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The Changed Guard in Fiji
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13270 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
10 / 1987 |
3,070 Words |
| Author
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W. Theo Roy W. Theo Roy is professor of politics at Waikato University in
Hamilton, New Zealand. |
When the British withdrew from Fiji in 1970 at the ebb tide of colonialization, they left behind a constitution on the Westminster model, a viable economy, a civil service, a police force, and a small standing army - but a population vastly different in composition from the one they found in 1874. In this fact lie the seeds of Fiji's present disturbances.
In 1879 the first shipload of Indians arrived. That shipload was followed by many more over the years as the British responded to the need for plantation labor, until the abolition of the system in 1920. Out of a total of 60,969 Indians, an estimated 12,000 returned to India, but the rest remained to form the basis of the Indian component of Fiji's society. Currently, of the 715,000 inhabitants of Fiji, 48 percent are Indians and 46 percent are native Fijians.
The Fijians, though reluctant to let their imperial protectors go, eventually faced up to political reality. Having found a replacement for the deceased Ratu Sir Lala Sukuna (the respected former leader of a separate Fijian administration) in the person of Ratu (now Sir) Kamisese Mara (a New Zealand- and Oxford-educated high chief from the Lau group), they founded the Alliance Party in 1966. Its composition and backing was primarily Fijian, although it also included various groups of Pacific Islanders resident in Fiji, Europeans and part-Europeans, and Chinese.
Meanwhile in 1965, immigrant lawyer A.D. Patel completed the foundation for an Indian-based Federation Party with an apparatus reminiscent of the Indian National Congress, and with himself as its president. For the first time electoral battle lines were clearly drawn in
... (1996 of 18677 Characters)
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