Overview
republic, Pacific Ocean
Country and archipelago, South Pacific Ocean.
It lies east of Vanuatu and southwest of Samoa. Area: 7,055 sq mi
(18,272 sq km). Population (2007 prelim.): 827,900. Capital: Suva. The
majority of Fijians are of mixed Melanesian-Polynesian ancestry, with a
large South Asian minority. Languages: English (official), Fijian.
Religions: Christianity (mostly Protestant, also other Christians, Roman
Catholic), Hinduism, Islam. Currency: Fiji dollar. Fiji lies 1,300 mi
(2,100 km) north of New Zealand and comprises some 540 islets and 300
islands, of which about 100 are inhabited. The main islands are Viti
Levu and Vanua Levu. Fiji also includes the dependency of Rotuma, an
island located about 400 mi (640 km) to the northwest. The two large
islands are mountainous and volcanic in origin, rising abruptly from
densely populated coasts to forested central mountains. The smaller
islands are also volcanic, and all are ringed by rocky shoals and coral
reefs. The coastal deltas of the principal rivers contain most of the
fertile arable land. The climate is tropical oceanic. Fiji has a market
economy based largely on agriculture (particularly sugar production),
tourism, and light industries; gold and silver are mined. Fiji is a
republic with two legislative houses; its chief of state is the
president, while the head of government is the prime minister. The first
settlers arrived from Melanesia some 3,500 years ago. The first European
sighting was by the Dutch in the 17th century; the islands were sighted
in 1774 by Capt. James Cook and in 1789 by Capt. William Bligh, who
returned in 1792 to explore them. Traders and the first missionaries
arrived in 1835, and European settlers began arriving in the 1860s. In
1874 Fiji was proclaimed a crown colony. It became independent as a
member of the Commonwealth in 1970 and was declared a republic in 1987
following a military coup. Elections in 1992 restored civilian rule. A
new constitution was approved in 1997. Coups in 2000 and 2006 created
continuing political instability in the early 21st century.
Profile
Official name Republic of the Fiji Islands1, 2
Form of government interim regime3, 4
Chief of state President
Head of government Prime Minister
Capital Suva
Official languages 2
Official religion none
Monetary unit Fiji dollar (F$)
Population estimate (2008) 839,000
Total area (sq mi) 7,055
Total area (sq km) 18,272
1Fijian long/short-form names: Matanitu Tu-Vaka-i-koya ko Viti/Viti;
Hindustani long-form name: Fiji Ripablik.
2English, Fijian, and Hindustani (Fijian Hindi) have equal status per
1998 constitution.
3Backed by the military from December 2006; the constitution is not
formally abrogated.
4The people’s charter, a supplement to the constitution, was approved
by the president in late December 2008. This should allow for the March
2009 legislative elections to take place.
Main
republic, Pacific Ocean
country and archipelago in the South Pacific Ocean. It surrounds the
Koro Sea about 1,300 miles (2,100 km) north of Auckland, N.Z. The
archipelago consists of some 300 islands and 540 islets scattered over
about 1,000,000 square miles (3,000,000 square km). Of the 300 islands,
about 100 are inhabited. The capital, Suva, is on the southeast coast of
the largest island, Viti Levu (“Great Fiji”).
Land
Relief
Fiji has a complex geologic history. Based on a submerged platform
of ancient formation, the Fiji islands are largely the product of
volcanic action, sedimentary deposit, and formations of coral. Viti Levu
has an area of about 4,000 square miles (10,000 square km) and accounts
for more than half of Fiji’s land area. A jagged dividing range running
from north to south has several peaks above 3,000 feet (900 metres),
including Tomanivi (formerly Mount Victoria), at 4,344 feet (1,324
metres) the highest point in Fiji. The main river systems—the Rewa,
Navua, Sigatoka (Singatoka), and Ba (Mba)—all have their headwaters in
the central mountain area. To the southeast and southwest, as well as to
the south where the range divides, the mountains give way to plateaus
and then lowlands. The coastal plains in the west, northwest, and
southeast account for less than one-fifth of Viti Levu’s area but are
the main centres of agriculture and settlement.
Vanua Levu, the second largest island, has an area of about 2,140
square miles (5,540 square km). It is divided along its length by a
mountain range with peaks rising to more than 3,000 feet. On the
island’s northern coast, away from the mouth of the Dreketi (Ndreketi)
River, the coastal plains are narrow. Most of the other islands,
including the Lomaiviti, Lau, and Yasawa groups, are volcanic in origin,
but, like the major islands, they are bounded by coral reefs, offshore
rocks, and shoals that make the Koro Sea hazardous for navigation.
