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ABBREVIATED HISTORY Pre History According to archeological evidence (mostly pottery), Fiji was settled in several different waves. The earliest settlements date from about 1600 BC. These people came from the New Britain area (now belonging to Papua New Guinea) and were most likely ancestors of present-day Polynesians. They practiced agriculture, raised pigs and poultry, and fished. The final wave of settlement (1000 to 1800 AD) was a massive movement from Melanesia. These people practiced a sophisticated form of terraced agriculture, which helped support a large population that may have risen to 200,000. People grew yams and taro, raised poultry, fished and evolved a highly developed culture. 
European Settlement The early explorers knew Fiji to be dangerous, an unknown area inhabited by unpredictable cannibals and strewn with treacherous reefs--in short, a place one avoided. This changed after the discovery of sandalwood and the growth of the bàche-de-mer (sea cucumber) trade.
European settlement in Fiji resulted in the almost immediate involvement of foreign powers. French, British and US war ships called regularly, often on behalf of aggrieved nationals. As the European population grew, settlers who lived under the protection and at the whim of local chiefs lobbied their respective governments in an effort to annex Fiji and establish a business-as-usual climate. Both the British and American consuls living there were deeply immersed in Fijian affairs. As self-proclaimed King of Fiji, Cakobau offered to cede Fiji to Britain in return for the payment of his long-overdue US$43,000 debt to the United States. Four years later the offer was refused. After the 1860s the European settlement evolved from a handful of scraggly beachcombers and vagabonds to a more orthodox settler society arriving mostly from Australia and New Zealand. Fiji became attractive because of the belief that the British were going to annex it, and economically as a cotton-growing center for European markets which were deprived of this commodity during the American Civil War. By 1870 the European population numbered more than 2000. Settlers purchased land, sometimes fraudulently, by selling firearms which were used in tribal conflicts. Claims and counter-claims often followed with no form of arbitration. There were also problems with labor. Men were needed to work the plantations, and the Fijians were reluctant to do so. Virtual slave laborers from the Solomons or New Hebrides were imported or `blackbirded' to Fiji. National Government The first attempt at a national government was a council of chiefs which met in 1865, but collapsed two years later because no one could agree on anything. This was followed by the creation of regional governments in Bau, naturally headed by Cakobau; in Lau, run by Ma'afu (with close links to Tonga) and, in Bua. Although the latter two were moderately successful in establishing some kind of order, events were moving too rapidly for the chiefs' attempts at political reform, particularly with the influx of European settlers. In 1871 the Cakobau government was established at the old whaling port of Levuka. Hopes were high on all sides that it would work. However, as a historian noted, `the ministers could not satisfy the irreconcilable demands of merchants, planters and Fijians'. The government became universally unpopular' and the situation deteriorated. Talk of race war was heard, and in order to prevent anarchy and bloodshed Cakobau was forced to cede Fiji to Britain. The British, realizing the responsibility they had towards the settlers and the Fijians, and not wishing the country to fall into America's hands, accepted. On 10 October 1874 the deed of cession was signed in Nasova, near Levuka. Fiji had become a crown colony. Arrival of the Indians Fiji was now a colony, but a colony deemed in need of economic growth. Large-scale plantations seemed the obvious answer to the new rulers, but labor was scarce. Sir Arthur Gordon, the colony's first governor, and fortunately for Fiji a decent man, was dead set against using `natives' to work the fields. Not only did he take steps immediately to protect Fijians from being exploited as a labor force, he also made it illegal to sell native land. In addition, he set up a taxation system requiring Fijians to work their own land rather than that of a planter. Thus Gordon set in motion laws that would forever benefit the Fijian people by making sure they would never be alienated from their land nor exploited as workers. Gordon, a true 19th- century romantic, took the role of protector seriously and developed an administration very paternalistic towards the Fijians. However, the colony was still in a dilemma. The infant sugar industry did have potential, but