Fijians set to vote in ‘toughest election yet’ for Bainimarama | News

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Voters in Fiji will head to the polls on Wednesday to elect a new parliament after a bitter race between two former coup leaders.

The general election pits Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama, who seized power in a bloodless coup in 2006, against long-time rival Sitiveni Rabuka, a military commander who himself led two power grabs in 1987.

Bainimarama, 68, who has sought to manage the China-United States rivalry in the Pacific region and has championed efforts to tackle climate change, is seeking a third term in office via the ballot box.

His FijiFirst party comfortably won democratic elections in 2014 but fought to hold on to its majority in the following election in 2018.

Analysts say it is now facing its “toughest election yet”, with voters increasingly concerned about the rising cost of living.

The Pacific nation, which is reliant on tourism, has been hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic; about a quarter of the country’s population of 900,000 people live in poverty.

Voters are also fearful of a potential return to instability in a nation that has seen four coups in 35 years.

The coups were racially fuelled, with Indigenous Fijians fearful of losing political control to the economically powerful Indo-Fijian minority, who make up 35 percent of the country’s population and are descended from the ethnic Indians who were brought there by the British to work in the sugarcane fields during the colonial era.

Fiji's Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama attends a meeting during the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow
Fiji’s Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama has been in power since 2006 when he orchestrated a bloodless coup  [File: Phil Noble/Pool via Reuters]

Bainimarama, following his coup, quickly moved to abolish traditional, rival power bases such as the ethnic Fijian Great Council of Chiefs and pushed for equal rights for all Fijians, culminating in changing the constitution in 2013 to remove a race-based electoral system. He won support among the Indo-Fijians for the move, but Rabuka has been trying to make inroads into the community by forming an alliance with the National Federation Party, which attracts a strong multi-racial vote.

“This is set to be the toughest election yet for Bainimarama,” wrote analysts Lucy Albiston and Blake Johnson in a recent blog post for the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.

“Although there are no reliable pre-election polls, it’s looking like Rabuka might win, forming a coalition with Fiji’s National Federation Party. The divide between Bainimarama and Rabuka used to be all about race, but Rabuka has consistently tried to demonstrate a change in his stance on Indo-Fijian rights since the 1987 coup. This year, it’s about social issues and government services,” they wrote.

Others say holding power since 2006 could be both a “curse and a blessing” for Bainimarama at the polls.

“A curse in that people might feel that this government has been in power too long,” said Shailendra Singh from the University of the South Pacific. “There might be voter fatigue – the same government and the same faces, the same messages.”

Singh told the AFP news agency that the high cost of living, with inflation around 5 percent, will weigh on voters’ minds.

“Rightly or wrongly, the government will get most of the blame for it, so I believe it will be a major determining factor in how people vote,” he added.

Bainimarama, who has painted the election as the “most important election ever”, has sought to reassure Fijians of growth and prosperity.

“We know the stakes: our recovery, our jobs, family support, strong leadership that serves everyone equally,” said Bainimarama in a campaign stop ahead of a pre-election media blackout.

A group of election observers getting in a boat on an island in Fiji. The sky is cloudy and they are wearing lifejackets
A multinational observer group is in Fiji to observe Wednesday’s polls [Multinational Observer Group via Reuters]

Rabuka, meanwhile, said Fijians were ready for change and predicted victory was at hand.

“After 16 years of disastrous dictatorial rule, we’re coming very close to the end of it,” he told supporters. “We will be consigning them to the dustbin of history where they rightly belong.”

Observers say the military’s role will be key following Wednesday’s vote.

For now, the military has sought to allay fears of a military led-intervention, with Major General Jone Kalouniwai insisting that his forces will “honour the democratic process by respecting the outcome”.

A multinational observer group led by Australia, India and Indonesia will see about 90 election observers monitor polling booths and the national vote-counting centre.

Sumber: www.aljazeera.com

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