Government by Greed: PART 1: The Fiji
Military - Origins
Guest Writer- Subhash Appana
In Fiji Military, it was always assumed that Chiefs would be at forefront of power in Fiji. And that would have assumed Royal Fiji Military Forces (RFMF) would support the Government.
The misplaced assumption was that: 1) Fijians would always remain united under the chiefly system, 2) political opposition would only come from the Indo-Fijian, 3) the RFMF would always be led by a chiefly or chief-supported commander, 4) the RFMF would always support the Fijian establishment and 5) that Fijian chiefly rule would continue unbroken.
Each of these was to fall with time and propel the country into coup-coup land. Continue reading, and hope for more from our Guest Writer, Subhash Appana
The Fiji Military - Origins
This series has contended throughout that the 2000 coup
and subsequent developments involving PM Qarase and his Gang were fuelled by
greed – hence the name Government by
Greed. Qarase’s cabal (gang) had its roots in the Fiji civil service which since
1987 had been called on to play a more prominent role in Fiji’s politics. It
was members of this cadre of civil servants, a number of disgruntled ambitious
chiefs and members of the Methodist hierarchy who formed the platform on which
Qarase and his Gang plied their plunder under the all-encompassing umbrella of
“Fijian assistance”.
The obvious question that arises then is: so where did
the Fiji Military fall within this scheme? This article develops a brief historical outline of
the evolution of the Fiji military and the changing roles that it has played in
Fiji’s political landscape. The bulk of the focus (in ensuing articles) must,
of necessity, fall on the role of the military in the 1987 and 2000 coups
before any meaningful discussion can follow on the 2006 coup and Fiji’s present
military-supported government.
In 1874 when Governor Arthur Gordon arrived, Fiji’s
self-made “king”, Ratu Seru Cakobau already had a Royal Army organized with the
assistance of white settlers who had preceded colonization by Britain. In fact,
Fiji’s very first coup took place in Levuka just prior to cession as Cakobau
tried to organize a government that could levy taxes and control the whole
country from a central administrative office.
At that time Bau’s hold on Fiji was precarious even
though its designs were clear. Of particular concern was the non-acceptance of
Bau rule by westerners and the “savages” from Colo and Navosa highlands. This
was the first target of Gordon’s army and the bloody skirmishes that followed
in the highlands is a thing of legend. That’s where the derogatory term “kai
colo” comes from. Loosely translated it means junglee or uncivilized.
Following these campaigns Gordon amalgamated the Royal
Army with the Fiji Constabulary (police) to form the Armed Native Constabulary
as there was continuing need to subjugate the warrior-like tendencies that
prevailed in pockets among the Fijian people. Furthermore, at the turn of the
19th century a third element began to become a national irritant –
increasing demands for fairness and political representation by the undefined,
un-understood and un-inducted girmitiya or Indian labourers.
It was not long before the Armed Native Constabulary was
turned onto this disturbance. A January 1920 strike by Indo-Fijian workers of
the Public Works Department that spread into a bigger confrontation was
suppressed by force using 200 Fijians from Lau and a number of others co-opted
from Rewa and Navua – one Indian died in that attack (Gillion, 1977). One year
later, the 1921 cane strike was suppressed by 250 Fijian constables from Bau
commissioned through their chiefs.
Ongoing problems with atrocious working conditions
within the sugar industry meant that rebellion was a constant threat. The
forced suppression of 1921, where desperate workers were beaten up and bundled
into submission simply hardened resolve and a second cane strike in 1943 saw
soldiers being prominently posted around the western cane belt as part of an
intimidation tactic during the strike. Little is made of the resentment towards
this overt threat that led to failed negotiations between Ratu Sukuna on behalf
of government and cane leaders.
Later the December 1959 Oil and Allied Workers strike
led by Apisai Tora and James Anthony invoked further threats of violent
suppression by government (Lal, 1992, pp. 165-169). Again little was made of
the multi-racial composition of that worker revolt as the army gradually became
an unarticulated instrument to ensure that the Indo-Fijian population stayed in
its undefined “place” and “behaved”.
