Sign Up
..... Connect Australia with the world.
Categories

Posted: 2022-12-18 12:50:14

The deeply religious Gavoka said Fiji was a Christian country and policies would be underpinned by that principle, but he poured cold water on speculation he was seeking to establish a Christian state.

“We have a secular state in Fiji but … we are very much a Christian people and that will be dominant in the way we do things as a government,” he said.

Ministries and the potential for Gavoka to become deputy prime minister above the leader of the larger NFP party in the possible tripartite coalition remain on the table.

He says any government he leads will not sign a bilateral security arrangement with China, and will align closely with Australia and New Zealand and with members of the Pacific Islands Forum on the international stage.

Election workers count votes at the National count centre on December 14 in Suva.

Election workers count votes at the National count centre on December 14 in Suva.Credit:Getty

“I know the Solomon Islands have gone out a bit and done the security thing with the Chinese, we won’t do that,” he said.

“We will go with our traditional partners of Australia and New Zealand.”

But he will also push the two nations to join a compensation scheme for the descendants of indentured Indian labourers in Fiji, into which he would put $10 million ($6.78 million) into each year.

NFP leader Biman Prasad said Fiji had expressed a will for change, with some 58 per cent voting to expel FijiFirst.

“People have given a clear mandate to the opposition parties and they have indicated their desire for a new government,” he said.

Gavoka defended potentially working with FijiFirst after leading the opposition and running on a “time for change” platform, saying he’d continue to work in his supporters’ interests.

People’s Alliance leader Sitiveni Rabuka said his party and SODELPA were more ideologically aligned.

People’s Alliance party leader Sitiveni Rabuka after voting in Suva.

People’s Alliance party leader Sitiveni Rabuka after voting in Suva.Credit:Getty Images

Rabuka, himself a former coup leader turned prime minister, was ousted by Gavoka as SODELPA leader in the last term of parliament, which led him to establish the People’s Alliance.

“It’s natural for us to forge a coalition because when we look at our policies, they are in harmony,” he said.

But Rabuka was more apprehensive when asked about Gavoka’s foreign policy, saying working with regional partners would not “take away our sovereign rights to conduct our bilateral relationships”.

“At the moment we are bound by the collective agreement we have with our traditional allies in the Pacific,” he said, adding Fiji couldn’t just break away from those.

But he noted that “collective, regional and bilateral relationships differ”, saying he wanted to maintain his good relationships with Chinese, Indian, Pacific islands and other world leaders.

This article was made possible through the Melbourne Press Club’s Michael Gordon Journalism Fellowship Program.

AAP

View More
  • 0 Comment(s)
Captcha Challenge
Reload Image
Type in the verification code above