A Dark History of Modern Fiji: When the failed military mutiny changed Fiji’s fate
Thakur Ranjit Singh
This is a reprint of article first published in 2014
Second November 2000 was the day when Frank Bainimarama
was supposed to have died, and Fiji taken over by ethno-nationalists through a
military mutiny instigated by some Chiefs and greedy individuals. Thank God it
did not eventuate.
Can you for a
moment imagine what Fiji would be like now, had the devils,
supported by some chiefs, succeeded in assassinating Frank Bainimarama on that
fateful day?
What would have been the fate of Fiji-Indians? Another Girmit or
slavery, or massacre, something like Luanda or Syria?
Thank God for
the 2 November, 2000, which gave back a stronger Bainimarama and a new pleasant
history to Fiji. We are so thankful to the failed mutiny on this fateful day
when victory, light and life respectively defeated loss, darkness and death.
Indeed, 2nd of November should be declared local Diwali for Fiji – when life won over death, and that dash through a cassava patch saved the life of an army commander who changed the fate of Fiji.
Thursday 2 November 2000 started as an uneventful day, for me, a normal clear day in
Suva, nothing untoward. I was at Vatuwaqa Cemetery at around 1pm to attend a
friend’s funeral from Carpenters Shipping.
I had planned to travel to Ba later
that afternoon to attend the funeral my cousin, Jai Karan Singh (Prem) who had suddenly passed away the previous morning at Rarawai, Ba, Fiji.
As we were completing
viewing, after 1pm, we heard what sounded like cracking of gunfire. It was
echoing from Nabua Military barracks which is some 2-3km away from Vatuwaqa Cemetery.
We immediately sensed something was wrong, and news filtered through that
something unpleasant was happening at RFMF Barracks.
After the funeral, I quickly
rushed home in Raiwai, and shot–off to Ba via Queens Road with my family to
attend the funeral. Later we heard in the news that there was mayhem at Nabua
Barracks where attempts were made to assassinate Commodore Frank Bainimarama.
He was able to escape with help of some soldiers through cassava fields.
This was the second mutiny at a military camp.
On 7 July 2000, rebel soldiers supporting George Speight overran the Sukunaivalu Barracks in Labasa, the largest town on the northern island
of Vanua Levu. Besides seizing the barracks, these soldiers
harassed ordinary citizens of Labasa, kidnapping bus commuters, ransacking
homes, and seizing crops, and bullying, assaulting, and harassing mostly Fiji
Indians.
The police was powerless and humiliated, and yours truly, Thakur made a mockery of the police force to a "badhia bail"-a castrated bullock. I coined the caption of a cartoon which read, where one farmer in Labasa is telling another farmer, pointing to a bull: “My castrated bullock has more balls than the police force.”
The police was really impotent under the then Commissioner Isikia Savua, who was having a jaunt in Vanuatu when anarchy was taking place in Labasa. [Read full four-part account of Savua Enquiry in my FIJI PUNDIT blogsite]
Reports later emerged
that the situation at Nabua Barracks on this fateful day was bloody and unheard
of where Fijians were prepared to shoot their fellow soldiers in cold blood,
while the milk of human kindness in some rebels stopped them from killing
in cold blood.
Fijian army officers were executed in cold blood by the rebel
soldiers from Counter Revolutionary Warfare (CRW, which was equivalent to elite
force of SAS) during this rebel uprising, with one soldier shot at point blank
range while he was asleep.
Reports in local
newspapers gave graphic details of how renegade Special Forces soldiers killed
three loyal officers during the failed military mutiny at the Queen Elizabeth Barracks
in Suva on this fateful day
of 2 November, 2000. One was shot while seated at his computer. His blood was
cleaned from the keyboard, according to the
Fiji Sun.
One rebel from the
Counter Revolutionary Warfare (CRW) Unit refused to execute two officers at the
height of the gun battle. Major Niko Bukarau, who escaped execution, told
Fiji's Daily Post: "I should be in the mortuary if everything went as
planned."
While the CRW rebels had taken over the Nabua Barracks, it was
perhaps their bad luck, as little did they realize that the most powerful and
feared unit of RFMF, the Third Infantry Regiment was at Sigatoka Sand dunes, undertaking
military exercises.
As I passed Sigatoka on my way to Ba on the day, I passed these
soldiers waiting just below Matanipusi Hills, some 100km away from Suva, in Dee
Cee Buses, as if readying themselves to pounce on the enemy. Somehow, I had a hunch
that Fiji still had hope.
