Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Coupfourpointfive tipped off about Sayed-Khaiyum's 'kick-backs'

Posted on COUP FOUR POINT FIVE

31 AUGUST 2010
Military Council suspects Khaiyum of allegedly hiding millions in private bank account from kick-backs 
 
He is likely to be kicked out of his illegal post within days
 
Every dictatorship provides a fertile breeding ground for unscruplous supporters of illegal juntas to exploit illegality and to enrich themselves, their families, and their cronies.
 
Now, the days of the once powerful crony of military dictator Frank Bainimarama and chief persecutor of opponents, including the Fiji Times, are numbered as he awaits that final letter and ultimatum to resign or receive the military boot up his backside for allegedly hiding from the nation, and the Military Council, millions in kick-backs from various deals, award of construction contracts, and the Surfing Decree etc, etc, etc.

Stay tuned to Coupfourpointfive - we will be revealing more on Aiyaz Sayed Khaiyum and his fate, which is now in the hands of the all powerful Military Council.


The author of the infamous Sunset Clause, the thesis that sought to destroy Fijian cultural autonomy, will know very soon whether the sun has finally set on him.

And he's not the only one. Even the dictator himself is suspected of being part of the inner ring, that benefitted from the kick-backs. 

More to come.

Khaiyum's crony John Prasad plans to flee to NZ

Posted on COUP FOUR POINT FIVE

31 August 2010

Khaiyum's crony John Prasad plans to flee to NZ after milking Fiji's economy

Prasad
More cracks are appearing within the ranks of the illegal regime - John Prasad is now no longer the Permanent Secretary of Finance. 
 
He was replaced today by David Kolitagane, with a statement from the junta saying the appointment takes place "immediately" and that Prasad "reverts" back to his previous position as Consultant Special Projects.
 
Coupfourpointfive has been reliably informed, though, that Prasad, a former Rew Dairy technician turned bogus financial expert, is now planning to flee back to New Zealand as the Miliatry Council closes in on the illegal Attorney-General, Aiyaz Sayed Khaiyum, and his corrupt deals running into millions.

Thanks to his buddy Khaiyum who had earlier made him chair of the Fiji Water Authority and the Fiji Development Bank, Prasad raked in thousands in consultancy dollars. 
  
Those around Khaiyum are also being pencilled in to be taken to the Queen Elizabeth army barracks for questioning. Those Indo-Fijians holding New Zealand and Australian passports are now packing their bags and fleeing Fiji - the country they claimed they had come back to help save with the military dictator.
 
John Prasad is the first of many who are booking plane tickets back to their adopted countries, leaving Khaiyum to book a ticket to Naboro!

Khaiyum’s crony and junta supporter lined up to bid for Fiji Times

Posted on COUP FOUR POINT FIVE

31 August 2010

Maharaj: source Sun Insurance
Coupfourpointfive has been reliably informed that Suva businessman, Dewan Maharaj, of Quality Print Limited has been lined up to negotiate the purchase of the Fiji Times, which the illegal Attorney-General, Aiyaz Sayed Khaiyum, says must be sold to a citizen of Fiji.

Maharaj, who owns Fiji's largest commercial printing operation, was a prominent member of the junta’s illegal Peoples Charter for Change, Peace and Progress, and is the President of the Sanatan Dharm in Fiji.

In August 2008, Maharaj openly supported Khaiyum’s claim that there was some support from the international community for the Peoples Charter. Endorsing the claim, Maharaj said that even if Australia and New Zealand do not accept the charter, countries like India and China are willing to help Fiji.

Links to Sun Insurance
The same Dewan Maharaj is one of the directors of Sun Insurance Ltd, who holds 200,000 shares, along with Padam Raj Lala, who owns 50,000 shares in Sun Insurance, the former National MBF Finance (Fiji) Ltd.

Recent Sun Alliance activity includes purchase of the Ports Authority headquarters building for  $3.2 million when it  was actually valued at $17 million.

Hypocritical Khaiyum profits from his own policies
While Khaiyum has repeatedly said the Fiji Times must be locally owned, he has had no qualm in selling his Berry Road property to Bright Star Investments Ltd which is owned by Tappoos. Two of Tappoos' BSI directors are listed as holding Australian and New Zealand citizenship.

