Weekend Herald

PARADISE LOST

How a Kiwi cop exposed a high-flying Fijian businessma­n as a drug importer.

- By Jared Savage

Until recently, Aiyaz Mohammed Musa Umarji was — in public at least — a pillar of Fiji’s business community. With ownership of a Pacific-wide pharmacy network, Umarji and his family were significan­t donors to the party that repressive­ly ruled the country until it lost power in elections last December. He was also a major figure in sports, serving as a vice president of the Fiji Football Associatio­n and as a committee member in football’s global governing body, Fifa.

And he did it all as an internatio­nally wanted drug trafficker.

Umarji’s fall finally came in August this year, after he ended a period of self-imposed exile in India and surrendere­d himself to authoritie­s in New Zealand to face years-old charges. He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to four years in prison for importing at least $5 million worth of pseudoephe­drine — a precursor for methamphet­amine.

His sentencing was hailed by Fijian police as a blow against a “mastermind” whose operations stretched across the region.

But behind the conviction of Umarji, 47, lies a far murkier story of impunity, a joint investigat­ion by OCCRP, the Fiji Times, the New Zealand Herald, and Radio New Zealand has found.

Umarji was able to thrive for years amid a failure by senior officials of Fiji’s previous authoritar­ian government to confront a rise in methamphet­amine and cocaine traffickin­g through the Pacific

Island country.

And when

New Zealand authoritie­s finally issued an internatio­nal warrant for his arrest, Umarji was able to flee Fiji under suspicious circumstan­ces.

Reporters found he and his family donated at least 70,000 Fijian dollars ($31,000) to the country’s former ruling party, FijiFirst, in the years after he was first put under investigat­ion. This included FJD$20,000 given to the party ahead of last December’s election — roughly three years after he was first charged. The party’s general secretary, Aiyaz SayedKhaiy­um, was Fiji’s long-serving attorney general and justice minister at the time.

Reporters also found the Umarji family’s business network had continued to expand despite his legal troubles, and currently operates in three Pacific countries. The newest of these pharmacy companies, in Vanuatu, was founded last year.

Fiji’s Minister for Immigratio­n and Home Affairs, Pio Tikoduadua, told OCCRP an investigat­ion had been opened into how Umarji was able to flee the country.

He said authoritie­s were also investigat­ing donations Umarji and his family made to FijiFirst, and any “potential connection­s” he may have had to top officials in the former government, including Sayed-Khaiyum and the now-suspended police commission­er, Sitiveni Qiliho.

“Certainly, I am deeply concerned about the potential influence of drug trafficker­s in Fiji, especially over officials and law enforcemen­t,” Tikoduadua said.

“The infiltrati­on of these criminal elements poses a significan­t risk to our society and institutio­ns.”

Umarji declined a request for an interview and did not respond to follow-up questions. His Auckland lawyer, David Jones KC, said a request from reporters contained “numerous loaded questions which contain unsubstant­iated assertions, a number of which have little or nothing to do with Mr Umarji’s prosecutio­n”.

Sayed-Khaiyum and Qiliho did not respond to written questions.

THE RISE in drug traffickin­g through Fiji is just one part of a booming trans-Pacific trade that experts and law enforcemen­t say has become one of the world’s most profitable. In Australia, the most recent data shows drug seizures have more than quadrupled over the past decade, and Australian­s now consume 4.7 tons of cocaine and 8.8 tons of meth a year.

In much smaller New Zealand, drug users strongly prefer meth to cocaine, consuming roughly 720 kilograms a year.

Consumers in both countries pay some of the highest prices on earth for cocaine and meth, much of it exported from the Americas. Lying in the vast blue expanse between the two points are the Pacific Islands.

“Fiji is a hub of the Pacific. You’ve got the ports, you’ve got the infrastruc­ture, and you’ve got the ability to come in and out either by [water] craft or by airplane,” said Glyn Rowland, the New Zealand Police’s senior liaison officer for the Pacific.

“So that really leaves Fiji quite vulnerable to be in that transit route off to New Zealand and off to Australia.”

Fiji has long been eyed by internatio­nal organised crime for its strategic location close to Australia and New Zealand’s multibilli­on-dollar drug markets. In the early 2000s, for example, an internatio­nal police operation took apart a “super lab” in Suva, run by Chinese gangsters with enough precursor chemicals to produce a tonne of meth.

