Sep 25, 2009

Regime clutching at straws for funds. Tourists take note

It seems that staying in Holiday Homes in Fiji is now illegal

Thanks to http://fijitoday.wordpress.com/, according to the bumbling Fiji Jesus police force who are way too righteous for their own good, anyone staying in accommodation in Fiji without paying for the privilege in Fiji dollars is practicing tax evasion and breaching currency regulations.

It is presumed that money has changed hands overseas and the visitor is guilty and can be arrested and charged even if you are a genuine mate.

Any visitor not staying in a registered resort or hotel is liable to arrest and up to three months in one of the most archaic third world prisons in the world.

Determined to look busy and earn brownie points from their illegal KoManDa, the thin blue lice in Savusavu, said "they have commenced investigations."

“We have identified homes accommodating tourists but they do not have a licence from the Hotel and Licensing Board,” he said.

“Some tourists have already been questioned.”

“The owners of some of the homes reside overseas and their properties are managed by a caretaker.” He also said that." most absentee owners have a caretaker to protect the property from squatters and thieves so this is just a nonsense statement"

“But we have confirmed that several don’t have any license at all so that makes their operation illegal.” (Look who's talking)

Your friends can become criminals unless you can show you have deposited the equivalent rent into a Fijian bank account and paid tax n the money as income. The owner of the home must then register with FTIB to operate a tourism business, submit annual tax returns, VAT returns etc…..

The "crimes" that will be investigated by the illegal Police/Army will now include tax evasion, operating an unregistered business, contravening visa conditions etc etc.

Visitor beware.

I say, it is time to for overseas visitors to stop visiting Fiji for now as the workers are certainly not benefiting. It is the illegal junta in Fiji that is making a grab for 34.5% of your dollar when you arrive in Fiji. This money will go into fattening the already burgeoning illegal army regime.

More on ethical tourism in another post soon.

Sep 9, 2009

Amnesty International confirms what the world needs to know about Fiji

Fiji is violent and repressive, says Amnesty.

The military regime that has tightened its grip on power in the Pacific island nation of Fiji in recent months is guilty of human rights abuses, severe violence against its citizens and repression, a damning report by Amnesty International has warned.

The report "Fiji – Paradise Lost" claimed the country had been caught in "a downward spiral of human rights violations" since its constitution was scrapped in April.

It described a "climate of fear" in Fiji, which had not been reported because the military regime had censored and intimidated the local media.

Fiji is currently governed under Public Emergency Regulations (PER), brought in by Frank Bainimarama, the self-appointed interim prime minister, who announced in August that emergency rule had been extended yet again until the end of the year . As a result of refusing to hold democratic elections until 2014 , Fiji has been suspended from the Commonwealth.

Under PER imposed in April, Amnesty says
"Fiji's military and security forces retain absolute control over the country's population, and soldiers and police enjoy complete immunity from prosecution for their actions, including serious violations of human rights".
The organisation also describes
"a pattern of government interference in the judiciary, severe censorship of the media, and the harassment and arrests of government critics".
Among the incidents of particular concern were the release, after six weeks, of eight soldiers who beat a 19-year-old man to death. Broadcasts or publications that "promote disaffection or public alarm" had been banned and several journalists had been arrested and deported.

The report urged international donors and investors to press the Suva government to return to the rule of law.

"In particular, China, which has massively increased its financial assistance to Fiji since the 2006 coup, should use its influence to resolve the constitutional crisis," it said.

China's donations had filled a void created by sanctions imposed by major donors such as Australia and New Zealand, it said.

"China has long claimed that it doesn't interfere in other country's affairs, but, in Fiji, China has clearly favoured one side of a long political dispute and in the process ignored the country's human rights situation," Donna Guest, Amnesty Asia-Pacific deputy director, said in a statement.

Sep 7, 2009

Kevin Rudd - another man of Substance

Canberra to maintain a hard line on Fiji

Rowan Callick | September 07, 2009

Article from: The Australian

THE Pacific-watching community, such as it is in Australia, is wringing its hands about what to do about recalcitrant Fiji - but Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is displaying no second thoughts.

He is going for the jugular.

