APOLOGISING WITHOUT CONSEQUENCE:
Fiji’s Matanigasau
and the Constitutional Elephant.
If Fiji were a stage, and it often behaves like one, then
the recent matanigasau from the Fiji Military Forces to the Great
Council of Chiefs would be the grand, sweeping, emotionally charged Act III
moment. The violins swell, the lights dim, the warriors kneel, and the chiefs
receive the apology with gravitas befitting centuries of tradition.
It is moving. It is solemn. It is beautiful. It is also (let’s
not mince words here) hilariously incomplete because behind the
dignified ritual, stands something so enormous, so awkward, so constitutionally
indestructible, that everyone pretends not to see it:
The Immunity Clause. The elephant in the room that Fiji
is legally required to ignore.
An apology delivered under a constitutional shield is not
reconciliation. It is public relations in ceremonial attire.
1.
The Elegant Ceremony and the Ugly Reality
The military apologized to the GCC, a body of chiefs, many
of whom were not the ones dragged from beds, beaten in police stations,
threatened in cane fields, or economically destroyed.
The victims of Fiji’s coups were:
- Indo-Fijians
whose homes and businesses were torched,
- moderate
iTaukei ostracized for refusing hatred,
- families
living through fear as mobs roamed city streets,
- families
that lost fathers and sons,
- communities
taught to brace for instability the way other nations brace for cyclones.
They were not in the room. They were not mentioned. They
were not acknowledged.
Like the elephant, their presence was felt but inconvenient.
2.
The Constitution: Fiji’s Most Loyal Coup
Defender
It declares, without
hesitation:
When the military presented its matanigasau, it knelt
before the chiefs. But legally, Fiji kneels before the Immunity Clause.
3.
Selective Remorse: A National Hobby
Fiji’s most wounded communities, the Indo-Fijians who lived
through the riots of 1987 and 2000, iTaukei moderates who resisted extremism,
and ordinary citizens traumatized by instability, watched from the outside.
Some watched with skepticism. Others with bitterness. Many
with exhaustion.
Because this country has spent decades perfecting the ritual
of public ceremonies while ignoring private pain.
4.
Reconciliation Without Accountability Is
just Theatre
A nation cannot heal while its foundational law declares:
“The truth matters, but consequences do not.”
You cannot build reconciliation on a constitutional promise
that ensures the most powerful actors can never be touched by the justice
system. You cannot heal a people whose trauma is acknowledged only symbolically
but erased legally.
We perform apologies. But we forbid justice.
5.
The Real Matanigasau Still Waits
A genuine national reconciliation would look very different.
It would acknowledge:
- Indo-Fijian
families driven from homes and farms
- children
who grew up with the sound of coups as background noise
- iTaukei
leaders punished for defending democracy
- business
owners ruined by mobs
- citizens
abducted, silenced, beaten or murdered.
- dreams
deferred
- trust
destroyed
6.
Fiji’s Choice: Keep the Elephant, or
Build a Future
We cannot call this healing. We cannot call this closure. We
cannot call this national unity.
We can only call it what it is:
A beautiful ceremony staged in the shadow of an unmovable
constitutional elephant.
Fiji must decide whether it wants ritual reconciliation or
real reconciliation.
Because until accountability is possible, every apology, no
matter how sacred, no matter how beautifully presented, remains incomplete.
And the victims, every citizen bruised by Fiji’s chaotic
political experiments deserve better than ceremonies.
They deserve truth. They deserve justice. They deserve a
future unburdened by the ghosts of immunity. They deserve a Fiji where
elephants do not write the constitution.

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