Your go-to source for new
ideas and inspiration
Monocolumn: The Reaction To Fijian President’s Death

Monocolumn: The Reaction To Fijian President’s Death

By Monocle on February 17, 2011

Monocolumn is Monocle’s daily bulletin of news and opinion. Catch up with previous editions here.

Josefa Iloilo, the former Fijian president whose scrapping of his island nation’s constitution and sacking of its legislature cemented the grip of a 2006 military coup that isolated his country and enraged regional powers Australia and New Zealand, has died aged 91.

Canberra and Wellington have reacted to the death of Iloilo – described by many as a good man caught in a bad situation – with deafening silence. This is a bad sign for the already-dismal relations between the countries, who have been at odds since his 2009 moves effectively legitimised the military government of Commodore Frank Bainimarama, who then began Fiji’s recently accelerated drift away from their sphere of influence.

A gravely ill Iloilo stepped down as president in 2010 and although it is unlikely that his death will have any immediate impact on the government, Australia and New Zealand’s reaction to his death will not likely help their ongoing attempts to engage with Fiji, said Brij Lal, a professor of Pacific and Asian History and Fiji expert at Australian National University in Canberra. The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs did not answer a request for comment on his death.

“What Australia wants is to have a meaningful dialogue with those in power in Fiji, and that the military is not prepared to do,” says Lal. “They really want monologue, not dialogue.”

Fiji, a former British colony which comprises about 330 islands in the central Pacific Ocean, was placed under military rule after a 2006 coup, but did not formally reject its constitution as a republic until Iloilo’s 2009 actions. These include declaring himself president and assuming similar power to that of a king or queen in a constitutional monarchy.

To continue reading, click here.




href=”http://www.statcounter.com/tumblr/”
target=”_blank”>tumblr analytics


TOPICS:Advertising, Branding & Marketing
TAGS:
Monocle

Comments