The government has asked the UN to order a "progressive replacement of Fijian troops" in peacekeeping operations - which provide the third-biggest source of national income after tourism and sugar.

A Foreign Affairs Department spokesperson said last week: "We have conveyed our position on a number of occasions to the UN at senior levels, and the UN has advised us that it is aware of and has taken account of our position."

This tactic strikes at the core of the support for prime minister and military commander Frank Bainimarama - his own army colleagues, who have been the principal, arguably the only, material beneficiaries from the coup he led in December 2006.

What happens when the perks stop coming?

New Zealand Foreign Minister Murray McCully has said that "it is very hard to see how (the UN) can justify using military people who have overthrown the rule of law in their own country as the agents to enforce the rule of law as peacekeepers somewhere else".

The army spent a long time responding to the coup in mid-2000 when George Speight seized the entire cabinet and held them hostage in the parliament compound for 56 days.

Eventually, it did regain control, and Speight was jailed for life. Bainimarama set up Laisenia Qarase, a government banker and senator - in which role he championed affirmative action for ethnic Fijians - as prime minister.

But Bainimarama failed to gain the enhanced status and voice in the public realm he felt he deserved. The attempted mutiny of November 2000, when five mutineers and three loyal soldiers were killed, underlined his sense of unease, his desire to gain a more prominent role and with it greater control over the nation's - and his own - destiny.........

...... The Bainimarama coup, while ostensibly to support fairer status for the Indians, has instead seen an acceleration in their exodus as they fear both the economic consequences of the promised four further years of military rule and an eventual reckoning by suppressed Fijian nationalists.

In April, Bainimarama raised the stakes considerably by abrogating the constitution, sacking the judiciary, imposing censorship on the media, replacing the Reserve Bank head and declaring that no election would be held until September 2014.

Justice delayed, justice denied.

Democracy delayed that long, democracy also denied.

The army has taken on Fiji's other core institutions, including the chiefs and the Methodist Church - which have formerly championed the ethnic Fijian cause - and effectively silenced them, too. Since April, Fiji has been suspended from the Pacific Islands Forum and since last week from the Commonwealth. Its foreign reserves have slumped, in part because of its "coup culture", says ratings agency Moody's, which like its competitor Standard & Poor's has downgraded Fiji this year.

The measure that has been most effective, though, hitting Fiji's elite hardest, has been the ban on entry to Australia or New Zealand by people in senior government positions or boards - and their families.

This underlines the importance to Fiji of those two "great powers" of the region. It also provides people who view the military regime with distaste, with an excellent excuse not to accept invitations to serve it.

Is China seizing the chance of rushing in to the resulting vacuum? Wang Yongqiu, the head of Pacific relations at China's Foreign Ministry, formerly posted to Suva and Canberra, told The Australian during the recent Pacific Islands Forum summit in Cairns: "While we are conducting interactions with Fiji, we have tried to persuade it to conduct friendly relations with its neighbouring countries, but its future is decided by its own people and its own government."

Carefully calibrated words. China naturally wants to increase its influence, but not at the cost of utterly alienating Australia even at this awkward time between Beijing and Canberra. It has learned from the global response to its earlier embrace of outcast regimes in Africa.

Fortunately, we have in James Batley, our high commissioner in Suva, Australia's top Pacific diplomat.

But within Australia, many Pacific-watchers worry that Canberra's strategy of isolating the Suva regime is counter-productive because it leaves no room for incentives for the military to do the right thing...........

...... The inflexible Suva regime has given little cause to believe that it is truly capable of serving people, as opposed to ordering them about. It is a military regime of a different order entirely, in its ubiquity, from that imposed by Rabuka. It has deployed ill-equipped military officers to run almost every area of public life.

Jon Fraenkel, a Fiji expert and former resident, now at the Australian National University, said recently that Bainimarama "has cast himself in the role of a modern-day Robespierre seeking to transcend the parochial divisions of the ancient regime, or as a born-again Kemal Ataturk intent on building a modern secular order.

"More usually, 'coups to end all coups' that aim to transcend communal divisions have ended in forms of dictatorship. The idea of the army that stands above the fray finds little historical support, especially when the military itself reflects communal divisions - as in Fiji where it remains 99per cent indigenous," Fraenkel says.

