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Fiji wants to replace Pacific allies with China

Don't know enough about Fiji to form a solid opinion. If you put a gun to my head, I would probably have to guess that the Fijians are fed up with Aussie nagging. It is just another way of telling them to buzz off.

The whole world is nagging this pacific nation to hold democratic elections, as this country is now under the control of a military dictator.

Lolz good stuff.... wise of Fiji.

Please explain how it's wise to install a military dictator and throw out democratic elections which then brings sanctions from your neighbours which then kills people in your country from starvation.

The majority of fijians do not want a military dictator, they want free and fair elections but can't because of this dictator that uses the military to censor people.
 
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Austalia is going to be very angry if its so.
 
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Ethnic Fijians were a minority of 255,000, in a total population of 600,000 of which fully half were of Indian descent, with the remainder Chinese, European and of mixed ancestry.

The native Fijians live throughout the country, while the Indo-Fijians reside primarily near the urban centers and in the cane-producing areas of the two main islands.
 
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Austalia is going to be very angry if its so.

The Australian government isn't angry that fiji has allied with China, we are friends with China.

The Australian government is angry that a military dictator now rules fiji from a coup and now censors the media and refuses to hold democratic elections which the fijian people want.


The Australian government doesn't care who they ally with.

At the end of the day, it's Fijis lose, Australia, New Zealand, europe and other pacific nations gave aid to Fiji, we gained nothing.
 
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Fiji Seeks Closer Ties With China, Cooler Relations With US, Others

Fiji Seeks Closer Ties With China, Cooler Relations With US, Others | Asia | English





Fiji's leader, Commodore Frank Bainimarama, plans to curtail traditional ties with Australia, New Zealand and the United States in favor of a closer relationship with China. The army chief, who seized power in 2006, has ignored calls by international critics to restore democracy.

Fiji's self-appointed prime minister says the Chinese understand the reforms he is trying to implement better than Australia and New Zealand do.

While visiting China this week, Commodore Frank Bainimarama said he is prepared to abandon his country's traditional political ties in the region in favor of China. He stressed, however, that Fiji will continue to trade with New Zealand and Australia.

The army seized power in Fiji a bloodless coup in Fiji three-and-a-half years ago. The commodore says he is working to cleanse his country of corruption and racism. Canberra and Wellington have, however, been vocal critics of his rule.

In China, the Fijian leader says he is among friends and will direct diplomatic efforts toward Beijing in the hope of more donations and trade opportunities.

Professor John Warhurst from the Australian National University in Canberra says China's efforts to be more influential in the South Pacific will unsettle Australia.

"What has happened in Fiji over the last 10 or 15 years now with the number of coups probably leads Australian policy-makers and the general community to throw their hands up and say 'look, this is beyond our doing anything about it'. The question of a superpower like China injecting itself into the Pacific I think would have long-term worries for Australia," Warhurst said.

Warhurst thinks China could undermine a region that is already destabilized, while a greater role for Beijing in the South Pacific might overshadow Australia's role as the biggest power in the neighborhood.

The Bainimarama government in Fiji is short of friends overseas. Its disagreements with Australia and New Zealand have occasionally boiled over with diplomatic expulsions, with the commodore accusing his more powerful South Pacific neighbors of interfering in his nation's affairs. Opponents of the military government say Commodore Bainimarama is increasingly behaving like a dictator.

The press has been muzzled, opponents jailed and the constitution scrapped, while the judiciary has been dismissed and plans to hold elections repeatedly delayed.

As a result, it has been suspended from the 16-nation Pacific Islands Forum, the region's main diplomatic bloc, and the Commonwealth grouping of former British colonies. Australia, New Zealand, the United States and the European Union have imposed some sanctions on the Fijian government.

The Fijian archipelago lies about halfway between Hawaii and New Zealand, and is home to about one million people. Most are indigenous Fijians, while just over a third are ethnic Indians, descendants of laborers the British brought to work on colonial sugar plantations.












STILL NOT ANGRY??? :smokin:
 
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Nope, but the fijians sure as hell are. please refer back to my post above.

They elected a leader, and this guy took over.

As far as every nation in the pacific and the fijian people are concerned, the so called "leader" of fiji does not have the authority to do anything in the country as he is not the leader, he appointed himself illegally as leader by use of the military.
 
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Nope, please refer back to my post above.

As far as ever nation in the pacific is concerned, the so called "leader" of fiji does not have the authority to do anything in the country as he is not the leader, he appointed himself illegally as leader by use of the military.

So Aussies are just pissed off with just this guy.

What will you guys do if Chinese navy comes around your neighbourhood?? :coffee:
 
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So Aussies are just pissed off with just this guy.

Not only us, but every single pacific nation and the Fijian people as i explained.

He mounted a coup and installed himself as leader and now rules as a military dictator and refuses to hold elections.

What will you guys do if Chinese navy comes around your neighbourhood?? :coffee:

Nothing? Any navy is free to go anywhere they want in international waters. The Chinese navy already sails around in the pacific.
 
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