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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, March 10, 2001 |
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Fiji Council of Chiefs to meet on March 13
By Amit Baruah
SUVA (Fiji), MARCH 9. The suspense continues in Fiji. Contrary to
expectations, the Great Council of Chiefs (GCC) today adjourned
it's discussions till Tuesday, with the country no wiser about
the fate of the March 1 Court of Appeal judgment returning the
country to constitutional rule.
The GCC, which has the power to appoint the President and Vice-
President but has no other Constitutional function, will now meet
on March 13 - two days before the deadline set by the Court to
appoint a President - who is then expected to implement the
judicial verdict.
By adjourning the meeting, an opportunity has ostensibly been
provided for the chiefs to consult with others to decide on a
future course of action.
While local media reports have spoken of differences among the
52-strong group of chiefs that met yesterday and today, there is
a practice that these differences are not aired in public.
Apparently, these differences in perception led to the
adjournment of the meeting.
According to an official statement, the meeting had been
adjourned so that ``members are allowed time to consider fully
all the proposals put to them at the two-day meeting which ended
today''.
Apart from a report presented by the ``interim Prime Minister'',
Mr. Laisenia Qarase, on the ``key aspects of the Government's
achievements in the last seven months'', several papers on the
Court of Appeal verdict and its fall-out were presented and
considered by the chiefs.
The papers included one from the interim Government (deemed
illegal by the Court) on the ``possible pathways that could
return the country to Parliamentary democracy within the 1997
Constitution. Another paper was presented to the Great Council of
Chiefs on the possible advice (to be) given to His Excellency the
President''.
Country facing danger
The official account of the meeting notwithstanding, Fiji is in
grave danger of inviting greater sanctions from the international
community. ``If (the GCC) asks the President to reject the
judgment, Fiji is in grave danger of becoming an isolated
State,'' said Mr. Jone Dakuvula of the Citizens' Constitutional
Forum while discussing the options available to the Chiefs.
``We will be in dire straits. Existing sanctions will be
strengthened and new ones will follow,'' Mr. Dakuvula said.
According to Mr. Richard Naidu, a Suva-based lawyer, the state of
uncertainty was political, not constitutional. The judgment
returning the country to Constitutional rule was clear, Mr. Naidu
told this correspondent.
``The influence of the GCC on indigenous Fijians is very
strong,'' Mr. Naidu said, referring to the possible impact a
rejection of the verdict might have.
While there have been no indications of which way the GCC will
decide on advising the President, it is evident that if the
chiefs' decision will possibly be the most crucial.
As has been made clear, the GCC has no role beyond appointing the
President and Vice-President in consultation with the Prime
Minister. Any ``fatwa'' issue by the GCC on the status of the
1997 Constitution and a return to Constitutional rule might well
be accepted by the ethnic Fijian community.
Interestingly, ethnic Indians, including the political parties,
are watching from the sidelines the deliberations of the meeting.
They have no role to play as the Chiefs decide on the future of
the country.
In the GCC itself, the tensions and differences are completely
intra-Fijian since ethnic Indians have no representation in this
forum.
In a country of some 800,000, Indo-Fijians, despite the fact that
they make up some 44 per cent of the population, have been
reduced to the status of spectators.
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