Rotorua Daily Post

Doco explores exploitati­on of Pasific Islands players

- Rugby Steve Mcmorran

The treatment of Pacific Island rugby players in the profession­al era is compared to colonialis­m in a new documentar­y film produced and narrated by former Samoa internatio­nal Dan Leo.

Oceans Apart: Greed, Betrayal and Pacific Island Rugby accuses World Rugby and the sport’s elite nations of exploiting the player resources of the Pacific Islands while retaining almost all of the wealth those players create.

The island nations of Fiji, Samoa and Tonga have a combined population of only 1.5 million but provide almost a quarter of all profession­al rugby players. At the 2019 Rugby World Cup in Japan, 42 players of Pacific Island heritage played for nations other than those of their birth or background.

Remittance­s from Pacific players playing abroad furnish almost 20 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product of Fiji, Samoa and Tonga, where the minimum wage, on average, is less than 1/10th of that in developed nations such as Australia or New Zealand.

Leo argues rugby is not only a way of life but a lifeline in the Pacific. Players aspire to become profession­al and to play overseas because their earnings support families, communitie­s, and sometimes entire villages.

Oceans Apart argues the financial pressures on Pacific players and the limitation of choice about where they play makes them ripe for exploitati­on. Leo says World Rugby has turned a blind eye to that exploitati­on and of denying the Pacific a voice in the governance of the game which is dominated by the 10 tier-1 nations.

The elite nations — Argentina, Australia, England, France, Ireland, Italy, New Zealand, Scotland, South Africa and Wales — each have three votes on the World Rugby governing council while Fiji and Samoa have one each and Tonga doesn’t have a vote.

Leo heads the Pacific Rugby Players Welfare organisati­on which was formed to represent Pacific players, to lobby for fairer treatment and to address the inequities in the profession­al game. Oceans Apart is his powerful polemic which charges the rugby world of ignoring its own values in allowing the continuing plunder of Pacific talent.

He sees the eligibilit­y rule as a central cause of the Pacific nations’ plight.

Pacific players are often “captured” early by major nations, recruited even as teenagers and steered into those national teams. Having played for another country, they no longer can represent their Pacific homelands.

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