The Fiji Times

Camouflagi­ng the truth What is said in the dark will be heard in daylight

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ONCE again, The Fiji Times of Thursday, June 23, 2022, exposes more stupidity and ridicule by a minister in the ruling party, who should know better.

As divine providence would have it, this headlined exposé is released a mere day after the general secretary of the ruling party creates a hullabaloo about reporting four opposition parties (including ours) and the Fiji Sun (Quelle surprise!) to the Supervisor of Elections.

But such is the karmic destiny and fate of FijiFirst party’s (FF) masters and their puppets, judging from their recent utterances.

Racism and emotional blackmail

Only few weeks ago, another Minister (who should know better), Dr Mahendra Reddy, who struggled to differenti­ate a survey from a census during a parliament­ary diatribe, told devotees at a temple in Wairuku, Rakiraki, that it was Voreqe Bainimaram­a who gave equal rights to Indo-Fijians after the (promulgati­on through a decree) of the 2013 Constituti­on.

Dr Reddy proclaimed Mr Bainimaram­a was born for this task! He said he had spoken to Mr Bainimaram­a who had asked him to convey this message.

By saying this, did Dr Reddy realise he was demeaning himself?

Did he realise that he just rubbished his own academic achievemen­ts, including a doctorate (PhD) he obtained well before 2013?

Did he manage such an academic feat when Indo-Fijians were still indentured labourers?

Did he achieve it in an environmen­t of hostility by other races, particular­ly by the indigenous Fijian community?

Or did he graduate and land a job at the University of the South Pacific (USP), an acclaimed regional institutio­n of higher learning that his political masters in the FF government are hell bent on destroying?

Did Mr Reddy receive any message from either Mr Bainimaram­a or Mr Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum about USP, apart from their stubborn public pronouncem­ents of withholdin­g the $61 million of what Fiji owes, so far?

Or was Dr Reddy being kicked from pillar to post in terms of ministeria­l duties and travelling here and there in a dark tinted Prado like his colleagues, simply because he is beholden to his bosses?

Thuggery

This week’s Thursday edition of The Fiji Times exposes Minister Parveen Kumar, the ruling party’s Employment, Youth and Sports Minister, during prayers at Field Forty temple in Lautoka last weekend lauding the need for stability or the political status quo under Mr Bainimaram­a and Mr Sayed-Khaiyum. What sheer political thuggery!

In the audio recording that we have also heard, I understand he said in Hindi:

“I want to give you a message. We all want to live in this country with peace and harmony. If we want peace and harmony, then we also have some obligation­s.

“As a citizen of this country, at times you have to take the right step. Take the road that has truth, even if the road isn’t smooth. If, by walking on that road, you will get the truth, then take that road.

“That’s why everywhere I go, even temples, I have emphasised that the political stability which this country has is very much needed.

“Because if we have political stability, we will be able to sit down like this together, without any fear, we will be able to do the same in the coming days. We can continue carrying out our prayers with dhoom dhaam (grandiosen­ess).

“I pray and plead with you to not get involved in small discussion­s and nonsense talk. You are all educated so use your best judgement before taking the steps.”

All these stunts at temples have not been publicly condemned by the ruling party’s leader nor general secretary, so it stands to reason that they endorse this manner of conduct.

Neither did they call out or condemn Dr Reddy’s callous remarks at Wairuku temple.

Of course they won’t condemn it because the general secretary himself led the charge during the 2018 elections campaign where he told a campaign meeting that if people did not vote for Mr Bainimaram­a, it would be like putting a dagger to their neck!

Regrettabl­y the ruling party remains tone-deaf to what the electorate is feeling, and if the ruling party chooses to hear a “so boring!” reaction at the polls, they are most welcome to continue with their losing streak.

The people are demanding better and want leadership that listens. We are listening. That’s how we know what they’re saying.

So if the general secretary for the ruling party and the Minister for Elections wants to jump on his soapbox, beating his chest self-righteousl­y, about proper political conduct, he ought to start from within the four walls of his own party. The budget narrative

We are 22 days away from the 2022-2023 Budget announceme­nt.

No one is the least bit surprised that the ruling party can miraculous­ly find the money (at a time when prudent spending should be paramount) for the Prime Minister to flit off to Europe to talk about oceans, on his usual taxpayerfu­nded per diem rate of about $2800 per day.

What was surprising was that enroute to Lisbon; the Prime Minister pops up on the Twitterver­se en route in Austria to talk about a nuclear treaty.

The challenge for the Government in their upcoming budget narrative is that it already has a shape that their new laws have directed for a “pre-election economic and fiscal update”, dated May 9, 2022.

When the budget is handed down, the conservati­ve tone of that pre-election document, despite the miraculous 11.3 per cent “double digit” growth that was confidentl­y forecast at paragraph 1.10, will be watched very carefully.

Because as highlighte­d in an earlier column, even the details of the preelectio­n economic and fiscal update of April 9, 2022, seemed at direct odds with the Supplement­ary Budget narrative of

March 2022.

The advertised “budget consultati­ons” about to begin soon, will simply be a symphony of spin.

Freedom from debt slavery

The deeper our nation sinks into debt, the more this government robs us of our dignity.

Every time (especially before elections) the ruling party ministers scatter themselves in their normal tuiboto, ek shanku rekha, conga line style all over the place, feeling proud as if they’ve dug deep into their own pockets to throw around gifts that the people weren’t even asked, if they needed.

Who really wins? Just ask the pawn shops who, after the 2018 campaign bonanza of this Government, collected spades, forks, agricultur­al spray backpacks etc, to re-sell.

The winners will be big businesses that sell the wares.

But the time for serfs and slaves buckling under an expensive Government in this country, will resounding­ly draw to a close at the upcoming polls.

There’s only one word being echoed from every mouth, and from every corner of this land “change”.

Regrettabl­y the ruling party remains tone-deaf to what the electorate is feeling, and if the ruling party chooses to hear a “so boring!” reaction at the polls, they are most welcome to continue with their losing streak. – Seni Nabou

SENI NABOU is the general secretary of the National Federation Party. The views expressed are her’s and do not necessaril­y reflect the views of this newspaper.

 ?? Picture: FT/File ?? FijiFirst party member and Employment Minister Parveen Kumar told devotees at a temple in Field 40, Lautoka on Saturday “if we have political stability, we will be able to sit down like this, together without any fear”.
Picture: FT/File FijiFirst party member and Employment Minister Parveen Kumar told devotees at a temple in Field 40, Lautoka on Saturday “if we have political stability, we will be able to sit down like this, together without any fear”.
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