Pacific Media Watch

12 August 2010

FIJI: Regime wants to replace Pacific allies with China

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Voreqe Bainimarama ... an "understanding" with China. Photo: AFP files
PMW ID
6969

SUVA: Fiji's military leader Voreqe Bainimarama wants to ditch traditional ties with Australia, New Zealand and the United States, and align his Pacific Island nation with China, a local website has reported.

Speaking to Fijivillage News during a visit to China, the self-appointed prime minister said China was the one country that understood the reforms he was trying to implement.

Bainimarama has had a fractious relationship with his neighbours since seizing power in a 2006 coup.

Fiji has been suspended from the 16-nation Pacific Islands Forum and the Commonwealth and has been hit with sanctions by Australia, New Zealand and the United States as well as the European Union.

Bainimarama said he was prepared to trade with regional powerhouses Australia and New Zealand but at a political level it made more sense to align with China.

China "is the only nation that can help assist Fiji in its reforms because of the way the Chinese think. They think outside the box. What they want to do they do, they are visionary in what they do," he told the website.

"I think we need to forget about the (Pacific) Forum, about Australia  and New Zealand. Let's maintain the trade but forget about the  
politics."

Bainimarama said Fiji needed to take advantage of its "understanding" with China to see how Beijing can assist with Fiji's development.

"We need infrastructure, we need water, we need electricity. Australia and New Zealand and America, none of those nations are going to provide that. We know that now because of their policies towards us so let's forget about these nations."

Since the 2006 bloodless coup, Bainimarama has ignored international demands for an immediate return to democratic elections.

His response has been to tear up the constitution, sack the judiciary, tighten controls on the news media, saying he wants to reform the  
voting system and develop a new constitution before returning to democracy.

He also told a recent meeting of delegates from Pacific island nations that they need to "break the shackles" of their colonial past. - Agence France-Presse/Pacific Media Watch

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