Climate
At Suva the average summer high temperature is in the mid-80s F
(about 29 °C), and the average winter low is in the high 60s F (about 20
°C); temperatures typically are lower in elevated inland areas. All
districts receive the greatest amount of rainfall in the season from
November through March, during which time tropical cyclones (hurricanes)
are also experienced perhaps once every two years. While rainfall is
reduced in the east of the larger islands from April to October, giving
an annual average of about 120 inches (3,000 mm) per year, it virtually
ceases in the west, to give an annual rainfall that approaches 70 inches
(about 1,800 mm), thus making for a sharp contrast in both climatic
conditions and agriculture between east and west.
Plant and animal life
Almost half of Fiji’s total area remains forested, while dry
grasslands are found in western areas of the large islands. Coconut
palms are common in coastal areas, and almost all tropical fruits and
vegetables can be grown. Much of the shoreline is composed of reefs and
rocks, while mangrove swamps are found on eastern coasts. There are few
white-sand swimming beaches and, because of the encircling reef, little
surf. Most animals, including pigs, dogs, cattle, and a few horses, are
domesticated. Mongooses, introduced to prey on snakes and rats, are
often seen.
People
Ethnic groups
Although the indigenous Fijian people are usually classified as
ethnically Melanesian, their social and political organization is closer
to that of Polynesia, and there has been a high level of intermarriage
between Fijians from the Lau group of islands of eastern Fiji and the
neighbouring Polynesian islands of Tonga. According to Fiji’s
constitution, all citizens are to be referred to as Fiji Islanders; the
term Fijian is reserved for the indigenous people. For official
purposes, citizens are referred to in terms of their ethnicity, such as
Indian, Fijian, European, Part-European, or Pacific Islander.
There are significant minorities of part-Europeans, Chinese, and
Pacific Islanders who have origins outside Fiji. In the last group is
the Polynesian population of the Fijian dependency of Rotuma—an island
of 18 square miles (47 square km) located about 400 miles (645 km)
north-northwest of Suva—and the Banabans. The latter were forced to
leave their home island, Banaba, now part of Kiribati, after destruction
during World War II made it uninhabitable. Many Banabans settled on Rabi
(Rambi) Island, off the eastern coast of Vanua Levu. Fijians made up
about half of the population at the end of the 20th century and Indians
about two-fifths.
Languages and religion
Under the 1998 constitution, English, Fijian, and Hindustani (Fijian
Hindi) have equal status as the official languages. The widely used
Fijian language has many dialects; the one most commonly used is known
as Bauan Fijian and comes from Bau (Mbau), an island that enjoyed
political supremacy at the advent of colonial rule. Most people speak at
least two languages, including English and the language of their own
ethnic community. Almost all indigenous Fijians are Christian, mostly
Methodist. Most Indians are Hindu, though a significant minority are
Muslim. The country also has a small Roman Catholic community.
Settlement patterns
There is little intermarriage between ethnic communities. While Suva
has a very mixed population, the sugar-producing regions of Viti Levu
and Vanua Levu have predominantly Indian populations. On the smaller
islands and in less-developed rural areas of the larger islands,
indigenous Fijians live in traditional villages. About half the
population lives in urban areas. The three largest urban centres are on
Viti Levu: Suva, in the southeast, with about one-fourth of Fiji’s total
population; Nasinu, a suburb of Suva that experienced rapid growth in
the late 20th and early 21st centuries; and Lautoka, in northwestern
Viti Levu, the centre of the sugar industry and the location of a major
port. Labasa (Lambasa), on Vanua Levu, is a centre for administration,
services, and sugar production.
Demographic trends
For four decades after World War II, indigenous Fijians were
outnumbered by Indians, most of whom were descendants of indentured
labourers brought to work in the sugar industry. However, after the
government was overthrown in 1987, many Indians fled to Australia, New
Zealand, and Canada, and Fijians regained a plurality. A small number of
Indians, particularly in commerce and in professions such as medicine
and law, are descended from free migrants.
