latest Score Board

December 19, 2007

Plus:

  1. Methodist Church who will not be sold for 40 pieces of silver. After all the hot air from Jona about not paying its debt regarding the renovation of the Ba Methodist Hospital, the illegal government then announced they are waiving the debt as an attempt to cohese the Methodist church to come on board the Illegal Charter bandwagon. Nahi! Sega!! said Rev Tuikilakila Waqairatu. We are not buying into that. WE WILL NOT PARTICIPATE IN AN ILLEGAL ACT!!
  2. Nadroga/Navosa Provincial Council for rejecting the proposed illegal Peoples Military Charter

Minus:

  1. The Chairman of the Tailevu Provincial Council, Joseva Serulagilagi, for continuing to defying the resolution reached at the Bose Vanua of Tailevu, in his pursuito his personal agenda of support for the Illegal Interim Government and the People’s Charter. His speech at the opening of the Tailevu Provincial Council last week boarders on total contempt of the views of the Vanua. He might as well join the Illegal Government as its spokesman.
  2. The Secretary of the Cautata SDL Branch in Tailevu, who presented a tabua and personally express the support of the Vanua for Voreqe (without consulting the villagers) at the funeral of a soldier in Cautata last month. In return Voreqe immidiately ordered a $32,000 grant to help with the Cautata water supply problem. People easily bought for 40 pieces of silver. TAKE NOTE SDL HEAD OFFICE. YOU NEED TO APPOINT DIFFERENT OFFICIALS FOR THE CAUTATA BRANCH NOW AS THEIR CURRENT OFFICIALS HAVE BEEN BOUGHT OUT BY THE PIG!!
  3. The Chairman of the Kadavu Provincial Council, $2 Jo Nawalowalo, for his continued public outburst of support for the Illegal Charter. He let it slip out of the bag this week that the province’s support depends on conditions it has given the illegal government. Again, the Council has been sold for 40 pieces of silver. Maybe the Chief’s of Kadavu are now used to selling the birthrights given their past history with Jimi Ah Koy Incorporation!!!