Australia prepares for possible military intervention in Fiji

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May 13, 2002
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#1
By Rick Kelly
29 November 2006




Amid stepped up threats by the Fijian military to overthrow the government of Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase, Canberra is taking aggressive steps to protect its interests in the country and the region. The Howard government will host a meeting of the 16 Pacific Islands Forum foreign ministers on Friday in order to invoke the “Biketawa Declaration,” which authorises regional intervention into the affairs of member states, potentially including military intervention.

The Howard government drafted the declaration six years ago in order to provide a multilateral cover for its neo-colonial operations in the region. Its application in the Fijian crisis may see yet another Australian military deployment in the south Pacific, alongside those in Solomon Islands and Tonga.

Three Australia warships, with at least 100 soldiers on board, remain stationed outside Fijian waters. Elite SAS troops have had their leave cancelled and a Sydney-based commando task group has been placed on standby. An unknown number of troops, possibly including SAS, are already in the Australian High Commission in Suva, after secretly entering the country on November 3.

Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer insists that these preparations are aimed at evacuating Australian citizens in the event of a coup, and dismissed as “entirely hypothetical” a question as to how he would respond to a possible Fijian government request for military intervention. He said he hoped the crisis would be resolved by the Fijian government and military, rather than “through a clash between militaries”.

Canberra’s calculations are solely driven by the strategic and economic concerns of the Australian ruling elite. Fiji is an important country in a region claimed by Canberra as its sphere of influence, and was one of several south Pacific nations Howard listed as potential targets for intervention earlier this year when he announced a significant expansion of the Australian military and federal police.

Tensions in Fiji heightened last week when military head, Commodore Frank Bainimarama, issued another ultimatum to Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase. The government has until early next week to meet a series of “non-negotiable” demands, including the withdrawal of two contentious pieces of legislation—one providing amnesty to leaders of the 2000 coup and the other establishing indigenous ownership over coastal areas. Both bills are designed to appeal to Qarase’s communalist indigenous Fijian constituency, but are opposed by sections of the national ruling elite and the Indo-Fijian minority.

Intense international pressure is being brought to bear on the Fijian military. Canberra has advised tourists and visitors to consider leaving the country, and families of Australian personnel have been evacuated. In a move condemned by the military, the Australian, British, and American ambassadors yesterday went to the main army barracks and spoke with senior commanders.

UN secretary-general Kofi Annan also weighed in, warning the military that if they launched a coup, Fijian peacekeeping forces around the world would be asked to return home. The withdrawal of these international deployments would represent a serious economic blow to many Fijian soldiers and their families who depend on UN salaries. A significant portion of the country’s income is derived from remittances from soldiers, as well as mercenaries, stationed in the Middle East and other world conflicts.

The New Zealand government arranged a meeting between Bainimarama and Qarase in Auckland this morning in an effort to resolve the long running standoff. Before the discussion even began, however, Bainimarama declared his unwillingness to back down. “It’s very simple: [Qarase] comes with a yes or a no to our demands,” he stated. After two hours of talks, Bainimarama flew back to Fiji without issuing a public statement. Qarase later called the discussion a “good start” but admitted that no conclusions were reached.

Reiterating previous warnings, senior Fijian military figures have declared that the mobilisation of 3,000 members of the Territorial Forces and Reserves on Saturday was aimed against a potential Australian intervention.

“The Biketawa Agreement is now being exploited by countries like Australia and New Zealand to facilitate their foreign policy and front for neo-colonialism,” Major Neumi Leweni said on November 16. “This policy is now unveiling right here on our doorstep and we should take heed. We should learn from the MSG [Melanesian Spearhead Group] countries that have experienced foreign intervention and whether it has helped them.”

This was a reference to the crisis in the Solomon Islands. Australian police and officials in the Regional Assistance Mission for Solomon Islands (RAMSI) control the country’s state apparatus. Canberra’s 2003 takeover of the Solomons was carried out under the nominal auspices of the Pacific Islands Forum and the Biketawa Declaration. Sections of the Fijian ruling elite and military are clearly concerned about the consequences of a similar operation in their country.

Canberra fears that a military coup in Fiji would deepen the regional crisis and further undermine its increasingly reckless strategy aimed at shutting out rival powers, such as China, by taking over the Pacific countries’ levers of state power.

