The FIJI Islands: 333.
Capital: Suva.
Area: 8000 square miles.
Population 10 lakh. Christian Hindu Muslim.
Got independence from UK in 1970.
Divisions.4. Province. 14.
National Game. Rugby football.
Currency:
Fiji dollar.
Located in South Pacific region, Suva is a deep
water harbor with best road and other infrastructure on par with NZ and
Australia. It is known as the hub of South Pacific.
When Fiji's first
settlers arrived from island Melanesia at least 3,500 years ago, they carried
with them a wide range of food plants, the pig, and a style of pottery known as
Lapita ware. This pottery is generally associated with peoples who had
well-developed skills in navigation and canoe building and were
horticulturists. From Fiji the Lapita culture was carried to Tonga and Samoa,
where the first distinctively Polynesian cultures evolved. Archaeological
evidence suggests that two other pottery styles were subsequently introduced
into Fiji, though it is not clear whether these represent major migrations or simply
cultural innovations brought by small groups of migrants. In most areas of
Fiji, the settlers lived in small communities near ridge forts and practiced a
slash-and-burn type of agriculture. In the fertile delta regions of southeast
Viti Levu, however, there were large concentrations of population. These
settlements, which were based on intensive taro cultivation using complex
irrigation systems, were protected by massive ring-ditch fortifications.
Traditional Fijian
society was hierarchical, with tribal groups led by chiefs chosen according to
rank based on descent as well as personal achievement. Tribes were divided into
mataqali, or clans, and residential sub-clans. By alliance or conquest, tribes
might form confederations led by paramount chiefs; warfare was common.
The first
Europeans to sight the Fiji Islands were Abel Janzsoon Tasman, who passed the
northeast fringe of the group in 1643, and Captain James Cook, who passed the
southeastern islands in 1774. Captain William Bligh passed through the group in
his open longboat after the mutiny on HMS Bounty in 1789 and returned to
explore it in 1792.
Commercial
interest in the group began with the discovery of sandalwood at the beginning
of the 19th century, leading to a rush to Bua Bay at the southwestern end of
Vanua Levu.
A few
beachcombers, useful as armourers and interpreters, were adopted by influential
chiefs from this time. Within little more than a decade the accessible,
commercial stands of sandalwood were depleted, but by the 1820s traders were
again visiting the group to trade for edible varieties of the marine
invertebrate called the sea cucumber, also known as bêche-de-mer or trepang.
Whereas most of
the sandalwood had been cut by gangs of foreigners, the bêche-de-mer harvest
involved large numbers of Fijians in gathering, cleaning, and drying and in the
provision of food and firewood.These opportunities for new wealth and power,
symbolized by the acquisition of muskets, intensified political rivalries and
hastened the rise of the confederation of Bau, led first by Naulivou, then by
his nephew Cakobau. Bau is a tiny island off the southeast coast of Viti Levu,
but by the 1850s it dominated western Fiji.
Cakobau's main
rival was the Tongan chief, Ma'afu, who led an army of Christian Tongans and
their allies from eastern Fiji. After a short-lived alliance with Ma'afu,
Cakobau became a Christian in 1854, thus bringing most Fijians under the
influence of Methodist missionaries. Roman Catholic and Anglican missionaries
arrived later but did not enjoy the same success.
By the 1860s Fiji
was attracting European settlers intent on establishing plantations to
capitalize on a boom in cotton prices caused by the American Civil War. The
consequent disputes over land and political power within and between European
and Fijian communities, and problems with labour introduced from other Pacific
islands, contributed to violent confrontations and exacerbated the implicit
instability of Fijian society and ensured that no Fijian chief could impose his
rule on the whole group.
European attempts
at government were doomed by the greed and factionalism of their members and by
the interference of European governments and consuls. Imperial intervention
thus became inevitable. On Oct. 10, 1874, after negotiations had led to an
offer of unconditional cession, Fiji became a British crown colony. The
policies of the first governor, Sir Arthur Gordon, were decisive in shaping the
history of Fiji. Gordon saw himself as the protector of the Fijian people and
thus initiated policies that limited their involvement in commercial and
political developments.