Should Australia be "imposing" democracy on such a country - especially when it does not push China, for instance, to become democratic?

This is where the politics, the "art of the possible", comes in to play. Compared with China, Fiji has been a democracy, however flawed. It has now gone backwards. And it is hurting, economically and socially. It is hard to see the status quo surviving another five years, as planned.

If the military regime were simply to be invited back into the fold in the meantime, the message, the precedent, would be clear.

You can seize power, defy the world, and win.

If, of course, you have the weapons - and personnel trained, hardened and rewarded through UN international operations.

Sep 5, 2009

Howards Lawyers Offices in Suva broken into

An act of vandalism at the Howards Lawyers offices in Suva earlier this week has taken a malicious turn especially when we consider carefully the following factors:

1. The media has not reported it - which means that the story did not make it past the censors - which in turn means the military regime had a reason for suppressing the story.

2. Howards Lawyers are where Graham Leong and Ratu Joni Madraiwiwi are based. Both gentlemen are well regarded critics of the military regime.

When the military junta hijacked the process of LAWYER LICENSING in Fiji in May 2009, via one of their illegal decrees (namely the 'Legal Practitioners Decree 2009'), all legal practitioners in the country had to reapply for their practicing certificates with the Chief Registrar of the High court as their licenses expired.

Being men of high principle, both gentlemen decided not to renew their licences.

The careful and deliberate manner of the break-in has cast the finger of suspicion straight to Bainimarama's men, and have indicated the nefarious desire by Fiji's self-installed regime masters to 'catch' these gentlemen in the act of practicing lawyer activities. (Because of course, then they can be prosecuted under the new and illegal fascist decrees)

3. The method of the break-in. This was a very neat cut in the door right around the lock, rather than a forceful smash of the door or breaking a pane of glass.
This would indicate that the break-in was done by experts rather than just common robbers, and we know the military and the police would have the equipment to cut such a hole.

4. The items things targeted and taken were related to things "Fijian" - namely documents pertaining to the Constution & Registration of the Institute of Fijian Studies that is an off-shoot of the Fijian Retired Teachers Association.

One would have to ask the question - why would a common criminal be interested in taking those sorts of papers ?

My understanding is that this organisation has been on the receiving end of endless delaying tactics and nitpicking by the Companies Registry who are trying to undermine the process of getting the organisation registered and the susequent applications for UN aid for its establishment.

It may be of additional interest to itaukei that this regime is demanding that any mention of the word 'Fijian' has to be deleted , and that even though the organisation is being set up as an academic and research institute of learning (and as such, qualifies for UN aid and other agency funding) the junta are demanding that it has to be registered as a Company even though it is not a company.

As a Company, the regime can demand fees and taxes and monitor their aid monies now that they have entrenched themselves into all levels of governance
.

Yes folks, yet another example of the criminal ploys typically undertaken by Bharmybanana's regime to keep the truth from getting out
. Shame !

Sep 1, 2009

Caption Needed for Fiji Snapshot


OK Blogger Contributors - put on your creative hats and send me your best Caption.

A Fijian Man of Substance


Bravo Mr Rika, Editor of the Fiji Times, for your brave presentation in Australia recently.

It is my humble opinion and hope, that Fiji Times managing director Ms Fussell will award Mr Rika the PRIDE OF FIJI medal for he represents the free voice of the Fiji people, and the yearning for that freedom of expression that we once had, and have lost ... but that we could recapture.

In 1897 one of the world's greatest contralto voices was born - a black baby in the USA called Marian Anderson. You can imagine the prejudices against her whilst she pursued her singing career at this time
in history.

She made it through life under enormous pressures and became very famous singing before Monarchs and Presidents . In her autobiography, "My Lord, What a Morning," she says :

"There are many persons ready to do what is right because in their hearts they know it is right. But they hesitate, waiting for the other fellow to make the first move--and he, in turn, waits for you. The minute a person whose word means a great deal dares to take the open-hearted and courageous way, many others follow....."
We all live with that hope, God bless you Mr Rika !