This has to be coupled with the fact that government in
Fiji was predicated on the back of a traditional system that was shaped,
fossilized and maintained by the colonial administration. The chiefly system
thus formed the back of the liberal-democratic system that presented the “face”
of government in Fiji after independence in 1970. It was therefore very
important that the hierarchy seen at the back (ie. the chiefly structure)
reflected that seen at the front (ie. the government).
An elaborate link between government and the military
was maintained through a system of recruitment and promotion that ensured that
those with traditional status (ie. the chiefs) progressed through the ranks
faster and held positions of power within the military. A run through the list
of commanders shows Brigadier D.J. Aitken, Colonel Paul Manueli (1974-79), Colonel Ian Thorpe
(1979-82), Brigadier-General Ratu Epeli Nailatikau (1982-87), Major-General
Sitiveni Rabuka (1987- 92), Brigadier-General Ratu Epeli Ganilau (1992-99), Rear
Admiral Frank Bainimarama (1999 - 2014) and Brigadier-General Mosese Tikoitoga
(2014 -).
A closer scrutiny shows that Paul Manueli became commander during the era of multi-racialism and at a time when there were virtually no other local candidates. Rabuka on the other hand, simply wrested the position through his coup. Bainimarama appeared at a time when there were no chiefly successors and commoner senior officers had begun to agitate for the position. The other 2 long-serving commanders of the RFMF were chiefs of very high rank.
A closer scrutiny shows that Paul Manueli became commander during the era of multi-racialism and at a time when there were virtually no other local candidates. Rabuka on the other hand, simply wrested the position through his coup. Bainimarama appeared at a time when there were no chiefly successors and commoner senior officers had begun to agitate for the position. The other 2 long-serving commanders of the RFMF were chiefs of very high rank.
Thus in the initial post-1970 scheme of governance (and
politics) in Fiji, the hierarchy of the Royal Fiji Military Forces (RFMF) was
supposed to reflect that of national government. And both were predicated on
the chiefly system - chiefs were expected to be at the forefront of power in
Fiji. This was the intricate link that guaranteed RFMF support for government.
The assumptions within this framework were that: Fijians
would always remain united under the chiefly system, political opposition would
only come from the Indo-Fijian, the RFMF would always be led by a chiefly or
chief-supported commander, the RFMF would always support the Fijian
establishment and that Fijian chiefly rule would continue unbroken. Each of
these was to fall with time and propel the country into coup-coup land.
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Stay Tuned: Part 2 : Government by Greed- Role of the Military.
Read................
[About the Author: Subhash
Appana is an Indo-Fijian academic with Fijian family links. He has researched
and presented papers at international conferences throughout the world. This
has inevitably resulted in publications in respected international journals.
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Stay Tuned: Part 2 : Government by Greed- Role of the Military.
Read................
"Ironically, while these manly international campaigns were being waged
for “freedom” and “democracy”, leaders in Fiji were totally unconcerned about
the pleas of Fiji’s very own semi-slaves, the Girmitiya......"
"The
British system of running the military with a class structure and inbuilt
systems of discrimination became accepted practice. That’s partly why Indian
demands for equal pay to join the military after 1939 was seen as treachery...."
[Read in Part 2...coming soon...]
E-Mail: appanas@hotmail.com / thakurji@xtra.co.nz
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Subhash
was brought up in the chiefly village of Vuna in Taveuni and is particularly
fond of the Fijian language and culture. His paper on the Fijian chiefly system
(2005) was the first of its kind after the landmark book on the same by Rusiate
Nayacalou in 1975.
Subhash
has written extensively on the link between the politics of the vanua,
Indo-Fijian aspirations and the continued search for a functioning democracy in
Fiji. This series attempts to be both informative and provocative keeping in
mind the delicate, distractive and often destructive sensitivities involved in
cross-cultural discourses of this type.]
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