FIJI: ‘Stifled aspirations’: The 2014 General Election under restrictive laws

On 17 September 2014, eight years after the 5 December 2006 coup, Fiji held a General Election under repressive laws curtailing freedom of expression and the media, government accountability and the judiciary. A notable number of 248 candidates aspired for the 50 parliamentary seats under the 2013 C...

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Main Author: Mosmi Bhim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asia Pacific Network 2015-05-01
Series:Pacific Journalism Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/151
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author Mosmi Bhim
author_facet Mosmi Bhim
author_sort Mosmi Bhim
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description On 17 September 2014, eight years after the 5 December 2006 coup, Fiji held a General Election under repressive laws curtailing freedom of expression and the media, government accountability and the judiciary. A notable number of 248 candidates aspired for the 50 parliamentary seats under the 2013 Constitution and an Electoral Decree released a few months prior to elections. In an atmosphere of lavish campaign advertisements on billboards, public transport vehicles and the print and television news media by the post-coup Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama’s political party FijiFirst, recently activated political parties struggled to have their voices heard. Two daily media companies—the Fiji Broadcasting Corporation and the Fiji Sun—displayed bias towards the FijiFirst party by providing them with excessive and preferential coverage and portraying other parties in a negative light; other media organisations attempted to give fairer coverage. The debate heated up amid crackdowns by police on ‘trouble-makers’ vandalising FijiFirst posters. The country headed for the polls as celebrations marked the release of 45 Fijian soldiers held hostage by Al-Nusra in the Golan Heights. Amid complaints by five political parties, the election was declared ‘free and fair’ by the Electoral Commission. This article, through analysis of media materials, campaigning, polling and results calculations, contends that the elections only satisfied part of the international criteria for ‘free and fair elections’.
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spelling doaj.art-f9314aa5e5c34fd59f1be5987eeb8e602022-12-21T20:30:29ZengAsia Pacific NetworkPacific Journalism Review1023-94992324-20352015-05-0121110.24135/pjr.v21i1.151FIJI: ‘Stifled aspirations’: The 2014 General Election under restrictive lawsMosmi BhimOn 17 September 2014, eight years after the 5 December 2006 coup, Fiji held a General Election under repressive laws curtailing freedom of expression and the media, government accountability and the judiciary. A notable number of 248 candidates aspired for the 50 parliamentary seats under the 2013 Constitution and an Electoral Decree released a few months prior to elections. In an atmosphere of lavish campaign advertisements on billboards, public transport vehicles and the print and television news media by the post-coup Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama’s political party FijiFirst, recently activated political parties struggled to have their voices heard. Two daily media companies—the Fiji Broadcasting Corporation and the Fiji Sun—displayed bias towards the FijiFirst party by providing them with excessive and preferential coverage and portraying other parties in a negative light; other media organisations attempted to give fairer coverage. The debate heated up amid crackdowns by police on ‘trouble-makers’ vandalising FijiFirst posters. The country headed for the polls as celebrations marked the release of 45 Fijian soldiers held hostage by Al-Nusra in the Golan Heights. Amid complaints by five political parties, the election was declared ‘free and fair’ by the Electoral Commission. This article, through analysis of media materials, campaigning, polling and results calculations, contends that the elections only satisfied part of the international criteria for ‘free and fair elections’.https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/151accountabilitycensorshipelectionsFijiFiji coupsfreedom of expression
spellingShingle Mosmi Bhim
FIJI: ‘Stifled aspirations’: The 2014 General Election under restrictive laws
Pacific Journalism Review
accountability
censorship
elections
Fiji
Fiji coups
freedom of expression
title FIJI: ‘Stifled aspirations’: The 2014 General Election under restrictive laws
title_full FIJI: ‘Stifled aspirations’: The 2014 General Election under restrictive laws
title_fullStr FIJI: ‘Stifled aspirations’: The 2014 General Election under restrictive laws
title_full_unstemmed FIJI: ‘Stifled aspirations’: The 2014 General Election under restrictive laws
title_short FIJI: ‘Stifled aspirations’: The 2014 General Election under restrictive laws
title_sort fiji stifled aspirations the 2014 general election under restrictive laws
topic accountability
censorship
elections
Fiji
Fiji coups
freedom of expression
url https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/151
work_keys_str_mv AT mosmibhim fijistifledaspirationsthe2014generalelectionunderrestrictivelaws