Friday, December 23, 2022

Sitiveni Rabuka Becomes Fiji's New Prime Minister, Brings An End To Frank Bainimarama’s 16 Years In Power


<p><strong>New Delhi:</strong> Sitiveni Rabuka became Fiji&rsquo;s Prime Minister on Saturday after a coalition of parties voted to elect him, signalling an end to Frank Bainimarama&rsquo;s 16 years in power. Rabuka&rsquo;s appointment on Saturday ended 10 days of uncertainty after an election delivered a hung parliament.</p> <p>Fiji&rsquo;s Social Democratic Liberal party (Sodelpa) held the balance of power and on Friday voted to form a coalition with Rabuka&rsquo;s People&rsquo;s Alliance and the National Federation party. The deal was designed to remove Fiji First&rsquo;s Frank Bainimarama, who has led the Pacific archipelago since a 2006 coup. The secret parliamentary vote for Prime Minister on Saturday was closer than expected. 28 members of parliament voted for Rabuka while 27 voted in support of Bainimarama.</p> <p>Rabuka&rsquo;s coalition holds 29 seats, indicating that one member had broken ranks to vote in favour of the former Prime Minister.</p> <p>After being elected as Fiji&rsquo;s new Prime Minister, Rabuka, 74, said that he felt &ldquo;humbled&rdquo; to be Prime Minister as he made his way out of parliament to be sworn in by the country&rsquo;s President. The military had been deployed on the streets of Suva as Rabuka and Bainimarama raced to cobble together a coalition government following a deadlocked general election.</p> <p>Citing unsubstantiated reports of ethnic violence, Bainimarama said the military was needed to maintain &ldquo;law and order&rdquo;. But former military commander Rabuka, who served as Prime Minister between 1992 and 1999, said the government was &ldquo;sowing fear and chaos&rdquo; and &ldquo;trying to set the nation alight along racial lines&rdquo;.</p> <p>Many Fijians feared the government&rsquo;s claims of ethnic violence and subsequent military deployment were a pretext for a &ldquo;creeping coup&rdquo;. Four coups have upended Fiji in the past 35 years.</p> <p>Sodelpa&rsquo;s leader, at a press conference earlier this month, said he wanted Fiji&rsquo;s foreign relations to be closely aligned with Australia, New Zealand, and some members of the Pacific Islands Forum.&nbsp;</p> <p><em><strong>(With agencies&rsquo; Inputs)</strong></em></p> <p>&nbsp;</p>

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