With rapid urbanization, especially on the fringes of Suva, came the
emergence of squatter settlements and some social problems. The
disparities of income between urban and rural workers, contrasting
lifestyles within the urban areas, and high urban unemployment can be
seen as factors that have contributed to both an escalating rate of
crime and the rapid growth of a trade union movement.
Economy
Fiji has an agriculture-based market economy, including a
substantial subsistence sector dominated by indigenous Fijians who earn
a supplementary cash income from cultivating copra, cocoa, kava, taro
(locally called dalo), pineapples, cassava (manioc), or bananas or from
fishing. The commercial sector is heavily based on garment manufacturing
and on sugar, which, for the most part, is produced by independent
Indian farmers.
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing
Sugar production is concentrated on the western side of Viti Levu
and in the area around Labasa. The government-controlled Fiji Sugar
Corporation has a monopoly on milling and marketing. The European Union
(EU) is the biggest market for Fiji’s sugar; Fiji has had preferential
trade agreements with the EU, such as the 1975 Lomé Convention (which
expired in 2000) and the subsequent Cotonou Agreement (2000). For much
of the country’s postindependence period, sugar was Fiji’s largest
export, accounting for more than half of all exports. In the early 21st
century, however, international pressure brought about reforms in the EU
sugar pricing structure, and Fiji saw its income from sugar decline. The
Fijian industry was forced to institute its own structural changes, such
as those aimed at increasing productivity, in order to survive. In
addition, the growth of the garment industry and tourism has created a
decline in sugar’s relative importance to the economy.
Except for a few years early in the 20th century, the alienation of
native land has been prohibited since 1874, thus leaving nearly
nine-tenths of all land under Fijian ownership. Farmers of other ethnic
groups operate on leaseholds of up to 30 years under the Agricultural
Landlord and Tenant Act. Fijian land ownership is in the hands of
mataqali, or clan groups, but may be administered through the Native
Lands Trust Board.
Since large-scale systematic planting of pine forests began in the
1960s, a timber industry has developed for domestic use and export.
Fishing has become increasingly important to the economy; in the early
21st century, fish products accounted for nearly one-tenth of export
revenue.
Resources and power
There is substantial hydroelectricity generation, but fuel remains a
major import. Gold is mined, though production declined in the early
21st century, and one of the country’s main mines closed. Silver is also
mined. A copper mine began operation in 1997 at Namosi, inland from
Suva.
Manufacturing
The garment industry has been a success story for Fiji. Utilizing a
preferential trading agreement with Australia and New Zealand, overseas
investors have helped provide employment for more than 20,000 locals as
well as valuable foreign exchange. The industry accounted for nearly the
same amount of revenue as food products (including sugar) in the early
21st century. A relatively new industry, the bottling of mineral water
for export, has become increasingly important.
Trade
Development plans have emphasized the need to reduce dependence on
imported food, especially rice, meat, fish, and poultry products.
Significant imports include mineral products, machinery, chemicals, and
textiles. Singapore, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and the United
States are the major sources of imports. Fiji exports petroleum
products, sugar, fish, clothing, mineral water, and gold; major export
destinations are Australia, Singapore, the United States, the United
Kingdom, and New Zealand.
Services
Tourism created roughly three times the income produced by sugar in
the late 1990s, making it Fiji’s largest foreign exchange earner by far.
Although political unrest in the early years of the 21st century
severely affected the tourist sector, slashing visitor numbers, tourism
is still a major part of the economy. Fiji is strategically located for
air travelers from Australia, New Zealand, the United States, and Japan
and is a major destination for tourist cruises. Tourism is based on the
attractions of duty-free shopping and colourful handicraft markets as
well as the usual draws of tropical islands. Many hotels are located on
small offshore islands or secluded beaches and offer accommodations in
houses of local design and materials rather than in urban-style
multistory buildings.
The economy has a strong service and light-industrial component
serving small neighbouring countries as well as Fiji; activities range
from boat-building (especially fishing boats and pleasure craft) to
brewing and paint manufacture. The government offers incentives
(including residence) for investors but insists on potential for job
creation and training programs for local employees.