Last year, Coupfourpointfive obtained the land transfer document showing that Khaiyum sold his Berry Road property to Tappoos for an inflated $810,000. Tappoos bought Khaiyum’s property at the ballooned figure in return for a deal which was revealed later in the 2010 budget.

The deal was that tourists could claim back only from duty free shops owned by Tappoos, VAT on duty free items. Coupfourpointfive obtained a copy of the Land Transfer lodged by a Suva law firm and signed by Khaiyum. It also carries the common seal or stamp of Latifa Investments. The document clearly shows that two lots owned by Latifa Investments were sold to BSI for $810,000.

Our sources established that Khaiyum bought the property for $350,000 in 2005. If this was true then Khaiyum made a profit of $460,000 in three years.

Bright Star Investments was formed in August 2005, and Suresh Lal Tappoo gave his citizenship as Australian and Yogesh Tappoo gave his as New Zealander.

Nepotism goes unchecked
Khaiyum, with his mother Latifa Khaiyum, formed Latifa Investments Ltd in March 2005. They gave their address as 40 Lovoni Road, Suva. The property is now heavily guarded by the police at taxpayers expense after a break-in in 2008.

The property in Berry Road, Suva used to be the office of Fiji Women's Crisis Centre before they moved to new headquarters just before the December 5, 2006 coup.

Remember that in August 2005 Khaiyum also filed a case against his neighbours the Fongs, in the High Court, claiming that he had the right to buy the property because they had promised to sell it to him. Yet another ruse, to acquire and sell at an inflated price through Latifa Investments Ltd?

Latifa is 99 per cent owned by Khaiyum and one per cent by his mother. On 15 March 2005 he informed the Registrar of Companies: “I, Aiyaz Sayed Khaiyum (father’s name Sayed Abdul Khaiyum) of Suva in the republic of Fiji Islands, do solemnly and sincerely declare that I am a barrister and Solicitor of the High Court of Fiji engaged in the formation of Latifa Investments Limited .... and I make this solemn declaration conscientiously believing the same to be true and according to the Statutory Declarations Act 1970.”

It was signed before Commissioner of Oaths Mohini D Prasad, Barrister and Solicitor, Fiji. On 14 March 2005, another signature of his was witnessed by Volisa Lydia Elaisa, the legal secretary, Colonial Bank.

Particulars of mortgage dated 31 May 2005: $284,000, Property Mortgaged Lot 1 on DP 1280, Certificate of Title No 66993, with ANZ Bank.
On 23 August 2006, four months before be suddenly popped up as the illegal Attorney-General and Minister for Justice, Latifa Investments secured a new mortgage of $675,0000 on the same above land title with National Bank, trading as Colonial National, Fiji.

Interestingly, Latifa Investments gave its registered office as C/- BDO Zarin Ali, Level 8, Dominion House, GPO Box 555, Suva, Fiji. One of the Managing Partners of BDO Zarin Ali, a chartered accounting firm, is Nur Bano Ali. She is Khaiyum's maternal aunt, sister of Khaiyum's mother Latifa.

BDO has been paying out the salaries of Cabinet Ministers. Our inquiries revealed that tenders or expressions of interest for the work were not advertised. 

Now, the power-hungry illegal bully boy is forcing the Fiji Times to sell to a local buyer, cronies of his own at that. We ask: who is this illegal pig head of a lawyer to demand the Fiji Times be locally owned when his Latifa company sold his Berry Road property to two people who hold Australian and New Zealand citizenships?

We note, too, that Latifa Investments Ltd has NOT submitted annual returns to the ROC for years 2007 &2008. The question needs to be asked - WHY NOT?

Saturday, August 28, 2010

AG, SG not going says Smith-Johns

Source: Ministry of Information - August 28, 2010

The Fiji government has issued a statement against what it says are rumours concerning the dismissal or resignation of the Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum and the Solicitor General, Christopher Pryde.

Permanent secretary for Information Sharon Smith-Johns said the rumours are unfounded and should be totally disregarded.

“The fact of the matter is that the Attorney General and the Solicitor General have been at the forefront of moving government reforms and are performing well above expectations and have the utmost confidence of the Prime Minister and other cabinet members.”

Smith-Johns said the statement was in response to queries made to her office.

“It’s obvious these rumors are being spread by individuals and disgruntled ex-politicians whose only interest is to undermine the economy and investor confidence.”