The Howard government has no sympathy for the two contentious bills at the centre of the military-government standoff. The amnesty bill for the 2000 coup leaders is considered a potentially destabilising move and the land rights legislation cuts across Canberra’s efforts to privatise Pacific land and promote investment opportunities for Australian corporations. Howard is strongly opposed, however, to the rest of Bainimarama’s demands, above all the dismissal of Fiji’s police commissioner Andrew Hughes.

Hughes, a former Australian Federal Police officer, was appointed in June 2003 and has been Canberra’s man on the ground in Fiji ever since. He has played a highly political, and provocative, role in the present crisis. On October 30, he confiscated a shipload of ammunition ordered by the army and declared it would not be released while threats were being made against the government. After soldiers seized the cargo, Hughes threatened them with arrest.

The police commissioner has also moved to charge Bainimarama with sedition. Last Thursday Hughes ordered a raid on the office of President Ratu Josefa Iloilo shortly after he had met with Bainimarama. Iloilo reportedly responded by banning Fijian police from presidential grounds, while Bainimarama compared the incident to last month’s raid by Australian police on the office of Solomon Islands’ Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare.

New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark yesterday revealed that her government had turned down a request to arrest Bainimarama, presumably issued by Hughes, while the military commander was visiting the country.

Hughes has accused Bainimarama of being a front-man for unnamed individuals and organisations, and in a press conference last Thursday, angrily threatened to expose and arrest these figures. According to journalist Michael Field, Qarase’s indigenous land ownership bill is “strongly opposed by tourism operators and several key figures, including a prominent American, [who] have access to the Commodore”. Other reports have alleged that prominent indigenous figures in politics and business are also backing the military.

Bainimarama has demanded that all criminal investigations against him and his colleagues cease, and warned Hughes to leave the country before things “blow up”. After receiving anonymous threats, the police commissioner has reportedly returned his family to Australia and moved himself to an undisclosed location.

The situation in Fiji’s capital, Suva, remains very tense. Armed Fijian soldiers are currently patrolling the streets and the military has just announced a “training exercise” scheduled for tonight. “The exercise is in anticipation of any foreign intervention and the RFMF [Fijian military] is taking all precautionary measures,” a statement declared.
 
Mar 9, 2005
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#2
I think that Australia can only intervene if the Fijian Government requests help. We've been involved in constant military exercises in the North Islands, particularly East Timor, in an attempt to 'restore peace'. The problem is that they always ask us to help sort things out, then when things start getting better they tell us to piss off. Unlike the US government, we actually listen to them and leave, but unfortunately the shit hits the fan again the minute our troops leave. We've been going back and forth for years and years trying to provide 'security' to these governments but nothing much is being achieved.

It's difficult, because in one sense, focussing on changing the politics in these countries may result in a greater consensus of the people and less uprisings. However, the easiest way for us to do this is to introduce our own form of democracy, selecting members of their Government who can best implement these policies - in other words, hand pick a government to run the country. Sounds like Bush and Iraq...
 
May 13, 2002
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#3
Hutch said:
I think that Australia can only intervene if the Fijian Government requests help. We've been involved in constant military exercises in the North Islands, particularly East Timor, in an attempt to 'restore peace'. The problem is that they always ask us to help sort things out, then when things start getting better they tell us to piss off. Unlike the US government, we actually listen to them and leave, but unfortunately the shit hits the fan again the minute our troops leave. We've been going back and forth for years and years trying to provide 'security' to these governments but nothing much is being achieved.
I think it's a lot more sinister then simply "restoring peace" comrade. Did you ever read this thread?
 
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2-0-Sixx said:
I think it's a lot more sinister then simply "restoring peace" comrade. Did you ever read this thread?
I must have missed that thread, cheers - I know that Australia wasn't trying to 'restore peace' in East Timor and other north islands just because Australians were 'good people', there are always alterior motives behind all of our military actions. Perhaps Howard traded Bush support for the Iraq war with Bush's support of Australias Imperialist goals? That would help explain our support for the Iraq war (we're not getting much oil out of it!).

Bloody Aussies, and there I was thinking that we were better than America (well, not really). The only real way a true democracy can form is through the unbiast involvement of the UN in political decision making. It won't happen, it CAN'T happen if Australia calls all the shots.
 
May 13, 2002
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#8
Fiji PM says coup is 'imminent'

Fiji's prime minister has told the BBC that he expects to be taken into custody by the army, amid speculation the country is on the brink of a coup.