Transportation
The larger islands and many smaller ones are served by domestic air
services, and there are several international airports. A coastal
highway circles Viti Levu, and minor roads to the interior give access
to most areas of settlement. For many villagers, however, river punts
with outboard motors provide the most efficient form of transport, and
from more-remote areas it may still be simplest to transport produce to
market by floating it downriver on bamboo rafts. Regular bus services
operate within and between the major towns.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
Until the coups d’état of 1987, Fiji was a dominion, a member of the
Commonwealth, and a parliamentary democracy that acknowledged the
British sovereign through a governor-general, who served as head of
state. The bicameral Parliament consisted of the House of
Representatives and the Senate. In October 1987 Fiji was expelled from
the Commonwealth (though it was readmitted in 1997) and became a
republic. The coup leader, Lieut. Col. Sitiveni Rabuka, appointed a
civilian government headed by a president with a largely ceremonial
role. The government was composed of a prime minister and a cabinet of
appointed members, almost all of whom were ethnic Fijians. On July 25,
1990, a new constitution, which concentrated power in the hands of
Fijians, was promulgated.
A revision of the 1990 document that was enacted in 1997 to moderate
the concentration of power among Fijians came into effect in July 1998.
The revised constitution eliminated the requirement that the prime
minister be Fijian, though it provided that the holder of that office be
appointed by the president, who in turn was appointed by the Bose Levu
Vakaturaga (Great Council of Chiefs), a body composed of the hereditary
leaders of the 70 major Fijian clans. According to the constitution, the
House of Representatives is to have 71 members: 46 seats apportioned
along ethnic lines (23 reserved for ethnic Fijians, 19 for Indians, 1
for a Rotuman, and 3 for members of other ethnic groups) and 25 open to
candidates of any ethnicity. The Senate is to have 32 members, all
appointed by the president on the advice of specific entities: 14 to be
determined by the Bose Levu Vakaturaga, 9 by the prime minister, 8 by
the opposition leader, and 1 by the Rotuma Council.
The 1997 constitution was declared to be still in effect after yet
another military coup in 2006, but in practice the government consisted
of a nonelected interim government, led by a prime minister who was also
the commander of the military. The president was the head of state and
was advised by an interim cabinet. In 2009, after a Fijian high court
ruled that this governmental regime was illegal, the president assumed
all power and abrogated the 1997 constitution. None of the country’s
political parties are active; historically, these have included the
United Fijian Party, Fiji Labour Party, United Peoples’ Party, National
Federation Party, and National Alliance Party.
Local government
Local government reflects the pluralism of Fiji’s social structure.
There are elected multiethnic councils in the larger towns, a separate
Fijian administration incorporating a hierarchy of chiefs and councils
for the control of rural Fijians, and direct administration elsewhere.
Security
Before the overthrow of the government in 1987, Fijian military
forces had a largely ceremonial role, though they bore much of the
burden of rebuilding and organizing after natural disasters and of
civilian development projects. Military forces continued to perform
these services after the coups, with the added role of agricultural
distribution, together with their major preoccupation with the
enforcement of internal security policies.
Education and health
While the government provides some primary and secondary education,
most schools are controlled through local committees run by and for a
single ethnic or religious community. Entry to secondary schools is by
competitive examination. Students pay fees but not the full cost of
their education, which is subsidized by the government. The University
of the South Pacific, near Suva, is a regional institution; Fiji and
other Pacific Islands governments fund its budget, and foreign aid meets
the costs of buildings and capital development. There are campuses in
other countries of the region. To extend the reach of the university
farther, lessons are broadcast to distant regional centres by a
satellite network. Fiji also provides for its own technical,
agricultural, and medical education and teacher training. There are
private medical practitioners in all large towns, a national network of
clinics and small hospitals, and major hospitals in Suva, Lautoka, and
Labasa.
Cultural life
Daily life and social customs
Fiji’s mixed ethnicity contributes to a rich cultural heritage. Many
features of traditional Fijian life survive; they are most evident in
the elaborate investiture, marriage, and other ceremonies for
high-ranking chiefs. These ceremonies provide a focus for the practicing
of traditional crafts, such as the manufacture of masi, or tapa cloth,
made from the bark of the paper mulberry; mat weaving; wood carving; and
canoe making. Drinking of yanggona (kava, made from the root of Piper
methysticum) takes place not only as a part of important ceremonies but
also as a part of the everyday life of Fijians and Indians alike.
The Indians of Fiji continue to maintain their own culture.
Traditional marriage ceremonies are practiced, as are customs such as
fire walking and ritual self-torture during the annual Guru Purnima
festival, at the time of the full moon in July or early August. Diwali,
the Hindu festival of lights, is celebrated every October as a public
holiday.
