Commodore Bainimarama is not only Fiji’s prime minister but the current chairman of the Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG), which links Fiji with Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu and the Kanaks of New Caledonia.
There’s already a clear fault line between the Melanesians and their Polynesian neighbours in Pacific regional forums.
A SENSE OF UNEASE
The photograph at top right on this page has sparked consternation about an imminent deterioration in the already strained relations between Fiji and Samoa.
It shows the Samoan prime minister, Tuilaepa Sailele Malielelagaoi (right), meeting two of Voreqe Bainimarama’s arch enemies in an Australian hotel suite.
In the centre is Ratu Tevita Mara, the son of independent Fiji’s founding father, the late Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara. Ratu Tevita, known as Roko Ului, made a dramatic escape to Tonga last month after he was charged with sedition.
And on the left is Commodore Bainimarama’s former land force commander, Jone Baledrokadroka, who left for Australia four years ago and has been conducting a concerted anti-government campaign ever since while on a fellowship at the Australian National University.
Both these men - exiles committed to Commodore Bainimarama’s destruction - now enjoy the explicit encouragement of an influential, mainstream Pacific leader.
In a weekend statement, Ratu Tevita said the Samoan prime minister had given his support to the so-called “pro-democracy movement” and a ten-point plan for elections in Fiji as soon as possible, as opposed to Commodore Bainimarama’s election timetable of 2014.
“I welcome his support and this meeting was part of the process of isolating the Bainimarama Government internationally, regionally and locally within Fiji”, Ratu Tevita said.
For his part, Tuilaepe confirmed his endorsement of Mara’s campaign in an interview with Radio Australia: “I tend to look at the defection and the pro-active role he (Mara) is playing now as part of the process of a solution initiated by the Fijians themselves, and in this situation, it’s so important because here is a person who was a former colleague of Bainimarama who has seen the light and decided to leave and is now taking the leading role in promoting democracy”.
The Samoan leader also called for tougher sanctions on Fiji aimed at provoking a popular uprising.
“The sanctions are not enough to shake the people, to realise that the kind of government that is ruling their lives is not the right one.
“There should be additional sanctions. Once the people realise that the sanctions are making their lives difficult, then it will motivate them to take the necessary action”, he said.
EXTRAORDINARY ATTACK
Tuilaepa claimed: “It is causing havoc, the treasury is empty and the government is extending its illegal activities into the use of (the) National Provident Fund” - a clear inference that Commodore Bainimarama is raiding the superannuation savings of ordinary Fijians to finance his regime. All of which is far removed from the real situation in Suva.
All this means that Fiji is on a collision course with its two closest Polynesian neighbours. Already furious with Tonga for sending one of its patrol boats to “rescue” Mara from within Fiji waters, the Bainimarama Government is now being provoked by Tuilaepa’s intervention.
And he’s compounded the offence by inviting Mara to visit Apia next month for further consultations.
This is in stark contrast to the attitude of the Solomons Government, which said Mara wasn’t welcome there because it wanted to preserve its relations with Fiji.
SUSPICIONS FUELLED
It lifted its ban on Mara entering the country to enable him to address pro-democracy rallies in spite of accusations that he’d abused pro-democracy activists in the wake of the 2006 takeover, in which he played a key role.
Are Australia and NZ using Samoa as a stalking horse to try to bring about regime change in Fiji?
Is Ratu Tevita being specifically groomed by them as an alternative Fijian leader in waiting? The ever lively coconut radio is abuzz with speculation about what it all might mean.
For the moment, Voreqe Bainimarama is striking a nonchalant pose about the threat Mara presents, thumbing his nose at the chief last week by visiting his home village in the Lau group and securing an apology from Mara’s clan for his errant behaviour.
Until now, he’s also dismissed Tuilaepa as “an Aussie and Kiwi stooge” whose sole achievement has been “to force Samoan motorists to drive on the other side of the road”.
A Fiji Government spokesperson said Bainimarama wasn’t planning to issue a statement on his Samoan counterpart’s latest comments. But now that Tuilaepa has openly encouraged a domestic rebellion against his leadership, that nonchalance will be sorely tested.
It’s certainly regarded as “irresponsible and potentially dangerous” by Australian academic Richard Herr, Adjunct Professor of Governance and Ethics at the Fiji National University and the author of a landmark report on Fiji 18 months ago for the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.
“When Toke Talagi, the Prime Minister of Niue, urged Fijians to rise up and overthrow the regime during the Cairns Pacific Forum in 2009, it was regarded as embarrassing and inflammatory and the then Australian prime minister -now foreign minister - Kevin Rudd, sought to tone it down”, Herr told Grubsheet.
“This is potentially just as inflammatory and dangerous and yet there’s been no public response thus far from Australia that might help defuse what is certainly an irresponsible intervention by the Samoan leader”, Herr said.
PROTEST POSSIBLE
But there’s certainly a view that when one Pacific leader chooses to call for the overthrow of another while on Australian soil, then it would be perfectly legitimate for the Fiji Government to call in Australia’s representative and formally ask if that is also Canberra’s position.
Already, Fiji and Tonga are engaged in a tense stand-off over the ownership of Minerva Reef, a coral outcrop with rich fishing grounds that’s claimed by both countries.
That dispute has been exacerbated by Tonga’s action in sending one of its patrol boats to pluck Ratu Tevita from the clutches of Fijian justice.
Now that he’s also being feted by the Samoans, Fiji’s relations with its near Polynesian neighbours will come under even more strain.
All of a sudden, the Pacific of legend is looking anything but.
By GRAHAM DAVIS*
*The Fiji-born author is a prominent Australian journalist. His views appear regularly in his blog commentary Grubstreet.
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