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The arbitrary detention and ill-treatment of Fiji-born Australian academic Professor Brij Lal by the Fijian military on 4 November 2009 is the latest example of the ongoing crackdown against any criticism of the regime and peaceful opposition activities.
Professor Lal is among scores of others in the last few months who have been targeted merely for speaking out against government policies. The ongoing repression of any peaceful dissent is unacceptable and the government should immediately put an end to this practice.
Professor Lal, who was on a research visit to Fiji, had commented to overseas media on the consequences of the expulsion of Australian and New Zealand diplomats by the military-led regime in Fiji on 3 November.
Following his statements, soldiers took Lal from his family home in Suva, the capital, to the army camp in Nabua, four miles from Suva city. A senior army officer interrogated him, kept him in a dark cell for an hour, and verbally abused, spat at and otherwise humiliated him. He was told that if he did not leave the country within 24 hours, he would be taken back to the army camp and killed.
Lal has since left Fiji and arrived in Australia on 5 November.
Peceli Kinivuwai, the national director of the Soqosoqo ni Duavata ni Lewenivanua (SDL) Party and a regular critic of the military-led government, was also detained and harassed at the army camp in Suva for commenting to overseas media about the expulsion of the diplomats. Kinivuwai was held overnight and released on 5 November.
The actions of the military in detaining and harassing Lal and Kinivuwai, is indicative of the deteriorating human rights situation in the country. In a report titled Paradise Lost, published in September 2009, Amnesty International documents a catalogue of human rights violations perpetrated by the Fijian authorities since the abrogation of the constitution; the sacking of the entire judiciary; and the enforcement of martial law through the Public Emergency Regulations in April 2009.
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Comments
Its better to keep Ms Melisa
Its better to keep Ms Melisa Walker who has brought development to Netball Players and remove Mr Brij Lal who has a destructive perception on Fiji's development.
Aloha, Aroha kiaora katou,
Aloha, Aroha kiaora katou,
Fiji should set and implement its own policies, and control its own media..... with diplomacy. Fiji is in charge of Fiji, its government stability is based on resources and if other nations "choke" them out of trade, etc. the people will need direction. It is what has been happening, the shift there is not evil or defiantly menacing. People are greedy and other nations seek to control Fiji's resources, many of which the Fijian government is not aware of. Fiji must look to it's Pacific cousins as their ancestors did once long ago, and support its own economy to regain its international stability.
Fiji should look at ko Hawaii pae aina, the original "Hawaii" the US misled the western world to believe was it's captured servant. It is an independent sovereign nation at present which western econimics relies upon. NOT the other way around.
Fiji's problems are financial and their way out is not to forsake their values, but to respect their own and what they have.