The arts and cultural institutions
Displays of “traditional” Fijian culture, music, and dancing make an
important contribution to tourism; model villages and handicraft markets
are popular with tourists. A traditional song-and-dance performance, the
meke, is rooted in storytelling traditions. In its strictest form, the
meke involves chanting by shamans, whose bodies take on spirits of the
netherworld, accompanied by dancing, rhythmic clapping, and the beating
of slit drums. The meke is one of the traditional performances at the
Arts Village, a model village and tourist centre near Deuba. Cinemas
showing imported Indian films are popular. The Fiji Museum, located in
the Thurston Botanical Gardens in Suva, contains a fine collection of
war canoes and other artifacts.
Sports and recreation
In general, sports in Fiji can be divided into pursuits
traditionally enjoyed by the locals and activities offered chiefly to
visitors. In the latter category are scuba diving and snorkeling,
surfing, windsurfing, and rafting. Among the authentic Fijian sports
activities are women’s canoe races on Rotuma Island, wrestling, and disk
pitching, a Polynesian-Melanesian form of shuffleboard. The bilibili, a
wooden raft, is traditionally used to traverse low-grade white-water
rivers. There is also a long tradition of outrigger canoeing in Fiji,
and it continues to play an important role in the country’s culture.
Rugby is very popular among native Fijians, and the islands supply
players to the top leagues in the world. The national team has performed
well in international competition. Other popular sports include football
(soccer), lawn bowls, cricket, and basketball. The Fiji Bula Marathon is
held each year in May or June. The Fiji National Olympic Committee was
formed in 1949, and Fiji has participated in the Summer Olympic Games
since 1956.
Media and publishing
Fiji has several daily newspapers, and there are also weekly and
monthly publications. There are a multilingual public radio broadcasting
system and several private multilingual radio stations. A commercial
television station provides free services and several pay channels.
History
When Fiji’s first settlers arrived from the islands of Melanesia
at least 3,500 years ago, they carried with them a wide range of food
plants, the pig, and a style of pottery known as Lapita ware. This
pottery is generally associated with peoples who had well-developed
skills in navigation and canoe building and were horticulturists. From
Fiji the Lapita culture was carried to Tonga and Samoa, where the first
distinctively Polynesian cultures evolved. Archaeological evidence
suggests that two other pottery styles were subsequently introduced into
Fiji, though it is not clear whether these represent major migrations or
simply cultural innovations brought by small groups of migrants. In most
areas of Fiji, the settlers lived in small communities near ridge forts
and practiced a slash-and-burn type of agriculture. In the fertile delta
regions of southeast Viti Levu, however, there were large concentrations
of population. These settlements, which were based on intensive taro
cultivation using complex irrigation systems, were protected by massive
ring-ditch fortifications.
Traditional Fijian society was hierarchical. Leaders were chosen
according to rank, which was based on descent as well as personal
achievement. Organized through residence and kinship (in the latter case
through mataqali, or clans, and residential subclans), Fijians
participated in a flexible network of alliances that sometimes brought
communities together and at other times caused them to oppose one
another. By alliance or conquest, communities might form confederations
led by paramount chiefs; warfare was common.
The first Europeans to sight the Fiji islands were Dutch explorer
Abel Janzsoon Tasman, who passed the northeast fringe of the group in
1643, and Capt. James Cook, who passed the southeastern islands in 1774.
Capt. William Bligh traveled through the group in his open longboat
after the mutiny on the HMS Bounty in 1789 and returned to explore it in
1792.
Commercial interest in the islands began with the discovery of
sandalwood at the beginning of the 19th century, leading to a rush to
Bua (Mbua) Bay, at the southwestern end of Vanua Levu. A few
beachcombers, useful as armourers and interpreters, were adopted by
influential chiefs from this time. Within little more than a decade the
accessible, commercial stands of sandalwood were depleted, but by the
1820s traders were again visiting the islands to trade for edible
varieties of sea cucumber, the marine invertebrate also known as
bêche-de-mer or trepang. Whereas most of the sandalwood had been cut by
gangs of foreigners, the bêche-de-mer harvest involved large numbers of
Fijians in gathering, cleaning, and drying and in the provision of food
and firewood.