And the powerful Third Regiment
was headed by a Bainimarama loyalist and career soldier, COLONEL VILIAME SERUVAKULA, who joined the Army in the early 1980s. He opposed the 2000 coup. And
he stood out as Fiji’s saviour on that fateful day.
They gallantly marched into
Nabua camp, mounted a brief offensive, and led the all-powerful Third Regiment
in a counter-offensive to retake the barracks from the rebels and maintain
normalcy and security. They succeeded.
Sitiveni Rabuka-the original coup-maker. He was also implicated in the mutiny, and as a result lost his opportunity of a diplomatic posting. |
Following the mutiny,
Seruvakula made some controversial statements in the media. He alleged that he
had been offered F$250,000 to support George
Speight's attempted coup in May,
and that former Prime Minister Sitiveni
Rabuka (who led two coups in 1987) had incited the mutiny and
attempted to overthrow the military commander, Commodore
Frank Bainimarama.
It later emerged that this
mutiny was led by Captain Shane Stevens. It
left some casualties and fatalities, and we can say there was some collateral
damage. A total of 42 soldiers from the Counter Revolutionary Warfare Unit were subsequently convicted of involvement in the
mutiny.
Bainimarama also accused
Rabuka of having "politicized" the Counter
Revolutionary Warfare (CRW).
The
name of Lieutenant Colonel Filipo Tarakinikini
has also been mentioned as the person who wanted to depose Bainimarama.
Stevens
later testified that Ratu
Inoke Takiveikata, the Qaranivalu, a senior chief of Naitasiri
Province and a Senator and former Cabinet Minister, had visited the barracks
during the mutiny to offer moral and practical support, which included
supplying the mutineers with cellphones. Later, Takiveikata was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for his role in the mutiny.
That was a flashback of events that unfolded over two decades ago. Can you
for a moment imagine what Fiji would be like now, had the devils,
supported by some chiefs, succeeded in assassinating Bainimarama on that
fateful day?
What would have been the fate of Fiji Indians? Another Girmit or
slavery, or massacre, something like Luanda or Syria? What would have the so-called leaders,
masquerading as Chiefs done to Fiji, after they had looted National Bank of Fiji(NBF) and other
institutions of Fiji under Rabuka regime?
Can
you appreciate and perhaps now understand Bainimarama for taking the actions he
took? How would you feel if your own people, in military, who were there to
protect the leader, had become your killers? How about Chiefs? Instead of being mentors and respectable advisers, they abused their position for greed of
power?
The
events that unfolded subsequent to this attempt on his life is reflected in the
tough stance Bainimarama took. He had warned Qarase to inculcate better governance,
bereft of nationalism and racism, which Qarase ignored at his peril.
Bainimarama purged
military and removed all the thorns and opposition, and strengthened it with loyal
officers who believed in multiracialism, good governance and loyalty.
The
thieves…oops, I mean Chiefs, some of them abused their positions and power, and
politicized the august body of GCC for personal and political gains.
The
biggest disappointment was Naitasiri's powerful and respected Qaranivalu, Ratu Inoke Takiveikata, who was implicated and
sentenced. As a result the sham of Great Council of Chiefs had to go.
Fiji's Prime Minister, Frank Bainimarama-thank God the mutiny failed in 2000 - we have a stronger person leading the nation. We cannot imagine what Fiji would have been with those ethno-nationalists |
With
the election of Fiji’s First government as the now democratically elected
government of Fiji and recognition by Australia, New Zealand and USA, followed by the whole world, Fiji has come a long way since that fateful day on
2 November, 2000.
Yes, this is the significant and historic day when
Fiji’s current Prime Minister, Commodore Bainimarama played hide and seek with
death in a cassava patch in Nabua. And like Diwali which heralds victory of
life over death, life won on that crucial day, which we now realize made him
into an ironman for the rascals and a friend of the weak.
Thank
God for the 2 November, 2000, which gave back a stronger Bainimarama and a new pleasant
history to Fiji. We are so thankful to the failed mutiny on this fateful day
when victory, light and life respectively defeated loss, darkness and death.
Indeed,
second of November should be declared local Diwali for Fiji – every year.
[E-mail:
thakurjifj@gmail.com]
[About
the author: Thakur Ranjit Singh is a media commentator and runs blog site, FIJI PUNDIT, that tells what others fail to tell. He is a former publisher of Fiji's Daily
Post newspaper, and is based in Auckland, New Zealand. This article was originally written in 2014 and is intended as a historical reminder of our dark past.]