no-one to work the fields. The planters were screaming for labor. Gordon had a plan. Having previously worked in Mauritius and Trinidad, he had seen indentured Indian labor. He convinced the planters to bring over Indians as the answer to their needs. On 14 May 1879 the era of the Indian in Fiji began. On this day the Leonidas arrived from Calcutta with 463 immigrants aboard. Between May 1879 and November 1916, when the final labor transport ship arrived, 60,000 people had come to serve as `coolies'. According to Fiji-Indian scholar and leader Ahmed Ali, in these conditions `privacy was nonexistent, marriages fragile, morality a luxury, overtasking widespread, violence, including murder and suicide, not infrequent...' Of the new arrivals, some 85% were Hindus, 14% Muslims, and the rest were mainly Christians and Sikhs. Most of the migrants were men 20 to 40 years of age from the poor, uneducated, agricultural castes. Life in India was never easy, and economic conditions had pushed them to accept the inducement offered by the British Empire. The Indian exodus was to forever change the face of Fijian history. Independence
Colonial rule in Fiji was generally benign. The chiefly class was left intact and Fijians were pretty much able to run their own affairs. Fijian soldiers fought with distinction in World War I, The Second World War and in Malaya. In the late '50s labor unrest at home began to grow. Labor unions, flexing their new-found muscle for the first time, called a general strike in December 1959, which eventually led to rioting by Fijians and Indians against European property. The strike was short-lived, but was followed by a huge sugar workers' strike the following year. A massive march on the capital by sugar workers was turned back at the Rewa Bridge by Fijian military forces reinforced by the New Zealand army. The colonial government, realizing that postponing independence any longer would be to no-one's benefit, set the spring of 1963 for the first popular election of the legislative council. For the first time, common Fijians and Indians would vote, and women of all races would be enfranchised. The legislative council had existed in various forms since cession to Britain in 1874, but its members were chosen by different methods according to race. Thus the European members were selected by an election amongst European men, the Fijians were appointed by the great council of chiefs, and Indian members were chosen by wealthy Indians. A ministerial system of government was introduced in 1967, with Ratu Mara appointed chief minister, and members of the executive council in the legislative council becoming the council of ministers. Negotiations began again in 1969 between the Alliance Party led by Chief Minister Ratu Mara and the National Federation Party led by A D Patel, the party's founder. The main stumbling blocks were the issues of full self-government and communal roll elections. The Patel-led Indians wanted a republic with no ties to the British Commonwealth or Crown and a one-person/one-vote electoral system. The Alliance Fijians and other races, including a minority of anti-NFP Indians, insisted on maintaining close links to the Crown and rejected any idea of a republic. The Alliance Party was also insisting on a communal election system. In October 1969, Patel died and was succeeded by Siddiq Koya, who had a good working relationship with Ratu Mara and was ready to compromise. In January 1970 a tentative date of 10 October 1970 was set for independence. However, there was still no constitutional agreement. A solution would not be reached until 30 April -- just five months before the planned date. Incredibly, the target date was met, and 96 years to the day after Fiji's sovereignty was handed to Britain, it became an independent state in the presence of His Royal Highness, Prince Charles, representing Queen Elizabeth. April 1972 saw Fiji's first post-independence election in which Ratu Mara's Alliance Party gained a 14-seat majority in the house of representatives. The following January, the paramount chief of the Fijians, Ratu Sir George Cakobau, was sworn in as governor general, succeeding Sir Robert Foster, the last governor under colonial rule. Fiji's international stature, almost single-handedly shaped by Ratu Mara, grew after independence. Perhaps the most visible manifestations of the nation overseas are the Royal Fiji Military Forces. In April 1978 Fiji
offered to send a battalion to Lebanon as part of the United Nations
Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL). The first soldiers left two months
later, and hundreds of Fijian troops served in that war-torn country until
the operation finally came to an end in 2002. Several dozen Fijian
