(First published in The Dominion Post, March 22.)
APOLOGISTS for the illegitimate Fijian government led by
Frank Bainimarama have melted away as the regime’s true thuggishness has been
exposed.
In the years following Bainimarama’s seizure of power, many
gave him the benefit of the doubt, deluding themselves that he was genuinely
concerned about breaking the dominance of the Fijian elite and protecting Fiji
Indians from discrimination.
But in the murk of Fijian politics, it seems no agenda is
pure. Whatever his motives at the start, Bainimarama has morphed into a
stereotypical melagomaniac.
In the unlikely event that anyone still believed in him
after he intimidated the media, suppressed dissidents, repeatedly postponed
elections and tore up a draft constitution (partly paid for by the New
Zealand), then the ugly truth must have finally dawned when Bainimarama defended
the police thugs shown on video beating up two prisoners.
There can no longer be any doubt that Bainimarama is the
Pacific’s Papa Doc. Which raises the question, what can we do?
We can certainly no longer look the other way and pretend it
isn’t happening. Neither can we expect that normal diplomatic tut-tutting will
cut any ice. Bainimarama is impervious to such gestures and grows more arrogant
by the month.
On an individual level, New Zealanders can protest by not
going to Fiji for their holidays. The smiling faces on tourist posters can’t
disguise the reality that Fiji is an oppressive police state, run by a tyrant
who is contemptuous of human rights and the rule of law.
But acts of individual conscience are not enough. New
Zealand and Australia should be thinking hard about the putting the squeeze on
Bainimarama by applying economic sanctions.
The argument against such sanctions is that they penalise
the innocent. Jobs will be lost and people may go hungry. But that argument
didn’t stop the world from blockading South Africa in the apartheid era, and
ultimately it worked. Bainimarama has shown that he is immune to anything less.
* * *
THE COUNCIL of Trade Unions has backed calls for a “living
wage” of $18.40 an hour. At the same time, it’s concerned about the high rate
of unemployment. But aren’t these two positions contradictory?
In a struggling economy that’s bound to shrink even further
as a result of the drought, bullying employers into paying higher wages hardly
seems likely to encourage them to take on more staff. It can only have the
opposite effect.
Now here’s an alternative idea. Rather than being made to
pay their rank-and-file employees more, why don’t companies pay their
executives less? It would free up money for investment in productive capacity,
possibly creating more jobs, while also making a powerful symbolic statement.
Corporate executives alone seem insulated against adverse
economic trends, their pay packages increasing year after year regardless of
performance. Just look at Solid Energy, where CEO Don Elder was paid $1.1
million for a year’s work even as the state-owned company’s finances were in
freefall.
That sum included a “performance” payment of more than
$300,000. By what sprinkling of corporate fairy dust was that justified? And
how come, in the year ended last June, 427 Solid Energy employees were paid
salaries of more than $100,000?
On the face of it, these sums bear no relationship to the
company’s fortunes. But such is the way these days in the corporate sector,
where stratospheric salaries and mysterious formulas for the payment of
so-called “at-risk” bonuses – “at-risk” apparently being management-speak for
“guaranteed” – are evidence of an out-of-control entitlement syndrome.
What a dramatic signal it would send if CEOs began taking
voluntary pay cuts. If business wants to enhance its image while at the same
time deflecting calls for higher wages for employees, it has the means to do
it.
* * *THE SPORTS NEWS is no longer mere soap opera. It has become a morality play.
Former All Black Zac Guildford was paraded before us on the
6 o’clock news, a rugby union minder at his side, and made to admit his
alcoholism. Did anyone else find this distasteful?
Guildford is an imperfect human being like the rest of us.
But because he’s a sporting hero, he’s considered public property.
The journalists at the press conference and the nation at
home sit in smug judgment. We now own people like Guildford and demand that
they appear before us to confess their sins and beg forgiveness.
Never mind that he thrills crowds with his talents on the
field. We want more. The price he pays for being a great rugby player is public
humiliation. Professional sport contracts don’t include words like privacy and
dignity.
Now we’ll all watch and wait for Guildford to transgress
again, so we can tsk-tsk and see the ritual abasement repeated. What a
degrading spectacle – for us as well as him.
As Matt Nolan, TVHE, says (I think it was Matt), the unions don't represent unemployed, so couldn't care less. If you want to see thuggery in action, just follow Helen Kelly's Twitter stream, and she has no idea about the social in social media, as she never interacts or debates, just uses Twitter to shout out her propaganda, even when I called her out yesterday on how good faith bargaining is possible when leader of CTU makes posts like this - hoping html works:
ReplyDelete@helenkellyCTU: Funny, I know worker who looked @ 20 jobs n horticulture & bosses wankers payng minimum pay, no pay if wet & poor h&s http://t.co/KyZK7Pmk5q
Yes, the Zac Gilford media show was both cringeworthy and offensive.
ReplyDeleteThe closest I can come to describing it is as 'a secular attempt at confession and redemption'. At least the Catholics provide their sinners with the dignity of privacy.
Good thing I gave up rugby early in my career.
You must have missed the recent news of the draft constitution and the elections to be held next year in Fiji then. I don't recall Papa Doc acquiescing to either of those things. It's also rather disgraceful to compare Bainimarama to someone who actually tortured and killed thousands of people. You would do well to can the hysteria.
ReplyDeleteYou know very little about South Africans and their history and to suggest that sanctions led to the downfall of the Government underlines your simplistic version of the country's history.
ReplyDeleteMy advise to you, is to concentrate on New Zealand and it's affairs and let the Fijians determine their own destiny.
You world improvers make me sick.
Rivonia Boy
ReplyDeletePiss off then. I don't recall insisting that you read this blog.