Nov 30, 2009

A Devil of a Mess

A great article ...

An unholy alliance of church and state
PAUL MCGEOUGH IN SUVA
November 29, 2009

When Fiji's regime brought the Methodist Church under its thumb, a fundamentalist rival joined forces with the police. Pastor Atu Vulaono was the cannon that backfired, revealing the Fiji regime at its tin-pot best.
In a double-act with Esala Teleni, his brother-in-law and the Police Commissioner, the evangelist's ''Souls to Jesus'' crusade was given wings as a strategy to supplant the power of the Methodist Church - the denomination into which most indigenous Fijians are born.

Rolling his eyes to the heavens before fervent crowds at venues such as Suva's National Gymnasium, Vulaono might have been just any God-botherer.

But funded by the Police Department and co-opted to spearhead a spiritual campaign against crime, the evangelist flew too close to the Fiji sun.


"It became too disruptive an influence," says Netani Rika, editor-in-chief of The Fiji Times. "First it was a problem in the police force and then among indigenous Fijians, for whom religion is very important.

So [Fiji's leader Frank Bainimarama] sat on them, because if they were allowed to continue to ridicule the other denominations, there was going to be trouble."


Indo-Fijians were rattled because the ascent Vulaono's New Methodist Church coincided with calls for Fiji to be declared a Christian state in which only ''good Christians'' could be appointed to government. "The New Methodists have a right to exist under the Declaration of Human Rights," a senior lay Methodist acknowledges.

"But to be supported by the Government? That's a different question," says Rika.
Vulaono claimed to have more than 70 congregations across the islands and was booking a 20,000-capacity stadium in Suva for his rallies.
In tandem, the Police Commissioner ordered his officers to dance in uniform on Vulaono's stage. Observers in Suva claim that Teleni's support for Vulaono contributed to a $F9 million blow-out in last year's police budget.

In April rank-and-file police and senior officers were stunned when ordered to attend a car-park rally where a New Methodist preacher harangued them on the ways of Jesus Christ. Hindu and Muslim Indo-Fijians were made to attend, too - but had to listen to the preacher's use of the indigenous Fijian language and his implicit rejection of their faith and culture.

Officers were forced to attend the New Methodist crusades - where they were made to sing and dance in uniform on the stage. "Teleni called all Indo-Fijian officers to a meeting and told them if they did not like what was happening, they could get f---ed,'' an observer told The Sun-Herald.

A combined police-New-Methodist, law-and-order campaign took to the streets of the capital, blaring out a message that turning to Christ was the way to deal with crime.

The police lectured night-clubbers, urging them to repent. Couples frequenting Lovers' Land, on Suva's waterfront, were ordered not to embrace in public - and sent to their separate homes.


Prostitutes who did not heed police warnings to get off the streets were summarily trucked to a bridge over an
ocean inlet where they were ordered to make the six-metre leap into the water. But, according to several of the women, Christian idealism sometimes broke down at this point - they were made to service the arresting officers and had their purses and mobile phones stolen.
Some of the prostitutes were warned that if they were caught again, they would be made to jump from a higher bridge.

Others had their heads shaved. Some were made to run alongside police vehicles in Suva's streets.

Under police escort, they also had to attend Vulaono's Sunday afternoon crusades. A human-rights activist said the Fiji courts were pressuring women who were victims of domestic violence to reconcile with their husbands.


Peni Moore of the Women's Action for Change lobby, said much of the ill-treatment of prostitutes stopped after she complained to Bainimarama about the commissioner's "biblical bullshit". (BUBU's COMMENT - this woman who is unashamedly Frank's 'mate' - waxes lyrical in her support of the "good coup", but in her sloppy cesspool of moral relativism, the fundamental secular, humanist and liberal details relating to the ordinary Fijian don't feature in her thinking - how sad!)

