From: AAP
November 07, 2012 5:32PM
FIJI'S military strongman Voreqe Bainimarama has accused the
academic charged with drafting the Pacific nation's new constitution of
"hijacking" the reform process and overstepping his role.
But Bainimarama, who seized power in a 2006 coup, denied harassing
Constitutional Commission chairman Yash Ghai and called on the Kenyan
scholar to consider his future as the country prepares for elections in
2014.
"No one person is more important than the task of producing a constitution for the Fijian people," he said.
"Yash Ghai can decide for himself whether he wants to be a part of this process," he added in a statement issued late Tuesday.
Bainimarama
was responding to an interview Ghai gave to the Australian Broadcasting
Corporation on Tuesday, in which he complained the regime had backed
away from a commitment to public consultation on his constitutional
blueprint.
Ghai, a legal expert who has previously helped frame constitutions
in Kenya and Nepal, also accused Bainimarama of undermining his
independence.
"There has been massive interference," he said. "Now
I get emails from the PM (Bainimarama) to do this or not to do that,
and this is a kind of harassment."
Ghai has a reputation for
fiercely protecting his autonomy. He resigned as the US special envoy on
human rights to Cambodia in 2008 after a war of words with Prime
Minister Hun Sen.
Bainimarama dismissed the harassment allegation
as "totally without foundation" and said Ghai's role was to produce a
draft constitution for the government, not to dictate what public
consultations subsequently took place.
"It is not for the
commission chairman to hijack the constituent assembly process," he
said. "Professor Ghai seems to fundamentally misunderstand the process."
Fiji
is preparing a new constitution after experiencing four coups since
1987, largely stemming from tensions between indigenous Fijians and
ethnic Indians descended from labourers brought in by the British in the
colonial era.
Bainimarama tore up Fiji's previous constitution
and replaced all judges with hand-picked officials in 2009, after a
court ruled his coup was illegal.
He has said the new constitution
would enshrine principles such as one-person-one-vote, an independent
judiciary and transparent governance, as well as concentrating on
establishing a secular, corruption-free state.
The military leader
appointed Ghai earlier this year, hailing him at the time as an
"internationally renowned constitution and human rights expert".
But
the pair have clashed on a number of occasions. Ghai called on the
regime in August to allow greater freedom of speech and assembly ahead
of the 2014 elections, prompting Bainimarama to tell him to stay out of
politics.
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