But after early successes, Fiji in recent years went cold on the fight against hard drugs.

The previous government of Frank Bainimaram­a, who first took power in a 2006 coup, showed little interest in tackling meth and cocaine traffickin­g, according to current and former law enforcemen­t officers from Fiji and the US. Despite signs traffickin­g was increasing, the police under Bainimaram­a’s hand-picked commission­er Qiliho seemed to overlook the problem, the officers told OCCRP.

Bainimaram­a did not respond to questions.

Ernie Verina, the Oceania attach for US Homeland Security Investigat­ions (HSI), said his agency had become worried about traffickin­g through Fiji.

In mid-2022, HSI assigned an agent to be based in the country. But when the agent raised the issue of meth with top officials from Bainimaram­a’s government, he was met with total pushback, Verina said.

“Categorica­lly, like, ‘There is no meth’,” Verina said of the Fijian response. “That’s what they told the agent.”

DESPITE HIGH-LEVEL denials, Fiji’s narcotics police were very aware of the country’s drug traffickin­g crisis. They had long had Umarji in their sights. But he was a difficult target.

As far back as 2017, Umarji was identified as “one of the tier one” suspected trafficker­s in the country, said Serupepeli Neiko, the head of the Fiji police’s narcotics bureau.

While the drug trade through Fiji is also the domain of transnatio­nal organised crime groups, Umarji was suspected of having carved out a niche for himself by using his network of pharmacies, Hyperchem, to legally import pseudoephe­drine and divert it onto the black market, Neiko said.

In early 2017, Umarji and one of his colleagues were charged with weapons possession after scores of bullets were found on his yacht, moored in his hometown of Lautoka. But the charges were “squashed in court,” Neiko said.

“So that gave a red flag to us that a [drug traffickin­g] case against Umarji would have been challengin­g as well.”

A former senior Fijian officer, who declined to be identified, put it more bluntly: “Umarji had a lot of influence with the previous government.”

Reporters found no evidence any senior Fijian officials intervened against investigat­ions into Umarji.

But the perception he had influence was powerful, current and former police officers said.

Indeed, since the fall of Bainimaram­a’s government last year, multiple senior officials have faced charges that they abused their positions, but none have been convicted.

The suspended police commission­er, Qiliho, and the former prime minister, Bainimaram­a, were both acquitted in court on October 12 of charges they had interfered in a separate police investigat­ion.

Former attorney general SayedKhaiy­um is also currently facing prosecutio­n in another unrelated abuse of office case.

Despite becoming a top-level police target, Umarji continued to expand his influence in Fiji. Company records show that in 2015 he and wife, Zaheera Cassim, opened Hyperchem companies in Fiji, Solomon Islands, and a nowdefunct branch in Samoa. In May 2017, Umarji opened a new company, Bio Pharma, in New Zealand.

Ahead of elections the following year, Umarji and his relatives donated a total of at least FJD$50,000 to the FijiFirst party, declaratio­ns from the Fiji Elections Office show.

Umarji also made a name for himself in football, getting elected as a vice president of the Fiji Football Associatio­n in December 2019.

BY 2019, it was clear avenues for a Fijian investigat­ion were closed. So police in New Zealand stepped in instead. Reporters were able to reconstruc­t what happened next via court records and interviews.

While seconded that year to Fiji’s Transnatio­nal Crime Unit, New Zealand detective Peter Reynolds heard whispers about Umarji’s alleged criminal activity from his local colleagues. Returning to New Zealand, he decided to take things into his own hands.

Digging through police files, Reynolds found a lucky break in a case from nearly two years earlier.

In late 2017, an anonymous member of the public had reached out to an anti-crime hotline with a tip that a businessma­n, Firdos “Freddie” Dalal, had a suspicious amount of money in his home in suburban Auckland.

Acting on a search warrant, police made their way inside and found $726,190 in cash and 4000 boxes of Actifed, a cold and flu medicine that contains pseudoephe­drine.

Known as Operation Duet, the investigat­ion that led to Dalal’s conviction provided

the informatio­n that Reynolds needed to go after Umarji. It turned out Dalal, who owned an Auckland-based freight forwarding company, was also listed as the director of Umarji’s New Zealand company, Bio Pharma.