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Resentment fear over Fiji nationality switch

26 AUgust 2010



The interim Fijian government has ordered the word "iTaukei" to replace "Fijian" in all written laws.

iTaukei means indigenous or native.

Fiji language experts are warning it could increase division.

Observers say its use could lead to resentment by indigenous Fijians.

Until now, "Fijian" as a term has excluded Indo-Fijians - who commentators say will welcome the change.

The purpose of the change, they say, is to try to make "Fijian" an inclusive terms for all citizens of Fiji, and "iTaukei" the term for indigenous people.

Dr Paul Geraghty, from the University of the South Pacific, says there was no groundswell movement to introduce the description.

"There certainly was no popular movement to introduce the word iTaukei to replace Fijian," the academic said.

"In a way, the rationale for this change is the perception among some of the Fijian Indian population who think that 'Fijian' should be a generic term for anybody who lives in Fiji, regardless of ethnicity."

http://australianetworknews.com/stories/201008/2994467.htm?desktop

Labour Party calls for Accountability for Ministerial payrolls

Fiji Labour Party

Fiji Labour Party calls on the interim government to comment on the authenticity of reports that salaries of Cabinet Ministers and a legal consultant hired by the government are paid through the accounting firm of BDO (Aliz).

There have been reports recently that ministers were not paid through the Treasury since March/April this year. Instead, their payroll was contracted out to BDO (Aliz) which is managed by Dr. Nur Bano Ali who is related (aunt) to the interim Attorney General, Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum.
Our inquiries revealed that tenders or expressions of interest for the work were not advertised.
According to information published on the internet interim Prime Minister Commodore Voreqe Bainimarama receives an annual salary of $267,000 while the interim Attorney General receives $336,000.
These are super salaries: no former Prime Minister or Attorney General has been paid anywhere near these figures. Salaries and allowances of PMs and Ministers were governed by determinations made by the Parliamentary Salaries Commission and ranged from $115,000 plus State housing for the PM to $96,000 including housing allowance, for the Attorney General/Ministers.
It will be recalled that Commodore Bainimarama had made it explicitly clear in 2007 that he, as well as all Ministers (including the AG), would receive only ONE salary irrespective of the number of portfolios they held. We believe that such is the case with all other Ministers who receive much, much less compared to the interim PM and the AG.
Interestingly, the Executive Authority of Fiji Decree No.2, 2009 states at Section 9 that:
A Minister is entitled to remuneration and allowances that were applicable before the 10th day of April 2009, provided that the President may by Decree amend, vary or replace the remuneration or allowance payable to a Minister.”
We have not seen any Decree which has altered, amended or varied the above provision.
The tax payer and the people of Fiji are entitled to know the truth. All public officials, including the Prime Minister and Ministers, must be paid through the Treasury, at rates approved by law and in a transparent manner.
After all, there has been much rhetoric on transparency and accountability by the High Command of the interim government.
The administration must now clarify whether the reports are true.

Fiji Police Chief Teleni Resigns or Pushed?


FBC News -  August 26, 2010


Taken from / By: FBC News


Commodore Esala Teleni has resigned from his position as Police Commissioner.


Teleni handed in his resignation yesterday afternoon. 

He stated in his resignation that he believes he has made a significant contribution to the Fiji Police Force. 

However, he adds it is now time for him to consider further career opportunities. 

Following his resignation, the Prime Minister, as provided for under the State Services Decree, has recommended the appointment of Joeli Baleilevuka as Acting Police Commissioner. 

Baleilevuka will act as Commissioner of Police until further notice. 

Government has thanked Teleni for his services to the Fiji Police Force and to the nation.

Teleni at end of military career: PS
August 26, 2010 

Former Fiji police commissioner Esala Teleni will not be returning to the disciplined services following his resignation, says permanent secretary for Information Sharon Smith-Johns.

Smith-Johns told FijiLive that Teleni had served the police force for almost three years but that he would not be returning to the military.

Teleni was navy commander prior to his appointment as police chief in 2007.

Announcing his resignation today, a Ministry of Information statement said “it is now time for him to consider further career opportunities”.

Smith-Johns said she did not have a personal discussion with Teleni on the matter therefore she had no idea about his future plans.

