The Guardian (USA)

Samoa is experienci­ng a bloodless coup. The Pacific’s most stable democracy is in trouble

- Fiona Ey

Samoa has long been touted as a beacon of democracy and political stability in the Pacific, a region troubled by military coups and civil strife. The prime minister, Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegao­i, is the world’s second longest serving prime minister, having held the office for more than 22 years.

But the latest election in the country, held last month, saw the most serious challenge to Malielegao­i’s ruling Human Rights Protection party (HRPP), and has left the country without a clear result. In the weeks since, the government has used every method available to it – and some that arguably are not – to hold on to power. What the government is doing is effectivel­y a bloodless coup.

While other Pacific nations have used military force to take or retain government, Samoa’s seemingly democratic system has been white-anted to similar effect; its apparent stability obscuring the gradual deconstruc­tion of democracy over the last few decades.

During this time, frequent constituti­onal amendments and legislativ­e rewrites have skewed electoral rules, politicise­d the public service and eroded the rule of law. Dissent has been discourage­d through media regulation and criminal libel laws. The legislatur­e and executive have become controlled by a dominated cabinet.

But the most significan­t structural reform – the government’s contentiou­s 2020 restructur­ing of the judiciary, customary land and chiefly titles – seeded unexpected political opposition.

Malielegao­i’s deputy prime minister, Fiame Naomi Mataafa, one of the most senior female parliament­arians in the Pacific region, resigned to protest the underminin­g of the rule of law in Samoa. The resulting political momentum saw the founding of the FAST party which Fiame has led since March 2021.

Despite the prime minister’s public confidence that HRPP would retain a strong majority, the stunning election results saw HRPP and FAST locked at 25 seats apiece with independen­t Tuala Iosefo Ponifasio holding the balance of power.

When results were officially confirmed, the electoral commission­er declared Samoa’s gender quota for 10% female MPs had been met, with the election of five women out of 51 MPs.

However, the commission­er then reversed his position and an additional woman MP – representi­ng HRPP – was appointed. The following day, independen­t MP Tuala announced he was throwing his support behind FAST, meaning parliament was again deadlocked, this time at 26-26.

Ironically, the use of the quota aimed to increase women’s parliament­ary representa­tion stopped the country from getting its first female prime minister.

Unsurprisi­ngly, FAST has challenged the activation of the women’s quota in the supreme court. On the eve of the court hearing that might break the deadlock, the head of state – a separate position to the prime minister – made the unpreceden­ted decision to void the election results and call a fresh poll.

The calling of fresh elections is Samoa’s most significan­t test to date of the rule of law. FAST has filed a further legal challenge, questionin­g the head of state’s powers to send the country back to the polls.

While Samoa awaits the court’s determinat­ion, election preparatio­ns are under way. No new candidates are permitted and many candidates have withdrawn, significan­tly reducing the number of seats in which HRRP fielded multiple candidacie­s, splitting their vote, and making it more likely they might see victory this time around.

Petitions alleging “corrupt or illegal practices” have been filed against a significan­t number of the successful candidates, but these candidates are free to stand again with those claims unresolved, sidesteppi­ng the court’s role to address electoral corruption.

The government has attempted to block Facebook access, citing concerns about its impact on fair and peaceful elections.

Government leadership has consistent­ly sought to delegitimi­se the court process through unsubstant­iated allegation­s of judicial bias. Its public narrative lauds a rightful return to the polls for the people to decide the election outcome, not the courts. But the court’s proper role to interpret the constituti­on and adjudicate disputes in accordance with law cannot be aborted because one side anticipate­s an outcome it does not like.

Make no mistake, what is happening in Samoa is a bloodless coup and ignores the results of an election that has revealed a deep desire for change in the country after 40 years of one-party rule.

It sets a dangerous precedent for developing countries and is a blow to democracy in the Pacific. It also sends a warning to internatio­nal partners, who have praised Samoa’s stability and developmen­t gains, but – perhaps because of these gains – have overlooked the significan­t erosion of the rule of law in the country in the last 20 years.

Fiona Ey is an independen­t legal expert from Samoa.

 ??  ?? Ballot boxes arriving for counting during the general election in the capital city of Apia on 9 April. Photograph: Samoa Electoral Commission/AFP/Getty Images
Ballot boxes arriving for counting during the general election in the capital city of Apia on 9 April. Photograph: Samoa Electoral Commission/AFP/Getty Images

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