Full text of the statement issued by the President, Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara
I speak to you as your President to bring you up to date with development since armed men forcefully entered Parliament
yesterday and took into captivity the Prime Minister and members of his Government.
I will use all the authority and resources at my command to bring about a just and peaceful solution to a tragic chapter
in our history.
The government will go to great lengths to avoid a violent confrontation with the attackers who terrorise our nation and
threaten the lives of its government.
We wish to se the impasse broken and the captives set free. But we will not bow down to threats and coercion. The
perpetrators should not underestimate my unshakeable determination to maintain the integrity and stability of the State
and to protect the rights and interests of the people. Let me assure you that the constitution of the Fiji Islands and
institutions of the State remain intact.
I have assumed executive authority following the legal declaration of a state of emergency. The disciplined forces are
fully meeting their responsibilities as laid out in the constitution and have reaffirmed their loyalty and allegiance. I
have been involved in a series of discussion on the law and order situation with the Commissioner of Police Isikia Savua
and the acting Commander of the Fiji Military Forces, Colonel Alfred Tuatoka. This morning I conferred again with Mr
Savua and Colonel Tuatoka. Also in the talks were Colonel Vatu and the secretary for Home Affairs, former Army Brigadier
George Konrote. They reported back to me in this mornings media briefing which spelt out clearly the roles and functions
of the disciplined forces in the current crisis.
We have discussed other aspects of the security situation and made decisions on how we intend to respond.
The Chief Justice has expressed the full commitment of the Judiciary and the Constitution I uphold and there as been a
similar undertaking on behalf of the Civil Service from Mr Anare Jale, secretary of the public Service Commission.
Expressions of support have also come from many other people, including the Tui Ba, from Sorokoba, who said that he had
spoken to a number of chiefs from his own Province, and from Ra. The Tui assured me that he and those he had spoken to
are standing by the legal government.
I must pay tribute to the former Prime Minister and current Chairman of the Great Council of Chiefs, Major general
Sitiveni Rabuka for the part he is playing in attempting to find a way forward. Major General Rabuka has emerged as a
trusted and invaluable mediator between the government and the terrorist group.
He is working tirelessly to persuade Mr Speight and his band to lay down their arms, free the captives and withdraw from
Parliament as an essential first step to entering into further dialogue. I wish to speak directly to the Fijian people
about the concerns which have been expressed by so many of them in recent times. You have my personal guarantee as the
executive head of the Republic that the issues you have raised will be dealt with fully and that your position as the
indigenous community will be protected and enhanced.
I was saddened to see so many of my own people taking part in the disgraceful looting and destruction of property in
Suva. What happened will be remembered as a day of shame. Normally respected people, perhaps encouraged by hoodlum
elements, became criminals who ran amok among shops and streets of our capital city. The police are now moving to
prosecute some of those apprehended.
My fellow citizens of the Fiji Islands, this is not the first time we have followed the road embarked upon by Mr Speight
and his group of supporters. We went down a similar road in 1987 and it led us nowhere. Armed intervention and attempted
coups are not the way to reach political and economical goals.
Mr Speight and those who have been misled into supporting him in the Parliamentary Complex must recognise the reality of
the situation and act accordingly while there is still time. I wish to ask you all to join with me in praying for our
homeland that it may be healed and reconciled, and that the people may come together in the desire for peace.
Let us turn our faces against the evil of those who see guns and violence as a mean of achieving their ends.
Good night and God bless our land.
ENDS