soldiers lost their lives in Lebanon. The Coups Since independence, Fiji had been the shining example of democracy, multi- cultural harmony and development in the Pacific, and indeed a standard for the entire third world. That was shattered on the morning of 14 May 1987, when Lt. Col Sitiveni Rabuka marched into parliament with a handful of soldiers and overthrew the government in a bloodless coup. The event triggering the coup had occurred a month earlier when Ratu Mara's Fijian dominated Alliance Party, which had ruled since independence, was defeated in the country's fifth post- independence election. A coalition composed of the mostly Indian NFP and the newly formed Labor Party won a stunning upset victory. The Labor Party had been formed three years earlier by trade union leaders, Fijians disenchanted with the increasingly conservative policies of the Alliance Party and Indians weary of the constant bickering and infighting of the NFP. Although the Labor Party and NFP did form a coalition heading into the election, it was the Labor Party's Timoci Bavadra who was chosen to head the new government after the election. Although Bavadra was Fijian and the majority of his cabinet was made up of non- Indians, the coalition was labeled `Indian dominated'. It was into this strained atmosphere that the new government convened its first business session of parliament. In its first hour, it was toppled. At gunpoint, Bavadra and his entire cabinet were kidnaped from the floor of the parliament before the disbelieving members of the house. The next day, Ratu Mara, one of the fathers of democratic Fiji, announced he would serve on the new government's council of ministers. This legitimized the coup in the minds of many Fijians. Rabuka's Reasons Rabuka said the purpose of the coup was to return political power to Fijian hands and demanded that changes be made to the constitution guaranteeing Fijian control of the government. The great council of chiefs met and gave their support to the Rabuka regime with a mandate to amend the constitution. Bowing to international pressure, Rabuka eventually handed control over the government to the governor general. But Rabuka remained in command of the army and police. On 25 September 1987, Rabuka staged his second coup, claiming his actions were to quell the violence against the Indian population. At the same time he scrapped the constitution and ordered the writing of a new document guaranteeing Fijian supremacy. Twelve days later Rabuka declared Fiji a republic, naming Ratu Penaia president, and ending the 113-year tie to the British Crown. At the end of 1987 Rabuka appointed Ratu Mara prime minister of an interim government and named himself minister for home affairs in charge of the army and police. Dr Timoci Bavadra died of natural causes on 3 November 1989. After prolonged
international censure, Rabuka and representative of the Info-Fijian
community signed a revised constitution allowing common roll voting in
1997. Two years later, the Fiji Labour Party led by Mahendra Chaudhry won
an upset victory over Rabuka's party and the country got its first
Indo-Fijian prime minister. On May 19, 2000, a failed businessman named
George Speight led a civil coup in Fiji's parliament, leading to the
proclamation of a state of emergency. With Chaudhry and other
parliamentarians held hostage by Speight's terrorists, President Mara was
forced to resign and a caretaker government under Laisenia Qarase was
appointed by the Great Council of Chiefs. Speight was eventually arrested
and convicted of treason. He is currently serving a life sentence on a
small island near Suva. Fresh elections were held under the 1997
constitution in 2001, and Qarase retained his position as prime minister.
With the rule of law reestablished, most countries dropped the sanctions
imposed after the 2000 coup, and life in Fiji returned to normal. Although
ethnic and economic tensions continue to simmer in Fiji, the country is
entirely safe for visitors.
Fiji Today Fiji's economy has been on then mend over the past few years but it still has to contend with the decline of sugar as a prime source of revenue and a nearly two decades long brain drain and flight of capital due to the past political unrest. The brain drain has meant doctors, nurses, lawyers, engineers, bank officers, mechanics and other skilled professionals have left) the country. In key areas such as health care, the government has hired foreign nationals to take up the slack. Fortunately for the Fijian government, most of the nations that had stopped contributing foreign aid after the coup, rethought their policies and once again provided money to the cash-strapped country. Despite problems of every stripe the current strong economy finds people more optimistic than at any time in the recent past.
© Rob Kay 2007
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