Joeli Baleilevuka has been appointed as acting Commissioner of Police at the recommendation of the Prime Minister until a substantive appointment is made.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Aust, NZ hampered judiciary says Ilegal CJ Gates

Fiji Live News
By Richard Naidu - August 23, 2010 

Fiji’s Chief Justice Anthony Gates says Australia and New Zealand have hampered progress in restoring Fiji’s judiciary at all levels.

Gates made the rare remarks while officiating at a Consumer Council event today.

“Bearing in mind all members of the judiciary were dismissed in April 2009, there has been a satisfactory restoration of judicial officers over the last 1 year 4 month period. There are no magic wands available for this process however. Australia and New Zealand have hampered our progress in restoring the judiciary at all levels. In the world, this assault on, and interference with, a neighbouring state’s judiciary is unprecedented,” he said.

Fiji’s judiciary was sacked and the 1997 Constitution abrogated last April, following which the current public emergency regulations were introduced.

Australia was blamed by the Fiji government last year for hampering efforts to recruit judges from Sri Lanka, leading to tit-for-tat expulsions of envoys from Suva, Canberra and Wellington.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Australian tourists turn a blind eye as Fiji's best people persecuted

Rory Gibson From: The Courier-Mail 
August 22, 2010







IT should be a source of profound shame to our country that Australians are going on holidays to Fiji in record numbers.







The Fiji Bureau of Statistics recently released its May tourism figures, claiming more than 45,000 people turned up at Nadi airport to make it the busiest May in the island nation's tourism history.







Nearly half of them were Aussies, lured there by the cheap package deals. It seems we can't get there fast enough to slip into "Fiji time" and bula our way to the cocktail bar.







While thoroughly understanding the desire of travellers and holidaymakers to get the best bang for their buck, it is appalling that we are directing our dollars to the coffers of a nation that is run by a military dictatorship little better than any apartheid regime operating in South Africa's dark ages.







We can all laugh that our Melanesian neighbours are ruled by a bloke with a name that sounds like an '80s girl band, and assuage our consciences by believing Commodore Bainimarama's claptrap about restoring fairness to Fiji's racist electoral system.







Most of the noise emanating from Fiji – and Australia's response to the trashing of democracy there – has focused on the big-ticket items, like the purge of the judiciary and the persecution and censorship of the independent media.







They are issues hardly likely to ping on the radar of a hard-working Aussie looking for a place to sit by a pool in the sun for a couple of weeks to forget about winter and the mortgage.







But this Pacific tragedy isn't about whether The Fiji Times is being edited under the baleful glare of one of Bainimarama's gun-toting thugs, or that an expat gets his marching orders.







It's about people like Imrana Jalal and her husband Ratu Sakiusa Tuisolia.







This is a couple who represents the best of Fiji. She is a prominent human rights lawyer of Indian descent, he is an indigenous Fijian chief.







They are educated, involved in their community, passionate about their country and staunch believers in the democratic process.







They are high-profile people whose marriage in 2003 stunned a country riven with ethnic tension – imagine a Mandela marrying a Botha in South Africa during apartheid.







Jalal has worked tirelessly for women's rights throughout the Pacific. She is a member of the International Commission of Jurists. Her husband was CEO of the Fiji Airports Corporation but was sacked after the military took over.







Jalal's parents, sisters and children from a previous marriage all live in Brisbane, typical of the Fiji-Indian diaspora that has drained their country of two generations of talent and human capital.







They have urged her to join them, fearful that her opposition to the dictatorship's attack on human rights would put her in jeopardy, but she has refused to abandon her country.







Unable to find a job after being blacklisted by the military, Ratu Sakiusa opened a cafe in Suva called Hook and Chook. His wife was listed as a director but was not involved in the running of the restaurant. It was through Hook and Chook that Bainimarama attacked Jalal.







In December, Fiji's laughably named Independent Commission Against Corruption brought charges against the couple relating to licensing issues involving the restaurant, matters normally dealt with by the Suva City Council and attracting a fine of $20.







When the charges were first brought before the Magistrates Court, Magistrate Mary Muir questioned why FICAC was prosecuting minor local authority misdemeanours. She was sacked two days later, and FICAC then successfully applied to have the charges moved to the High Court.







Thankfully, the charges against her were thrown out of the High Court by Justice Priyantha Fernando two weeks ago. One remains against her husband, but it too should be scuppered . . . unless Justice Fernando is sacked for being so gallingly impartial.







Although Jalal and Ratu Sakiusa have escaped prison so far, the toll on their finances and emotional health have been enormous.