These opportunities for new wealth and power, symbolized by the
acquisition of muskets, intensified political rivalries and hastened the
rise of the kingdom of Bau, a tiny island off the east coast of Viti
Levu, ruled first by Naulivou and then by his nephew Cakobau. By the
1850s Bau dominated western Fiji. Cakobau’s main rival was the Tongan
chief Maʿafu, who led an army of Christian Tongans and their allies from
eastern Fiji. After a short-lived alliance with Maʿafu, Cakobau became a
Christian in 1854, thus bringing most Fijians under the influence of
Methodist missionaries. Roman Catholic and Anglican missionaries arrived
later but did not enjoy the same success.
By the 1860s Fiji was attracting European settlers intent on
establishing plantations to capitalize on a boom in cotton prices caused
by the American Civil War. Disputes ensued over land and political power
within and between European and Fijian communities, and problems arose
with labourers introduced from other Pacific islands. These factors
contributed to violent confrontations, exacerbated the implicit
instability of Fijian society, and ensured that no Fijian chief could
impose his rule on the whole group. European attempts at government were
doomed by the greed and factionalism of their members and by the
interference of European governments and consuls. Imperial intervention
thus became inevitable.
On Oct. 10, 1874, after negotiations had led to an offer of
unconditional cession, Fiji became a British crown colony. The policies
of the first governor, Sir Arthur Gordon, were decisive in shaping the
history of Fiji. Gordon saw himself as the protector of the Fijian
people and thus initiated policies that limited their involvement in
commercial and political developments. Sales of Fijian land were banned;
the Fijians were taxed in agricultural produce, not cash; and they were
governed through a system of indirect rule based on the traditional
political structure.
In order to maintain these policies yet encourage the economic
development of the new colony, Gordon promoted the introduction of
indentured Indian labourers and investment by an Australian concern, the
Colonial Sugar Refining Company, to establish sugar plantations and
processing mills. Indian migrants were encouraged to become permanent
settlers at the conclusion of their contracts, even though little land
was available for sale and the migrants’ political rights were
circumscribed. After the termination of the indenture system in 1920,
Indian agitation over political and economic grievances caused strikes
and continual discontent and challenged the commercial and political
domination of the small European community in the islands.
During World War II Fiji was occupied by Allied forces, and a
battalion of Fijians saw service as scouts in the campaign for the
Solomon Islands. Indians, whose history as indentured workers in Fiji
had provided them with grievances regarding their unequal treatment in
society, refused to serve on political grounds, including the fact that
army volunteers from Fiji were offered lesser wages and conditions than
were Europeans; consequently, the army, which was retained after the
war, remained exclusively Fijian except for a handful of European
officers. Indians also refused to cut cane at the low prices offered.
These actions led to the taint of disloyalty being applied to Indians by
the other ethnic groups. After the war, the colonial authorities
restructured the Fijian administration, reinforcing chiefly leadership
and thus consolidating the conservatism of Fijian society.
Constitutional development toward independence, which began in the
1960s, was more a response to international and British pressures than
to any demand from within Fiji. The 1966 constitution represented a
compromise between the principles of parliamentary democracy and the
ethnic divisions within the country. The franchise, previously exercised
by Europeans and some Indians, was extended to adults of all ethnic
backgrounds, including Fijians, who until then had been represented by
their chiefs. Fijian land rights, guaranteed by the Deed of Cession in
1874, were given constitutional protection, while Fijian chiefs were
given an effective veto in all important matters affecting the status of
Fijians and in changes to the constitution itself. Although Indian
leaders had since the 1930s argued for an electoral system using a
common roll of voters, they now faced political reality and accepted the
new system. Voters were classified according to ethnicity: Fijian,
Indian, or General, which included citizens of any non-Fijian,
non-Indian ethnicity. Legislative representatives were elected from
Indian and Fijian rolls (called communal rolls) and from cross-voting
rolls, which presented candidates as members of their ethnic
constituencies who were then elected by voters of all ethnicities.
The effect of the constitution was to give power to Fijian
politicians so long as they remained in partnership with the General
voters and, critically, so long as the Fijian vote remained unified.
Despite “race riots” during by-elections in 1968, independence was
achieved in a spirit of cooperation on Oct. 10, 1970, the 96th
anniversary of cession.
From that time until April 1987, Fiji was governed by the Alliance
Party, which was pledged to policies of ‘‘multiracialism.’’ Its
electoral supremacy was challenged only briefly, in 1977, when Fijian
votes were attracted by Fijian nationalist candidates campaigning under
a slogan of “Fiji for the Fijians”; only factionalism prevented the
formation of an Indian-led government.
