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India mobilising opinion
By Our Special Correspondent
NEW DELHI, MAY 30. A senior official of the Foreign Office, Mr.
S. T. Devare, is to leave for Australia and New Zealand in the
next few days in an effort to mobilise international opinion in
the matter of the ongoing constitutional turmoil in Fiji. This
will be the first overt effort to be made by India. Mr. Devare is
also likely to visit Suva, capital of Fiji.
So far the Government had refrained from any direct involvement,
lest New Delhi's exertions be seen as provocation, which could
rebound to the disadvantage of the ethnic Indian community in
Fiji. But it is stated on good authority that India has been in
touch with Australia, New Zealand, Britain. In the next few days
the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group is likely to be
activated. The CMAG is expected to set up a ``range of markers''
which the new governing arrangement in Suva must subscribe to,
failing which the Commonwealth could think in terms of economic
measures and ultimately invoke the Harare principles. However,
there is a realisation that there are definite limits to economic
interventionism in Fiji.
The Indian approach, in tandem with other concerned countries in
the region, is to ensure that there was no return to the 1990
constitutional scheme of things, which institutionalized racism
by debarring Fijians of Indian origins from holding high offices.
The official judgment about the coup leader Mr. George Speight is
that his action add up to ``terrorism''.
The Vajpayee Government has found itself increasingly under
pressure at home to be seen as doing something about the
developments in Fiji. Today the BJP came out strongly in favour
of international sanctions against Fiji to pressure it to restore
a democratic order.
Over the last ten days the BJP has been silent on Fiji, but today
the party took note of the developments at a meeting of its
foreign affairs cell, chaired by Mr. N. N. Jha, and attended
among others by Mr. Brajesh Mishra, Principal Secretary to the
Prime Minister. The party is clear that a legitimate prime
minister has been overthrown, the president has been dismissed
and the 1997 Constitution has been disbanded. ``This was a cause
for worry. We do not want some Fijians (read ethnic Indians) to
become second class citizens,'' argued Mr. Venkaiah Naidu, the
party spokesman. He further argued that it was ``natural'' for
India to worry about the happenings there as 40 per cent of the
population was that of ethnic Indians.
Not just the BJP, even the Congress(I) has demanded a ``pro-
active'' approach towards the Fiji developments. The Congress(I)
and the BJP believe the Government should be mobilising
Commonwealth opinion and precedents against the illegal overthrow
of the democratic Government in Fiji.
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