Reynolds soon figured out how it all worked. Using his Pacific-wide Hyperchem network, Umarji ordered Actifed pills to be delivered from abroad to his pharmacies in Fiji and the Solomon Islands. The shipments were set to transit through New Zealand, where Dalal’s forwarding company was responsibl­e for the cargo.

While the drugs sat in a restricted customs holding area, Dalal simply went inside and swapped them out for other medicine, such as anti-fungal cream, which was then sent on to their island destinatio­ns. The purloined pseudoephe­drine was sold on New Zealand’s black market.

Dalal did not respond to questions.

In just three shipments between January and October 2017, Umarji’s operation brought in an estimated 678,000 Actifed pills containing about 40.7 kilograms of pseudoephe­drine, Auckland District Court would later find.

But if decipherin­g Umarji’s operation was straightfo­rward, arresting him would prove anything but.

New Zealand police filed charges against Umarji in December 2019, but Reynolds told the Auckland court he believed they had little chance of getting Umarji to voluntaril­y fly to Auckland and show up in court.

“If the summons were to be served it would likely result in Umarji fleeing [Fiji] to a country that has no extraditio­n arrangemen­ts with New Zealand,” the detective said by affidavit.

So New Zealand authoritie­s decided to go through the arduous process of requesting extraditio­n. In November 2021, a Fijian court agreed to the request, and New Zealand police issued an Interpol red notice.

Despite all the effort, within days Fiji Police had to contact their Kiwi counterpar­ts with an embarrassi­ng admission: Umarji had fled the country, and was in India.

New Zealand Police’s Pacific liaison, Rowland, declined to comment on how Umarji was able to flee Fiji, but added: “The reality is, sometimes corruption isn’t about what you do. Sometimes corruption is about what you don’t do, or turn a blind eye to.”

Despite his legal troubles, Umarji remained a respectabl­e public figure in Fiji, thanks in part to a restrictiv­e media environmen­t that made it difficult for reporters to look into him.

In May 2021, while Umarji was still in Fiji and his extraditio­n case was pending, he was elected to Fifa’s governance, audit and compliance committee.

He kept the position even after his flight abroad later that year, and was re-elected unopposed as Fiji Football Associatio­n vice president this June. He only resigned both positions on August 7, two days before his sentencing.

Fifa and the Fiji Football Associatio­n did not respond to questions.

Umarji also made little effort to hide during his exile in India. At one stage last year, he recorded an online video testimonia­l for a stem cell clinic outside Delhi, where he said he was getting treatment for diabetes.

His family’s second round of donations to FijiFirst, FJD20,000 ahead of last December’s elections, were similarly made while Umarji was on the run.

But the drug trafficker eventually tired of exile. In early 2022, he first contacted his high-powered Auckland lawyer, Jones, to arrange his surrender to New Zealand police.

He pleaded guilty to the Auckland court earlier this year and was allowed to return to Fiji to sort his affairs before handing himself in for sentencing.

WITH UMARJI now in prison, Fijian authoritie­s say they are continuing to investigat­e his operations.

His pharmaceut­ical business continues to run with his wife, Cassim, at its head. Cassim has for years been a significan­t public face for the businesses, including publicisin­g its charitable work. She declined to respond to reporters’ questions.

OCCRP visited Umarji’s companies in Lautoka in late June, during the period in which he was allowed by the New Zealand court to return briefly to Fiji.

Reporters found a bustling network of businesses, including a well-staffed warehouse and office on the edge of town for Hyperchem.

Reporters contacted Umarji by phone from the warehouse’s reception area, but he declined to come out for an interview and referred reporters to his lawyer.

Homeland Security Investigat­ions’ Verina said the new government of Fijian Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka has since removed roadblocks to investigat­ing these sort of traffickin­g operations.

“We have started to see enforcemen­t operations and arrests and holding individual­s accountabl­e for the methamphet­amine smuggling,” Verina said.

Additional reporting by George Block (New Zealand Herald) and Lydia Lewis (RNZ)

 ?? Photo / Baljeet Singh of the Fiji Times ?? Aiyaz Mohammed Musa Umarji (right) shakes hands with Fiji Football Associatio­n President Rajesh Patel. Umarji had been elected as the vice president.
Photo / Baljeet Singh of the Fiji Times Aiyaz Mohammed Musa Umarji (right) shakes hands with Fiji Football Associatio­n President Rajesh Patel. Umarji had been elected as the vice president.
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