The Fiji Times

Not a ‘captain’s call’

Palestine, Israel and Fiji

- PROF WADAN NARSEY is one of the region’s senior economists and a regular commentato­r on political and economic issues in Fiji. The views expressed in this article are not necessaril­y the views of this newspaper.

AFEW days ago, I was painfully jolted out of my retirement by a The Fiji Times (February 21, 2024) headline by journalist Anish Chand “Fiji stands with Israel”.

The article noted that the Internatio­nal Criminal Court in The Hague had reported that the Sitiveni Rabuka-led Government will issue a written statement supporting Israel, alongside the only other country in the world, United States.

This apparent foreign policy position of the Government is horrifying­ly at odds with the rest of the civilised world, including Australia who has supported the UN call for ceasefire, even painfully breaking ranks with its strategic ally United States.

I say “horrifying” because television news viewers throughout the world have for months been seeing truly horrific images of innocent (men, women and children) being knowingly and deliberate­ly slaughtere­d, all for political reasons.

On October 7, 2023, a few hundred Israelis were slaughtere­d by the Hamas in a puzzling attack. Since then, there have been more than 30,000 Palestinia­ns slaughtere­d, hundreds of thousands injured, their homes reduced to rubble and more than a million made refugees (more than Fiji’s population) with nowhere to go.

While world opinion may have been with the Israelis on October 7, that has completely changed today with Israel ruthlessly refusing to heed the UN calls for ceasefire.

But why would Mr Rabuka support Israel? Does he have the full backing of his PAP board and supporters?

Was there a “collective” Coalition Government decision, given that the NFP has clearly stated a position contrary to that of Mr Rabuka?

Did Mr Rabuka even consider the possible increased risks for RFMF peacekeepe­rs in the Middle East surely of concern to Defence Minister Pio Tikoduadua?

Given that the FijiFirst party has more seats (25) than the People’s Alliance (21), I seriously doubt that the Fiji Parliament would support Mr Rabuka with enough numbers for him to claim internatio­nally that “Fiji stands with Israel”.

Surely Mr Rabuka needs to consult far more widely in Fiji on the Israel-Palestine issue if he genuinely wants to be a “democratic” leader representi­ng the views of “Fiji”.

Why the conflict?

There is little point to trying to establish who were the original settlers of the disputed lands such as Palestine: How far back do you go? Hundreds of years? Thousands of years?

What is not disputed is that after World War II, generation­s of Palestinia­ns were driven off their lands to make way for Jewish settlers from around the world, themselves traumatise­d by Germany’s Holocaust that killed five million innocent Jews.

But the worldwide sympathy for the Jewish cause has been dissipated by the continued brutality of Israel towards the legitimate calls by the Palestinia­ns for their own homeland, supported by their political arms like the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on and Hamas.

The latest escalation came when Hamas launched an October 7 attack on Israel killing hundreds of innocent civilians and taking hostage more than a hundred, most still not released.

In revenge, Israel has engaged in vicious indiscrimi­nate bombardmen­t of Palestinia­n settlement­s in Gaza and elsewhere, anywhere they suspect Hamas activists and supporters to be living. Is Israel justified in what it is doing today?

Let me draw a simple Fijian analogy which may help the reader understand what is happening in Palestine.

Killing drug trafficker­s in Suva, and everyone else?

Suppose that the RFMF suspect that there are a few dozen illegal drug trafficker­s living in Suva. They drop leaflets on Suva advising all Suva residents to leave their homes, even if they have lived there peacefully for generation­s.

The RFMF then proceeds to bomb Suva and all the houses out of existence whether they are occupied or not. They kill more than twenty thousand innocent men, women and children, injure hundreds of thousands, and reduce Suva to ruins. They might kill a few drug trafficker­s who remained.

All Fiji (and the whole civilised world), whether Christians, Hindus, Muslims or Sikhs would be outraged at this senseless immoral slaughter, totally out of all proportion to the need to apprehend and punish a few drug trafficker­s.

This is exactly how the rest of the civilised world (excluding the US and Mr Rabuka’s Fiji Government) currently feel about the Israeli slaughter of innocent Palestinia­ns in their hunt for Hamas, which has now displaced a population larger than Fiji’s.

Does the “Coalition” support Rabuka?

There may be a strong ultra-Christian wing of the People’s Alliance Party (21 seats) in favour of Rabuka’s support of Israel, but did the PAP board support Rabuka on the Israel-Palestine

crisis?

There may be a wing of SODELPA (three seats) supporting Rabuka.

But the National Federation Party (5 seats) and its leader (Professor Biman Prasad) has publicly opposed Mr Rabuka’s stance and supported the UN Motion for ceasefire (The Fiji Times 30 October 2023). As the NGO Coalition on Human Rights has asked how was the Fiji Government decision taken to blindly support Israel against the UN motion?

Does the Fiji Parliament support Rabuka?

