SUVA, Dec 14 — Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama vowed to respect the outcome of Fiji’s election today, as he faced a rival ex-coup leader looking to end his 16 years in power and pivot away from China.

Bainimarama, 68, led a coup to seize control of Fiji in 2006 and has since legitimised his grip on power with election wins in 2014 and 2018.

Casting his ballot in the capital Suva, Bainimarama was asked if he would respect the result. “Of course,” he replied, before lashing out at reporters, suggesting they ask “better questions.”

Standing in the way of Bainimarama’s third elected term is his chief political rival, Sitiveni Rabuka, a 74-year-old former military commander nicknamed “Rambo” after leading two coups in 1987.

Rabuka — who is also a former Fijian international rugby player and Commonwealth Games hammer thrower — served as Fiji’s prime minister between 1992 and 1999.

“I’m feeling great and getting better. But victory belongs to the lord,” Rabuka told reporters after casting his vote at a makeshift polling booth in the capital, Suva.

Rabuka called into question whether the prime minister would concede if defeated.

“I accepted my defeat in 1999,” he said. “I hope he can do that. We cannot live forever, we cannot rule forever.”

The buildup to the vote has been marked by a strict media blackout, preventing Fijian media from reporting on any aspect of the election for 48 hours before voting day and until polls close.

Suva voter Avinay Kumar, 26, said there was a palpable feeling of tension ahead of the vote.

“It’s a bit tense at the moment, because the older parties and the new parties are clashing with each other,” he told AFP.

The vote is seen as a test of Fiji’s fledgling democracy, and of China’s quest for Pacific influence.

Rabuka has signalled Fiji could pivot away from Beijing under his leadership, saying it was time for Fiji to “reassess our associations” while explicitly ruling out a security pact with China.

Fiji has grown closer to China under Bainimarama, who used a “look north” policy to stabilise the economy after Australia and New Zealand hit the country with heavy trade sanctions in retaliation for his 2006 coup.

In recent years, Bainimarama has switched his fatigues for suits and colourful bula shirts and focused heavily on Fiji’s fight against climate change — an existential issue for the low-lying nation.

The military’s role could yet be key in a tightly contested vote — commanding officer Major General Jone Kalouniwai has insisted his forces will “honour the democratic process by respecting the outcome”.

There are no reliable polls that give any indication about the outcome, but it is expected to be close.

Ahead of election day, the 97-person-strong Multinational Observer Group said it had been given “full access” to election sites and had not “observed any irregularities” in registration or pre-polling.

A staff checks the names on the voters list during the general elections at a polling station in Fiji capital city Suva on December 14, 2022. — AFP pic
A staff checks the names on the voters list during the general elections at a polling station in Fiji capital city Suva on December 14, 2022. — AFP pic

‘It is prohibited’

While Bainimarama has billed the contest as Fiji’s most crucial vote “ever”, it was almost impossible to tell on the oppressively humid streets of Suva that an election was at hand.

The capital has been purged of political billboards, and campaign adverts have been erased from the airwaves under strict blackout laws meant to preserve the integrity of the election.

On election day, Suva’s distinctive open-air buses blasted reggae and dance music over the radio instead of once-ubiquitous campaign messages.

As the polls opened, only the sight of queues of voters fanning themselves with blue election booklets and seeking out trees for shade gave a hint that the election was under way.

Voting will take place in 1,436 polling stations dotted across a large number of Fiji’s 300-plus islands.

Campaign blackouts are not unusual internationally, but Fiji’s laws are notably harsh.

The government must approve all election-related local media coverage during the blackout — which started on December 10 and ends at 6.00pm local time (0600 GMT) Wednesday — and breaches can result in up to five years in prison.

“It is prohibited for any media organisation to publish, print or broadcast any campaign advertisement, debate, opinion or interview on any election issue,” Supervisor of Elections Mohammed Saneem told reporters in the lead-up to the poll. — AFP