In the meantime, the traditional Methodist Church was being neutered by the regime - and winning little support for its plight from other denominations.Catholic priest Father Kevin Barr dissects the traditional Methodist Church as a force of darkness that deserved the treatment dealt to it by the regime - "the message to its top people was that they should get lost''. "At the leadership level, the Methodist Church contains an explosive mix of fundamentalist Christianity and ethnic [indigenous Fijian] nationalism," he says.

Church sources say the phones of its leaders are tapped; their emails are intercepted; and they are followed by plainclothes officers as they move around Suva and the islands. Their passports have been confiscated, blocking travel to international religious forums. They are not allowed to meet with more than two people at any one time.

The Methodists' annual conference was outlawed; their traditional fund-raising was forced to a halt; and even a gathering as innocent as their national choir competition was deemed a likely hotbed of subversiveness - and blackballed. Seven senior Methodists, including the church president, the Reverend Ame Tugaue, and its general secretary, the Reverend Tuikilakila Warairatu, are awaiting trial on spurious charges after they were rounded up in April. They were detained overnight, interrogated and accused of being political activists. "They were treated as nobodies and verbally abused, as senior officials tried to find out the extent to which the church intended to resist the regime," an associate says.

Asked about the church's seemingly meek compliance with regime edicts, the lay Methodist explains: "We're giving meaning to the biblical message of Christ - give the shirt from your back to whoever wants it; if they say walk a mile, we'll walk two miles.(BUBU's COMMENT : Methodist Leaders have been proven wimps of the highest order with no moral fibre and not an iota of understanding how to be good shepherds to their flock. History will condemn these men at the helm forever. Shame ! Still that doesn't give Kevin Barr any right to side with the Military on the active Nazi-like suppression of the Methodist religion in Fiji)

"Our leaders can't speak out, even in church, because members of the military are in the congregation and we don't know who comes to pray and who comes to spy. ''The message to us was they'll not be stopped. Forget morality, law and order and human rights - might is right."
At the time of the Methodist arrests, a government spokesman said the church should concentrate on the spiritual needs of its congregation rather than "promoting the ambitions of a few politically minded individuals".

Ultimately the police-led New Methodist crusade became too embarrassing for the regime. Attorney-General Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum saw himself as a sensitive new-age guy, so Teleni had to be hauled in, The Sun-Herald was told.

There was no public announcement. "The closest to an official announcement was a letter from the chief censor to editors, ordering them to cease broadcasting the New Methodists' paid programs on the grounds that they had become a security risk," a media source says.

Says Barr of the police crusade: "It was a stupid thing." The priest dismisses Vulaono as something of a charlatan - "he roars and yells at sinners; to hear him preach is out of this world. People were upset as much by the influence he was gaining over the police and young people as by the contradiction of Frank's claim to want a multi-religious society, and here was this splinter group trying to dominate the country.


"Then, suddenly, it was over. I spoke to the PM's secretary - he waved his hand and said, 'Finished.'"

There are doubts that Vulaono ever attended Bible school, much less had any formal training as a church minister, and he is a target of ridicule in the blogs that thrive in Fiji despite, and because of, the regime's censorship of the media.

"The joke around town," according to a women's rights activist, "is that Frank shut Pastor Vulaono down, [because] he had a problem with the whole Christian thing - he just didn't like seeing the preacher become so powerful."

Just as the traditional Methodists got the regime message, it seems Vulaono did, too. At last Sunday afternoon's Souls to Jesus gathering at the National Stadium, the crowd of about 2000 was pumped - swaying, dancing, gyrating; eyes closed; a finger pointed to heaven.

A warm-up relay of preachers, which included Vulaono's daughter, whipped them into a frenzy. But as the headline act, Vulaono was restrained, shuffling to and from the lectern, but not seeming to engage the crowd.


He did not respond to telephone messages left by The Sun-Herald over a 10-day period.