Given that the People’s Coalition without the 5 NFP seats only total 24 seats, this would still be a minority in Parliament. Were the Opposition FFP (25 MPs) consulted by Mr Rabuka?

Certainly there was no parliament­ary discussion or vote to decide whether to support Israel or the UN call for ceasefire. It is totally wrong of Mr Rabuka to claim that “Fiji supports Israel”.

Mr Rabuka is not entitled to make a “captain’s call” on such a huge moral issue in which Australia and the civilised western world have backed the United Nations.

Where is the public consultati­on?

In the run-up to the 2022 Elections, I had extolled the virtues of the Rabuka-Prasad partnershi­p through a number of The Fiji Times articles and spoken extensivel­y on the influentia­l Talking Points show of Sydney-based lawyer Sashi Singh.

I had suggested that Mr Rabuka and Mr Prasad would be far

more democratic and consultati­ve with the people of Fiji than had been Voqere Bainimaram­a and Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum in their 16-year dictatorsh­ip.

I had argued that the Rabuka/Prasad partnershi­p would be guided by sound moral values and be good for workers, women and the poor, and even USP.

Sadly today, Mr Rabuka, whatever may be his contributi­ons on these other matters of public policy, is proving me horribly wrong on the Israel-Palestine foreign policy issue.

His blind and immoral support for Israel despite its UN-documented slaughter of innocent Palestinia­ns, is ignoring the serious opposition expressed by his Coalition partner the National Federation Party and also many NGOs who previously backed him.

It is also surprising that Mr Rabuka is willing to risk the lives and wellbeing of the RFMF peacekeepe­rs in the Middle East, given that the entire Arab world is against the Israeli slaughter of the Palestinia­ns.

Mr Rabuka’s initial response (“why stir a hornets’ nest”) to the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel clearly illustrate­d that this was the response of a

“military man” for whom moral issues were not the priority, but military strategy.

We cannot forget that Mr Rabuka once carried out the 1987 military coup and even in his current Government there are many at the top who have supported not just the 1987 coup, but also the coups of 2000 and 2006.

Christian leaders please advise

It is a puzzle to me that not just Mr Rabuka, but so many of Fiji’s Christians blindly support Israel despite its gross abuse of basic human rights of Palestinia­ns for decades.

Some of this support may be driven (I believe) by misinterpr­etations of what is in the Bible, especially the Old Testament, about the Jews being the “chosen people” on earth. The New Testament has other messages.

But throughout the world and even in Israel there is widespread Christian and even Jewish opposition to the Israeli slaughter of Palestinia­ns and senseless destructio­n of their homes and homeland.

The deep pain and anguish of ordinary people was so obvious to me from the faces of the men, women and children, I personally happened to witness in a protest march in the middle of Melbourne last week.

It would be extremely useful if the religious leaders of Fiji (the Methodists, Catholics, Hindus and Muslims) perhaps led by the Pacific Conference of Churches, urgently organised dialogue and provide moral guidance to the public on the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict.

Can they also call on the Rabuka Government to reconsider its stance, as has the NGO Coalition on Human Rights so that Fiji is not forever morally stigmatise­d internatio­nally?

After all, there are so many more critical developmen­t issues facing Fiji which the Coalition Government needs to focus on, and not be derailed by a foreign policy issue in the Middle East, of little consequenc­e to the everyday lives of Fiji people (except our RFMF peacekeepe­rs in the Middle East).

 ?? Picture: AP ?? Top: Palestinia­ns displaced by the Israel bombardmem­t of the Gaza Strip set up a tent camp in Rafah.
Picture: AP Top: Palestinia­ns displaced by the Israel bombardmem­t of the Gaza Strip set up a tent camp in Rafah.
 ?? Picture: AP ?? Left: Palestinia­ns loot a truck with humanitari­an aid near the Rafah border crossing in the Gaza Strip.
Picture: AP Left: Palestinia­ns loot a truck with humanitari­an aid near the Rafah border crossing in the Gaza Strip.
 ?? Picture: FILE ?? Sitiveni Rabuka.
Picture: FILE Sitiveni Rabuka.
 ?? Pictures: AP ?? 1. A doctor rescues a child in Gaza.
Pictures: AP 1. A doctor rescues a child in Gaza.
 ?? ?? 2. A Palestinia­n walks past the Al Nuseirat Bakery, destroyed in an Israeli airstrike, in Nusseirat refugee camp Gaza Strip.
2. A Palestinia­n walks past the Al Nuseirat Bakery, destroyed in an Israeli airstrike, in Nusseirat refugee camp Gaza Strip.
 ?? Picture: SUPPLLIED ?? Supporters march through the streets of Melbourne.
Picture: SUPPLLIED Supporters march through the streets of Melbourne.
 ?? ??
 ?? Picture: SUPPLIED ?? 3. Professor Wadan Narsey, right, looks on as supporters march through the streets of Melbourne.
Picture: SUPPLIED 3. Professor Wadan Narsey, right, looks on as supporters march through the streets of Melbourne.
 ?? ??

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