The Guardian Australia

'Will to fight together': Fiji's has taken another bold step in the battle against nuclear weapons

- Vanessa Griffen and Talei Luscia Mangioni

On the streets of Suva in the 1970s it was the young who carried the cause. In afros, headbands and bell-bottom jeans they handed out pamphlets and printed newsletter­s, performed skits and variety shows, gave lectures, and led rallies on the streets of Fiji’s capital.

Crowds heard firebrand speeches from church leaders, trade unionists, university staff and student leaders.

The Atom (Against Testing on Mururoa) committee, formed in Fiji in 1970, was dedicated to educating, creatively but powerfully, the Fijian public of the dangers of radioactiv­e fallout from French testing and colonialis­m in the Pacific.

They were resisting what Father Walter Lini, later Vanuatu’s first prime minister, described as “nuclearism” – an amalgamati­on of “nuclear” and “colonialis­m” – in the Pacific island territorie­s by the United States, Britain, and France with their nations’ permanentl­y harmful nuclear weapons testing.

The fight has been long. France would continue nuclear testing on atolls in Tahiti until 1996, and Pacific islanders fought too for justice over the radioactiv­e legacy of US and British tests in the 1950s in the Marshall Islands and Kiribati. Their damaging environmen­tal, social and health inheritanc­e remains today.

But today marks an important milestone for Fiji. Overnight it deposited its instrument­s of ratificati­on for the Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) in the United Nations.

Fiji was one of a majority of 122 nations that voted to adopt the historic treaty banning nuclear weapons three years ago in the UN general assembly.

Fiji has become the 39th country to ratify the treaty: 50 are needed to bring it into force, outlawing nuclear weapons all around the world.

While the treaty is rejected by the world’s nuclear powers, who maintain their stockpiles and nuclear weapons programs, its proponents argue the treaty is a powerful moral persuasion – in the vein of the cluster and landmine convention­s – for nuclear states to disarm, and to establish an internatio­nal norm prohibitin­g nuclear weapons’ developmen­t, possession and use.

Fiji’s ratificati­on carries particular significan­ce. It comes after five long decades of grassroots activism from women’s, church, national and community groups, and from teachers, unions, students and pan-Pacific organisati­ons, joined in steadfastl­y rejecting the effects of nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific.

In April 1975 the first ever regional Conference for a Nuclear-Free Pacific was held in Suva, at the campus of the University of the South Pacific, the Pacific’s first regional university.

In an age of expensive long-distance travel, 90 delegates came to discuss the issue of the nuclear weapons testing causing widespread pollution and endangerin­g the Pacific and neighbouri­ng countries.

It was at this meeting that the artificial distance of Pacific islanders from each other was erased. The arbitrary colonial divisions carving up their region into north and south, Francophon­e and Anglophone, island colonies and newly independen­t states, were shattered.

Pacific islands activists from the North Pacific met those from the South. Aboriginal people met Hawaiians; Micronesia­ns met Kanaks; and Gilbertese met New Hebrideans. Internatio­nal organisati­ons and Japanese, Australian and New Zealand peace and environmen­t activists added to the mix.

One critical decision was made at the end of this historic meeting: it was Pacific islanders who would decide their view of nuclear testing.

For many, their fundamenta­l cause was ongoing colonialis­m in the Pacific region.

After hearing testimonia­ls from 90 delegates the meeting was adamant that nuclear testing in Te Ao Maohi (French Polynesia) had to stop.

Many delegates thought nuclear testing represente­d a racist disregard for Pacific peoples and their position in the world. The US nuclear tests in Micronesia (then a United States Trust Territory), and British tests in the Gilbert Islands, along with ongoing French nuclear tests, cemented the view that Pacific peoples had effectivel­y been nuclear bomb test guinea pigs.

As Vanessa Griffen wrote in an article in 1970 for Pacific Islands Monthly, an overwhelmi­ng “sense of unity, support and above all else the will to fight together” emerged, the beginnings of an activist network, the Nuclear Free and Independen­t Pacific movement (NFIP), that would last for decades.

Today, we applaud Fiji’s ratificati­on of the Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons. It played an essential role in the treaty’s drafting and in its complex negotiatio­ns.

But more fundamenta­lly Fiji helped establish a long-standing tradition of Pacific solidarity and public abhorrence of nuclear weapons.

The Pacific NFIP movement, its pioneering Atom committee, its scientists educating the public: all had their genesis in the newly-independen­t Fiji.

For many in the Pacific, memories of the impact of nuclear weapons testing still exist, its legacies continue, and the Pacific-wide solidarity that started in Fiji carries lessons for the world.

Nuclear justice is a Pacific island term that remains well understood. We have our own “lest we forget”.

Vanessa Griffen was a NFIP founding member as a student activist; now a Fiji Campaigner in the Internatio­nal Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (Ican), 2017 Nobel Peace Laureate.

Talei Luscia Mangioni is a young Fijian and Italian PhD researcher based at the Australian National University. Her scholarshi­p by creative works aims to chart the Nuclear Free and Independen­t Pacific (NFIP) movement across Oceania through historical ethnograph­y, weaving archival records and material objects with oral histories of activists and artists.

 ?? Photograph: Supplied ?? The Against Testing on Mururoa (ATOM) committee protests on the streets of Suva, Fiji, in the 1970s
Photograph: Supplied The Against Testing on Mururoa (ATOM) committee protests on the streets of Suva, Fiji, in the 1970s
 ?? Photograph: Romeo Gacad/AFP ?? Pacific anti-nuclear protests in the 1990s. Fiji, an incubator of the anti-nuclear movement, has ratified a treaty banning nuclear weapons.
Photograph: Romeo Gacad/AFP Pacific anti-nuclear protests in the 1990s. Fiji, an incubator of the anti-nuclear movement, has ratified a treaty banning nuclear weapons.

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