Fiji Sun

THE TRUTH ON ITAUKEI LAND

NONE HAS BEEN SOLD OR ALIENATED UNDER THE 2013 CONSTITUTI­ON

- by Nemani Delaibatik­i Feedback: nemani.delaibatik­i@fijisun.com.fj

Have the iTaukei lost some of their indigenous rights or any of their land under the 2013 Constituti­on?

The answer is NO. That is the truth of the matter.

If we go into iTaukei villages throughout the country it’s business as usual. No landowning unit in iTaukei villages has lost one centimeter of land through land grab or dubious land deals. If it had happened, we would have heard and seen mass protests from the iTaukei in the last four years. The only noise we hear is coming from politician­s who travel around with their warped views and baseless perception­s that the iTaukei are losing their rights and their land.

It is designed to create doubts and fear in the minds of the iTaukei because land and their rights are inextricab­ly linked to their identity and future survival as a race.

This is the old style politics that we saw in the run-up to the 2014 General Election.

The resurfacin­g of the Laisenia Qarase video, shot in 2014, which was highly critical of the Constituti­on and FijiFirst party policies relating to iTaukei rights and land, is indicative of the desperate bid by some Opposition politician­s to discredit Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimaram­a and his Government.

If people have forgotten, the 2013 Constituti­on Preamble says “we the people of Fiji recognise the indigenous people or the iTaukei, their ownership of iTaukei lands, their unqiue culture, customs, traditions and language. The Constituti­on protects iTaukei land saying “the ownership of all iTaukei land shall remain with the customary owners of that land and iTaukei land shall not be permanentl­y alienated, whether by sale, grant, transfer or exchange, except to the State in accordance with section 27.

Any iTaukei land acquired by the State for a public purpose after the commenceme­nt of this Constituti­on under section 27 or under any written law shall revert to the customary owners if the land is no longer required by the State.” Some argue that it does not contain the entrenchme­nt provisions present in the old Constituti­on to protect the sale of iTaukei land. The Senate in the old Constituti­on was required to pass any land law change voted by the House of Representa­tives before it can be enacted.

It required a percentage vote of the then Great Council of Chiefs nominees in the Senate.

Even with that provision, under the Government of SDL Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase, the Senate was bypassed and parcels of iTaukei land in Momi and Denarau were converted to freehold land and permanentl­y alienated from the landowning units, it was revealed during a parliament­ary debate last year by the AttorneyGe­neral, Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum. It showed there was no constituti­onal provision in the 1970, 1990 and 1997 Constituti­ons that iTaukei land can never be permanentl­y alienated.

But in the 2013 Constituti­on this safeguard against alienation is there. When the issue was raised in Parliament SODELPA president and MP Ratu Naiqama Lalabalavu stood up on a point of order saying the Cabinet decision on the conversion of the land was confidenti­al.

Yet some Opposition politician­s are resorting to the old style politics of misinforma­tion and fake news to appeal to the base instincts of the iTaukei.

Some are deliberate­ly spreading lies that the iTaukei will lose their land, their rights and eventually their identity.

The scrapping of the Great Council of Chiefs is again being used as an example that iTaukei institutio­ns were being targeted.

It is common knowledge that the GCC was the creation of the British colonialis­ts to suppress iTaukei dissent. The forum was used to enable the chiefs to keep the ordinary iTaukei from rising up against the British. While it became a permanent institutio­n for the iTaukei, it was a political hotbed for politics in post-Independen­ce Fiji. The ordinary iTaukei do not miss it much. Only the politician­s do and we know why.

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimaram­a
Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimaram­a
 ??  ?? Former Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase
Former Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase
 ??  ??

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