Sales of Fijian
land were banned; the Fijians were taxed in agricultural produce, not cash; and
they were governed through a system of indirect rule based on the traditional
political structure.In order to maintain these policies yet encourage the
economic development of the new colony, Gordon promoted the introduction of
indentured Indian labourers and investment by the Colonial Sugar Refining
Company to establish sugar plantations and processing mills.
Indian migrants
were encouraged to become permanent settlers at the conclusion of their
contracts, even though little land was available for sale and the migrants'
political rights were circumscribed. After the termination of the indenture
system in 1920, Indian agitation over political and economic grievances caused
strikes and continual discontent and challenged the commercial and political
domination of the small European community in the islands.
During World War
II Fiji was occupied by Allied forces, and a battalion of Fijians saw service
as scouts in the campaign for the Solomon Islands. Indians refused to serve
because they were not offered the same wages and conditions as Europeans.
Indians also refused to cut their cane at the low prices offered. These actions
led to the taint of disloyalty being applied to Indians by the other races, and
to the army, which was retained after the war, remaining exclusively Fijian
except for a handful of European officers. Incipient racial awareness was
heightened by the realization that, from 1943, Fijians were outnumbered by
Indians. As one response to perceived stagnation in Fijian society, the
colonial authorities restructured the Fijian administration, reinforcing
chiefly leadership and thus consolidating the conservatism of Fijian society.
Constitutional
development toward independence, which began in the 1960s, was more a response
to international and British pressures than to any demand from within Fiji. The
steps taken were, in practice, a compromise between the principles of
parliamentary democracy and the racial divisions within the country. The
franchise, previously exercised by Europeans and some Indians, was extended to
adults of all races, including Fijians, who until then had been represented by
their chiefs. Fijian land rights, guaranteed by the Deed of Cession in 1874,
were given constitutional protection, while Fijian chiefs were given an
effective veto on all important matters affecting the status of Fijians and on
changes to the constitution itself.
Facing political
reality, Indian leaders relinquished their earlier demands and accepted the
communal and cross-voting system, thus giving away the common electoral role
that they had sought since the 1930s.The effect of the constitution was to give
power to Fijian politicians so long as they remained in partnership with the
General voters and, critically, so long as the Fijian vote remained unified.
Despite race riots during by-elections in 1968, independence was achieved in a
spirit of cooperation on Oct. 10, 1970, the 96th anniversary of cession.
From that time
until April 1987, Fiji was governed by the Alliance Party, which was pledged to
policies of multiracialism. Its electoral supremacy was challenged only
briefly, in 1977, when Fijian votes were attracted by Fijian nationalist
candidates campaigning under a slogan of "Fiji for the Fijians"; only
factionalism prevented the formation of an Indian-led government.
In 1987, however,
the Indian-dominated National Federation Party joined in coalition with the new
Labour Party, which had strong support from Fijian and Indian trade unionists.
The coalition was successful in elections held in April. The new government,
which had a majority of Indian members in the legislature, was greeted with
widespread Fijian protest. After only a few weeks the new government's leaders
were arrested and deposed in a coup d'état led by Lieutenant Colonel Sitiveni
Rabuka, who demanded greater protection for Fijian rights and an entrenched
Fijian dominance of any future government. The governor-general declared a
state of emergency and assumed control of the government. With political
leaders, he then negotiated a compromise that would have maintained civilian
rule pending a constitutional revision and new elections. The compromise
prompted Rabuka to lead a second coup in September and reimpose military rule.
Toward the end of 1987 he declared Fiji a republic and appointed a new civilian
government with Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara, prime minister from 1970 to 1987, as
prime minister. A new constitution, designed to concentrate power in the hands
of Fijians, was promulgated on July 25, 1990. Present President is Epeli
Nallatikau and PM Frank Bainimarama.
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