Their treatment is by no means isolated. Good people all over Fiji are being persecuted.







Going on holiday there while this sort of abuse is happening would be like sitting in a cafe sipping a coffee while a mugger attacked a pregnant woman on the footpath next to you, and you ignored it.







gibsonr@qnp.newsltd.com.au







Rory Gibson is a former editor-in-chief of The Fiji Times



http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/opinion/australian-tourists-turn...


Comments posted on Matavuvale.com

  • The following countries contributed to Fiji’s gross earnings from tourism in Quarter 4, 2009:
    Australia $112.6 million;
    New Zealand $32.1 million
    United States of America $19.4 million;
    Pacific Island Countries $13.5 million
    Continental Europe $11.4 million
    United Kingdom $8.1 million
    Canada $4.8 million
    Rest of Asia $4.8 million
    Japan $4.2 million
    China $ 4.0 million
    Korea $2.2
    Other Countries $2.3 million.
  • When the Idiot condemns new Zealand,Autralia, USA he had this statisticcs with him.Only stupid and idiot leaders ready to saver such relationship that has a cashflow ability as the above.Therefore for those of us who support this Idiot Bainimarama are either Dumb,Stupid, Blind or too sick to see what they have lost through this Idiotic leadership.This a tourism statistic and on humantarian support Australia and New Zealand donated 96% to all Fiji Received.Making this worse the RFMF have lost their moral obligation to Fiji.
  • I reckon Australia and NZ should have a total pullout from their economic support and let the fun begins. Let's begin by stopping the tourist market. Geographically Fiji island cann't move closer to China so it has nowhere to escape when it collapses. On the other hand let see when China runs the country, utilises the land and forced everyone to plough the land by enforcing child forced labour. Maybe thats when people will understand what China and its policy is all about.
  • I've been suggesting this for some 12 months or more , but it seems that many Fijian organisations and some individuals from within fiji, have vested interests in Tourism and are either unwilling or unable to lobby the Tourist operators outside fiji to stop promoting Fiji as a holiday destination. It's a shame, because if they were able to support our cause, to return Fiji to Democracy, we could acknowledge their contribution by supporting them at a later date.
  • Tourism is Fiji's largest industry, earning over $250 million and employing over 40,000 people in 2004. The tourism industry has grown at an annual rate of 10 to 12 percent over the last decade, but has slowed in the last few years. The majority of visitors come from the Pacific, specifically Australia and Fiji itself, but Fiji is pushing hard to reach the growing Chinese population.
  • As done with FIJI Times in Fiji Idiotic Leader wont care less if 40000 people would go unemployed but tried to showed he is a strongman but every action and word he says shows he is standing on a sinking ship and is very wiorried of how stupid he is becoming. Short term pain for long term gain. I'm guessing that there aren't too business smart after all.
  • it is a shame that as our brothers and sisters in Fiji suffer from the persecution of this illegal Regime under Dictator Bainimarama the people of both Australia and New Zealand fail to comprehend the total sufferings that is imposed on the average Fijian through their support of the Illegal govt. by holidaying in Fiji.
    When Australians and Kiwis holiday in Fiji they are supporting the Illegal govt by propping it up with the money they bring to Fiji.In fact it is the tourists of NZ and Australia that are funding the Bainimarama Militaryt govt. who are continuosly harassing the ordinary Fijians by the imposition of the PER, the abuse of Human Rights, the removal of freedom of speech and so forth. What a shame that our neighbors even though they disagree with the coup now turn right around and support it by funding it through the tourism Industry.

Pirate radio tries to beat repression in paradise

Fiji's democratic opposition hopes to evade military leader's draconian censorship

By Roger Maynard

Sunday, 22 August 2010
AFP


Newspapers face a clampdown from the regime of Commodore Bainimaram

This is a story about repression in what many people would think of as some kind of paradise.

In a move inspired by pirate radio stations of the 1960s, political activists in the South Pacific are planning to position a Dutch-registered merchant vessel in international waters off the coast of Fiji to defy censors in the military dictatorship.

Opponents of the coup leader and self-appointed Prime Minister, Commodore Frank Bainimarama, hope to have the station broadcasting news and interviews by the end of next month in an effort to circumvent draconian media laws imposed on the island state's press, radio and television.