In 1987, however, the Indian-dominated National Federation Party
joined in coalition with the new Labour Party (led by a Fijian, Timoci
Bavadra), which had strong support from Fijian and Indian trade
unionists. The coalition was successful in elections held in April. The
new government, which had a majority of Indian members in the
legislature, was greeted with widespread Fijian protest. After only a
few weeks the new government’s leaders were arrested and deposed in a
coup d’état led by Lieut. Col. Sitiveni Rabuka, who demanded greater
protection for Fijian rights and an entrenched Fijian dominance of any
future government. The governor-general declared a state of emergency
and assumed control of the government. He then negotiated a compromise
with political leaders that would have maintained civilian rule pending
a constitutional revision and new elections. Dissatisfied with the
progress of negotiations, however, Rabuka led a second coup in September
and reimposed military rule. Toward the end of 1987 he declared Fiji a
republic and revoked the 1970 constitution. Fiji was expelled from the
Commonwealth. Rabuka appointed a new civilian government. A new
constitution, designed to concentrate power in the hands of Fijians, was
promulgated on July 25, 1990.
Under the 1990 constitution, Rabuka was elected to parliament and
went on to become prime minister in 1992. Two years later a
Constitutional Review Commission was established that was charged with
recommending changes to lessen the ethnic bias built into the
constitution. Work on the constitutional revision was the political
focus throughout the mid-1990s, and a number of Fijian nationalist
groups organized to oppose Rabuka and the work of the commission, which
published its recommendations in September 1996. In 1997 Fiji was
readmitted to the Commonwealth over the objection of Fijian nationalists
and many Indians. The proposed constitutional changes were approved that
year and took effect in 1998.
In May 1999 Mahendra Chaudhry became Fiji’s first prime minister of
Indian ancestry. Fijian nationalists strongly opposed Chaudhry’s
premiership, and during his first months in office there were a number
of arson and bomb attacks in Suva linked to extremists. However,
Chaudhry easily survived a no-confidence motion by nationalist
legislators in August 1999. On May 19, 2000, Chaudhry and his government
were taken hostage and deposed by a group led by businessman George
Speight, who claimed to be acting for indigenous Fijians. Speight was
backed in the coup by rebel members of the army’s counterrevolutionary
warfare unit. The coup was accompanied by widespread looting and
destruction of Indian-owned businesses in Suva. The president, Ratu Sir
Kamisese Mara (who had served as prime minister for most of the
postindependence period), promptly declared a state of emergency and
took over governing powers of the country. However, after continuous
deadlock in negotiations with the coup leaders, the army declared
martial law and took over the reins of power.
In July 2000 a Fijian-dominated interim civilian administration was
appointed by the military commander to lead the country back to
democracy. Just over a week later the Bose Levu Vakaturaga (Great
Council of Chiefs) appointed Ratu Josefa Iloilo (formerly the vice
president) as interim president, and the rebels released the hostages
after 56 days of captivity in the parliamentary complex. In November,
Fiji’s High Court declared the military-installed government
illegitimate, decreeing that the parliament ousted in May remained the
country’s governing authority. Legal appeals of the ruling lasted into
2001, by which time the Bose Levu Vakaturaga reconfirmed Iloilo as
president and called for a general election in August and September.
Chaudhry failed to retain his post, and the interim premier, Laisenia
Qarase of the nationalist Fiji United Party, was confirmed as prime
minister in September 2001.
Tensions between the military and the elected government continued.
In 2002 plans were introduced for the privatization of the sugar
industry, which was in danger of collapse after the withdrawal of
subsidies from the European Union. Qarase’s party narrowly won the May
2006 elections, and he began his second term. In December, however,
military leader Voreque Bainimarama seized power, dismissing Qarase and
establishing himself briefly as the country’s sole leader. In January
2007 he restored executive powers to President Iloilo, who then named
Bainimarama interim prime minister. Bainimarama then proceeded to
appoint an interim cabinet. He promised to schedule elections within the
next several years but committed to no firm timetable. Following an
April 2009 ruling by the Fiji Court of Appeal that the Bainimarama
government had been put in place illegally after the 2006 coup,
President Iloilo announced that he had abrogated the 1997 constitution
and dismissed the country’s judges. Iloilo put off national elections
until 2014 and appointed a new interim government with Bainimarama again
as prime minister.
Barrie K. Macdonald