Heavily armed troops have surrounded Laisenia Qarase's complex in the Fijian capital, Suva.

Military chief Cmdr Frank Bainimarama has repeatedly threatened to unseat Mr Qarase over plans to grant amnesty to those behind a coup in 2000.

Mr Qarase says he assumes he will shortly be taken into custody.

No resignation

"I am at home but there are soldiers at the gate negotiating their way to come in," Mr Qarase said in an interview with the BBC on Tuesday morning.

"If they want to carry out an illegal act, that is their choice," he said, "but I will not resign."

He said Fiji's powerful South Pacific neighbours Australia and New Zealand had "flatly said no" to sending military support after the Fijian police were disarmed on Monday.

Some government ministers - who complained that their vehicles had been seized - arrived at the house on Tuesday for meetings.

The BBC's Phil Mercer, in Suva, says several truckloads of troops in combat gear have now converged on street near the prime minister's residence.

Checkpoints have already been set up across the capital in what Mr Qarase described as a "strangling of the government of the day."

'Dire consequences'

Our correspondent says the prime minister's official car has been confiscated but no attempt has yet been made to force entry into his compound.

Cmdr Bainimarama is angry at the way Mr Qarase has handled the aftermath of a coup in 2000, offering an amnesty to those responsible.

Mr Qarase says that at least 800 of those involved have already been convicted.

Australia, Britain and New Zealand have advised their citizens to stay away from the tourism-dependent former British colony.

They have also warned of dire social, economic and diplomatic consequences if the military carries out a further coup.

The South Pacific island state has seen three coups in the last twenty years.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6208526.stm
 
May 13, 2002
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#9
Dec 5

Fiji military chief stages coup

Fiji's military commander has seized control of the country, marking the fourth coup in two decades.




Commodore Frank Bainimarama said in a televised address he had assumed executive powers and dismissed Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase.

Cmdr Bainimarama accused the prime minister of corruption and leading Fiji on a path of doom.

Mr Qarase, who said he would now retire from politics, accused the military of bringing "shame to the country".

He said Cmdr Bainimarama was feeding the country lies about his government.

"What the military has done is raped our constitution," Mr Qarase said.

"They have brought shame to the country... and all right-thinking people should stand up and fight for our democracy - by peaceful means of course," he said.

"Fiji has now become a laughing stock in the international arena."

Fiji's largest daily newspaper, the Fiji Times, says it has suspended publication after refusing to accept censorship.

Cmdr Bainimarama had repeatedly threatened to unseat Mr Qarase, expressing anger at the prime minister's proposed legislation to offer an amnesty to those responsible for a 2000 coup which Cmdr Bainimarama helped put down.

Cmdr Bainimarama warned that more troops would be seen on the streets but said there was no curfew and he urged the population not to be intimidated.

He said Fiji had reached a "crossroads" and that the government had been "unable to make decisions to save our people from destruction".

"I urge all citizens to remain calm, and maintain the peace that currently prevails," he said.

Cmdr Bainimarama named a doctor, Jona Senilagakali, as caretaker prime minister and said he would next week ask the Great Council of Chiefs to restore executive powers to President Ratu Josefa Iloilo.

The president would then appoint an interim government and elections would follow at an unspecified date, the military chief said.

Cmdr Bainimarama said the prime minister had created tension in the army by trying to have him removed.

Acting commissioner of the largely unarmed police force, Moses Driver, condemned the takeover.

"The military has now indulged in a very serious criminal act and... we are not going to support the military," he said.

New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark also condemned Mr Bainimarama, saying he had "taken leave of his senses and the power has certainly gone to his head".

Britain said it had suspended military assistance to Fiji and was "considering further measures with our international and Commonwealth partners".

Troop request

Fiji has a population of only 900,000 but is a major tourist destination and attracts up to 400,000 visitors a year.

It has also witnessed considerable political tension over the past 20 years between ethnic Fijians, who make up about 50% of the population and ethnic Indians at around 44%.

The military takeover will add to the concerns of Australia and New Zealand about political instability in the wider Pacific islands region.

Australia, Britain and New Zealand had advised their citizens to stay away and warned of dire social, economic and diplomatic consequences if the military completed its coup.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard earlier said he had turned down a request from Mr Qarase to send troops to prevent a coup.

"The possibility of Australia and Fijian troops firing on each other in the streets of Suva was not a prospect that I for a moment thought desirable," Mr Howard said.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6208758.stm