Since taking power in a military coup in December 2006, Fiji's strongman has slowly eaten away at the country's democratic freedoms, installing newsroom censors and cracking down on foreign media ownership. Newspapers and radio stations now have to be 90 per cent locally owned, a stipulation that will almost certainly see the closure of the 140-year-old Fiji Times. The popular title, which has been owned by News Limited since 1987, has been emasculated since the censors moved in to demand the removal of any anti-government stories.

With most of the population too poor to access the internet or satellite television, the majority of Fijians rely on the press and transistor radios for their news. That is why Usaia Waqatairewa of the Fiji Democracy Movement has opted for pirate broadcasting. Now exiled in Australia, he plans to stream live programming to the ship from a Sydney newsroom and rebroadcast the material from an on-board transmitter on the AM waveband. "The basic purpose is to inform the public of what's really happening in Fiji so that they can make an informed decision about whether to support Bainimarama or not," he said.

Fiji has suffered four coups in the past two decades and is now facing an economic crisis that threatens to bring further instability to the 800,000 people who inhabit this sprawling archipelago. To make matters worse, there are increasing concerns about human rights as Commodore Bainimarama continues to crack down on those who oppose his dictatorship. In a rare interview aired by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation last month, the military leader said, "we'll need to shut some people up" before the country can return to democracy. "I don't trust the people," declared the Prime Minister, adding that he was none too happy about politicians or the judiciary, either.

After silencing the powerful Methodist church and the chiefs who are the traditional rulers of this fiercely patriotic nation, Mr Bainimarama sacked many judges.

Suspended from the Commonwealth and excluded from the recent South Pacific Forum annual meeting, Fiji risks becoming a pariah in the region at a time when it desperately needs friends. The Prime Minister also recently expelled Australia's acting high commissioner to Fiji and held his own mini-regional conference to prove he can do without the support of those who disagree with him.

The reforms the commodore talks about strike at the very heart of Fiji's racially divided society. For many years, about half the population was of Indian origin, descendants of indentured labourers who were brought to Fiji by the British in the 19th century to help in the sugar industry. In recent years, faced with eviction from their Fijian-owned farms after their leases expired, thousands of Indians have sought refuge overseas while many of those unable to leave have ended up in squatter camps.

When Mr Bainimarama seized power he promised a fairer society, with legislation designed to protect the interests of the Indian community. But while he may have been well intentioned, his policies are in danger of turning Fiji into an economic basket case. Unemployment, poverty and fear have created a society whose people are often too scared to talk.

Even the phones no longer guarantee confidentiality since the government ordered mobile and landline users to register all their personal details. One local carrier, Vodafone, is also demanding customers provide a left-hand thumb print and PIN, which the user would normally keep secret. The head of the Justice Ministry, Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum, claims the compulsory registration of all phones is the result of a spate of bomb threats and bogus calls. Critics suggest it is more to do with the interim government wanting to create a database of callers whose views do not correspond with the regime's.

Telephone paranoia even extends to some tourists. A German businessman who used his satellite phone in a restaurant recently was reported to the police, who promptly raided his hotel room. He left the country in disgust shortly afterwards. So far, such stories have not damaged tourism, which is one of the few Fijian industries still booming.

A devalued local currency and a strong Australian dollar have made Fiji a bargain destination for overseas holidaymakers. In June alone, more than 45,000 Australians ignored the political considerations and headed to the country's upmarket resorts.

Cocooned in luxury, they are unlikely to see any military presence or the squalor in which so many thousands of Fijians are forced to live in the squatter camps around the capital, Suva. But while the tourists are still heading to Fiji, businesses are pulling out. Australia's Commonwealth Bank has sold its Fijian arm, and Qantas is trying to sell its 46 per cent stake in Fiji's national airline, Air Pacific.

Despite these economic warning signals, Mr Bainimarama remains determined to do things his way. The Prime Minister has promised to go to the country in 2014, but, since he has repeatedly postponed his general election plans over the past three and a half years, few believe he will keep his word. And, if an application for a loan of F$1bn (£328m) from the IMF fails, "the country's economic outlook will be shocking", according to Anthony Bergin of the Australian Strategic Policy Unit.

Such a situation will make Usaia Waqatairewa's plans for a pirate radio station all the more crucial in informing Fijians about what is happening. "We are not intending to broadcast propaganda. We just want to report the facts," he says.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/australasia/pirate-radio-tr...