Low voter turnout sparks concern in Fiji

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Rabuka heads the People’s Alliance party. He said there was little prospect of a coup, even if the prime minister decided to contest the result, after Fiji’s military commander told his soldiers to respect the outcome of the election and said anything less would be an affront to democracy.

The Pacific nation has experienced four coups since it gained independence in 1970.

“I accepted my defeat in 1999 and I hope he can do that,” Rabuka said.

“We cannot live forever. We cannot rule forever.

“A successor from an opposition party should be accepted. It is a normal process in democratic systems.”

However, some voters remain concerned about potential repercussions if they speak out against the government.

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One, who gave his name as Jack, told AAP he wanted a change in government but both frontrunners were coup leaders.

“They’re both thieves. They took the government without permission,” the 50-year-old said.

“I want a change in government but when we are given a choice between two thieves, what hope is there for the future?”

People’s Alliance party is working with the smaller National Federation Party to expel the incumbent FijiFirst government.

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Rabuka and NFP leader Biman Prasad believe there is a mood for change.

“I think it’s going to go very, very well for us,” Rabuka said on Wednesday.

Voting is not compulsory but Fijians have been given a public holiday and encouraged to cast their ballot.

Lines stretched more than 300 metres at some polling stations an hour after voting opened but turnout dwindled throughout the day.

Supervisor of Elections Mohammed Saneem said turnout was not promising with just over half the eligible Fijians casting their votes as of an hour before polls closed.

It was significantly down from the 72 per cent who voted in 2018, and a further slide from the almost 85 per cent in 2014, when democratic elections were reinstalled after eight years.

“It is still, by Fiji’s standards, not acceptable,” Saneem said.

At his midday media update, Saneem urged: “Let’s spend the next six hours getting our family members to get out and vote.”

Preliminary results are expected on Thursday night, with official results in about four days.

Bainimarama and FijiFirst are running on their record during COVID-19 and a strong economy. He’s also spruiked free education, greater access to medical care and better infrastructure under his government.

Rabuka and opposition parties are arguing Fiji’s infrastructure and essential services are dilapidated.

They say poverty and inequality have increased while freedoms have been quashed by a prime minister they brand a dictator.

About one quarter of Fijians live in poverty and this jumps to more than 40 per cent in rural regions.

Cost of living pressures are also biting with inflation eclipsing five per cent and the price of food more than doubling since the pandemic started in some instances.

AAP

This article was made possible through the Melbourne Press Club’s Michael Gordon Journalism Fellowship Program.