NEW INTELLIGENCE UNIT PLANNED
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By Mithleshni Gurdayal
USP Journalism Graduate on the Daily Post
SUVA: A new intelligence unit will soon be established by Fiji's interim administration, says the interim Home Affairs
Minister Ratu Talemo Ratakele.
The unit will replace the Fiji Intelligence Service which was abolished by the deposed elected Mahendra Chaudhry
government last year.
In an exclusive interview with the Daily Post yesterday, Ratu Talemo said the interim administration is looking at
reactivating the National Security Council which existed during the rule of the Alliance government [of Ratu Sir
Kamisese Mara].
According to him, this is to keep up with security matters of the country.
"The National Security Council was in force during the Alliance government but after 1987, when the Fiji Intelligence
Service was established, this council lapsed," he said.
"But with the demise of the FIS, we have to reactivate the council," Ratu Talemo said.
"Core functions of the council will be to keep a tab on all matters concerning security and decide what actions to take
as far as the security of the nation is concerned and be able to tackle problems before they arise, unlike the May 19
situation."
However, Ratu Talemo pointed out that the May insurrection could have been avoided if the ousted government had heeded
police warnings.
"From the information have received, police and military intelligence had warned the [Chaudhry] government that things
were building up and my predecessor was pressed to impress on the former prime minister that things should be tackled at
that stage," he said.
"I am satisfied that the police in the Special Branch and the Military Intelligence had performed their task of warning
the government, that if nothing was done then the problem would escalate to a stage culminating in something like what
happened on May 19."
* Police Commissioner Isikia Savua, who has been implicated in the attempted coup, was reported by the Fiji Sun to be
officially from today pending an investigation into allegations about his involvement with he rebels.
A tribunal set up by the Public Service Commission, and headed by Chief Justice Sir Timoci Tuivaga, will investigate the
allegations.
Criticisms against Savua, a former military officer, have included his alleged failure to deal effectively with the
rioting and looting on May 19 and his decision to attend a security conference in Vanuatu, leaving the police without
effective leadership during the height of the crisis.
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