Nov 6, 2009

NZ Herald Editorial - Travel Bans pushing buttons in Fiji


4:00AM Friday Nov 06, 2009

Universal international condemnation has been shrugged off by Fiji's military regime and pledges for a return to democracy dishonoured. It is clear, however, that Commodore Frank Bainimarama is irked by the travel ban imposed by New Zealand and Australia on members of his band of usurpers. As much has been underlined by his decision to expel New Zealand's Acting Deputy High Commissioner and Australia's High Commissioner from Suva. Todd Cleaver is the third New Zealand diplomat to be ejected since Commodore Bainimarama seized power in December 2006. With every such incident, the regime becomes more malodorous to the people of this country.

The trigger for the latest flashpoint was the decision in April to extend the travel ban to include judges. This followed Commodore Bainimarama's decision to abrogate the constitution, dismiss the judiciary and impose further measures curbing free speech. The sackings came the day after Fiji's Court of Appeal ruled his regime was illegal. The extension of the travel ban has become a particular irritant because it affects judges who have recently been recruited from Sri Lanka.

Fiji argues that the judiciary should be exempt because its members are independent. That rings hollow. The judges have been hand-picked to, unlike some of their predecessors, kowtow to Commodore Bainimarama. By no stretch of the imagination could they be described as independent. They have signed up to membership of the regime. It is equally senseless of Fiji's Chief Justice, Anthony Gates, to maintain that the New Zealand and Australian Governments are stopping him from nominating credible, well-qualified individuals to serve on the Bench. No judge worthy of the name would wish to be associated with a regime that has removed democratic rights and squashed dissent, attracting pariah status in the process.

According to Fiji, a particular spark for Mr Cleaver's expulsion was the supposed difficulties of one of its judges in getting a visa for her son to get medical treatment at Auckland's Starship hospital. The complaint appears groundless. This country, quite rightly, waived the travel ban on compassionate grounds, and the child was granted entry in good time. For anyone but Commodore Bainimarama, this would surely warrant a vote of thanks to this country, not the expulsion of its top diplomat. His behaviour has, of course, succeeded only in prompting the usual tit-for-tat activity, with the New Zealand Government ordering Fiji's head of mission in Wellington to leave.

Mr Cleaver's expulsion means New Zealanders in Fiji might not be able to obtain consular help if they get into trouble. The high commission staff now numbers just seven, down from 12 last December, and the situation in Fiji, according to Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully, is volatile. That provides one reason for New Zealanders planning to visit Fiji to pause. More fundamentally, Fiji's continued abrupt and offhand treatment of this country's diplomats must attract an increasing degree of contempt. That should concern Fiji, which attracts 60 per cent of its tourists from New Zealand and Australia.

In the end, it will be down to the people of Fiji to react. At some point, hopefully before the country's economy is brought to its knees, they must abandon a seemingly deep-seated fatalism and demand the return of their democratic rights. In the meantime, New Zealand can only press for events to move in that direction. At the very least, a well-directed travel ban is, unlike many of the sanctions levelled against Fiji, getting Commodore Bainimarama's attention. It must continue to be enforced.

Nov 4, 2009

Visiting Fiji Commenting on Fiji-Beware Diktatorship in Action

Investors, Tourists, & Old Folk Be-Ware ............ this is what happens in Fiji today.

Speak your mind and you are "removed" from your family, community & society.


Welcome to the Fijian Nazi Party




I have no words to describe how disgusted I am at what the Military Regime have put Prof Lal through .........

Fiji's illegal Attorney General Aiyass talks about interference in the "Judiciary" ..... what a hoot .. what utter crap .... everyone knows there IS NO JUDICIARY that we can speak off - all puppets to an illegal regime ..... none of our current "magistrates" and "judges" would qualify as magistrates or judges anywhere else in the world ...

Prof Lal - we love you - you are an amazing person. We will always respect what you say as you always mouth the truth that we Fijians only dream about saying.

Vinaka and God Bless You.