Cogito, ergo sum. I think, therefore I am. (René Descartes, mathematician and philosopher,1599-1650)

Tuesday 7 September 2010

Premature Statement on Electoral Reform, Chiefs are Not the People, Squatters Praise Government, Mission Abuses of Office


A VOTE BEFORE TIME. I'm not sure on whose authority Strategic Framework for Change Coordinator Lote Raboila has announced that voting will not be compulsory for the 2014 elections. He says people will be given the choice whether to vote or not to vote according to Pillar One of the People's Charter. Pillar One makes no specific reference to compulsory or voluntary voting. But, more importantly, I wonder what this has to do with the SFC Office?

Isn't it up to the people who will be involved in the electoral reform process to make recommendations on all matters of electoral reform?  Government may give "advance notice" of what it would like, but their views should not be stated as facts before the event.

ALL PROVINCES NOW SUPPORT CHARTER. The Permanent Secretary PM's Office Col. Pio Tikoduadua, reports that Government now has the support of the 14 provinces in the country. He says even though some chiefs have yet to show their support, they have received assurances and encouragement throughout the 14 provinces. Great. But ...

But the chiefs and provincial council are not the people, though they invariably speak for them, and neither do they represent the non-ethnic Fijian population that don't quite fit into the provincial system. I understand the Rotuma districts have already expressed support for the Charter.

Does anyone know what Government envisages for the future of the separate and parallel system of ethnic Fijian administration, organized through tikina, provinces and divisions, come 2014?  And whether this will be open to discussion as per Pillar One of the Charter before then?  My understanding is that the roles of all ethnic Fijian institutions were to be reviewed.  This would include: the Great Council of Chiefs, the Native Land Trust Board, the Fijian Affairs Board, the Ministry of Fijian Affairs and Provincial Development, the Business Development initiatives such as Yasana Holdings and the Vanua Development Corporation and, of course, the Provincial Councils.  Some have already been reviewed but an overview of what has been done, and what remains to be done, and by whom, would be most useful.

Any volunteer to write about this, or provide the necessary information so that someone else can write it up?

SQUATTERS PRAISE GOVERNMENT. Semiti Qalowasa, Director of the People's Concerned Network, a grassroots NGO which aims to provide squatters with a legal piece of land and better housing, says the current government is the only government that truly cares about the plight of the less fortunate.

He was speaking at the Ground Breaking Ceremony for the Lagilagi Housing Pilot Project at the Jittu Squatter Settlement that will see 162 families rehoused.  For years, he said, they have struggled to have the voices of squatters heard but past governments were full of false promises. The Lagilagi Housing Project will see the construction of three double-storey complexes with two bedrooms, with a single storey one bedroom complex  put aside for the elderly and those receiving Assistance from the Social Welfare Ministry.

The Project comprises a partnership between the 162 families and the PCN, whereby the families pay half the cost of the construction of their home, with the other half funded by the German Catholic funding group Misereor, and the Fiji Government. The land on which the houses will be built will be owned communally.

PUBLIC FUNDS ARE NOT PRIVATE  FUNDS. Major fiscal discrepancies in some of Fiji's foreign missions still need addressing, and the heads of the missions need to be held accountable.  Take,  for example, the mission in PNG where $62,761 of public funds were used to pay the HighCom's son's fees for Saint Joseph's Nudgee College in Brisbane. The HighCom paid back $12,000 but the Ministry of Foreign Affairs ceased all the recoveries without any explanation when he was recalled in March 2009. Or the personal phone calls and other extravagant expenditure totalling $11,929 at the Tokyo mission.

These and other discrepancies came to light following the proper assessment of the Auditor General's Report for 2007 by the Public Accounts Committee. PSC Permanent Secretary, Parmesh Chand is seeking explanations before decided what further action should be taken.

8 comments:

Time to get real said...

Croz
Where have you been for the last 4 years?
Fiji is controlled by a military junta you strangely like to call a 'government'.
This 'government' has the guns - what the military regime says goes. They don't answer to anybody - simply 'decree' it and silence any opposition by PER, censorship and intimidation.
Please croz, don't demean yourself or the situation by pretending it is other than it is - a dictatorship.

Bad news said...

Julia Gillard scrapping back into government in Australia is a disaster for Fiji. Her foreign minister is likely to be the man she deposed, Kevin Rudd, who's always been blindly hardline about the Bainimarama regime. Only the votes of two independents deprived Liberal leader Tony Abbott of government. In contrast to Rudd, Abbott was willing to contemplate a change in Australia's policy on Fiji. He even had a meeting with Peter Thomson, our UN ambassador, to hear Thomson's case that Australia should be supporting Bainimarama's multiracial agenda for the country. Now, all that's gone. It's going to be a bleak three years with Labor back in charge in Canberra. Our only hope is that Gillard's hold on power is now so tenuous, Abbott might still be able to force an early election and a change of policy.

Joe said...

@ Bad news
Labour is the better of the 2 evils. Liberal/National are ruthless when it comes to undemocratic govts, as former foreign minister Downer said before the election that Labour has been very soft on the Fiji crisis. He actually wanted tougher and more stringent sanctions. Be it Smith or Rudd, it is a blessing in disguise for Fiji. It was actually Julie Bishop, Abbott's deputy who was willing to contemplate a change in OZ policy on Fiji, which actually means tightening the noose. Rudd will actually be more Fiji friendly, but will not legitimise a military govt, and rightly so.

Joe Bananas said...

Joe, with respect, you're deluded. The actual speech from Julie Bishop before the election was that sanctions against Fiji hadn't worked and it was time to engage with the regime, assist it with its electoral reforms and try to secure the earliest possible return to democracy. If that's not more positive than the present Labor stance, then I'm a monkey's uncle.

Joe said...

@ Joe Bananas
It was said in an election campaign. You must be a monkey's uncle to believe that. Why didn't she say that in parliament? Why was there a bi-partisan support for the stance taken by the Labour govt in the last OZ parliament in relation to the Fiji situation? If you dont understand politics, there are many on this forum who will help you. Just ask.

Who's the real monkey here? said...

Joe, stop monkeying around with semantics. Parliament had already been prorogued when Bishop made her comments on revisiting the stance on Fiji. So how could she have said it in the parliament? Circumstances have changed. Many Australian policy makers were startled by the success of Bainimarama's Natadola summit and there's a big rethink on Fiji happening across the board. Even you would have to concede that existing Australian sanctions haven't worked. And if you think Australia isn't worried about Frank's program of seeking new friends outside the region, then you're the monkey's uncle, mate.

Natadola summit said...

If the natadola summit was a 'success', I'd like to see how the junta measure failure?

More money business said...

"Natadola summit", success is Michael Somare and Derek Sikua turning up and leaving Edward Natapei out in the cold and Australia suffering acute loss of face. And if you think otherwise, you clearly don't know what was happening behind the scenes. As late as several hours before the summit, Australian officials were telling anyone who'd listen that no-one significant was turning up in Fiji. No-one significant? Just the leader of the biggest South Pacific nation for starters. It was both an intelligence and a diplomatic failure. The Foreign Affairs minister was left looking stupid and Canberra's image in the region took a battering when its attempt to derail the summit disintegrated so publicly. Established fact, end of story. Here, have a banana.