Fiji's military, famous for sending peacekeepers to the Balkans, Lebanon and
East Timor, is now facing one of its most pressing challenges on home soil.
It is more than three weeks since an armed gang lead by George Speight, a failed
businessman, stormed the parliament. Mr Speight said he did it for indigenous
rights, which he said had been eroded by a government with a strong ethnic Indian
influence.
Thirty-one hostages remain in the parliament. They include the deposed Prime
Minister Majendra Chaudhry and members of his administration.
Martial law was introduced 10 days after the coup. It gave Fiji's senior military
officer, Commodore Frank Bainimarama, control of the country.
His soldiers have secured all the approaches to parliament, creating a large
buffer zone between the security forces and the compound.
It is not a complete no-go area. The roads are largely deserted except for
army vehicles and learner drivers taking advantage of the space.
No-one breaks the speed limit despite it being the most lawless part of the
capital. Democracy has been hijacked by gunmen but the traffic laws remain.
There are 800,000 people across these islands. The economic impact of the coup
is beginning to bite but life is struggling along.
Most of the people here are warm and long for the days to be ordinary again.
They are natural hosts, which has made their tourist trade such a success -
until now.
Sit in a traffic jam in the centre of Suva and you see the patient slowly trying
to stir. Any sense of normality disappears at the stroke of eight every evening.
The curfew runs through until five every morning right across the 300 islands
which make up this Pacific archipelago.
The population here is mostly indigenous Fijian, but only just. Indians make
up 44% of the population. They were brought to work as indentured labour on
the sugar plantations by British colonists at the end of the 19th Century. Life
for the native community revolves around land and their historical attachment
to it.
One man, born of Fijian parents in Cardiff in Wales, was so concerned about
the mess the islands are in, he flew thousands of miles to offer to take the
place of the former Prime Minister, Mr Chaudhry. He waited for hours before
being turned away at the gates of parliament. Twenty-seven men and four women
remain held at gunpoint inside.
On Monday 12 June Fiji takes a day off to mark the Queen's birthday. It will
not be a time to celebrate.
Thousands are people from all races are planning to march from Lautoka on the
western side of the country's biggest island, Viti Levu, to Suva and the parliamentary
complex.
The marchers will include families of the hostages, factory workers who have
lost their jobs and school children locked out of classes.
It will be the biggest demonstration so far by ordinary Fijians who just want
their country back.
This story can be found at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/asia-pacific/newsid_786000/786422.stm
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