Fiji Islands - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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the early 1990s.
Fishing is done mainly at a subsistence level, but commercial fishing is increasing.
The country also receives income from the sale of licenses to foreignvessels to fish in Fiji’s exclusive economic zone.
Industry, including mining, manufacturing, and construction, employs 34 percent of Fiji’s wage earners and, in 2006, contributed 26 percent of GDP.
The governmentinstituted tax-free incentives in 1988 that created a flourishing garment industry.
Ready-made garments are now the chief manufactured items.
Gold and silver are theprincipal minerals mined.
A hydroelectric plant on Viti Levu in 2003 met 80 percent of Fiji’s energy needs, with imported mineral fuels providing the remainder.
About 96 percent of Fiji’selectricity is consumed by the urban areas and tourist facilities on Viti Levu.
In 2006, 545,000 tourists visited Fiji, attracted to the scenery and fishing, snorkeling, and diving opportunities.
They spent $433 million, making tourism a major sourceof foreign exchange.
The government of Fiji consistently runs a budget deficit.
In 1997, revenues were $789 million with expenditures of $816 million.
The balance of trade was alsonegative; exports were $544 million while imports were $1,254 million.
Fiji’s principal trading partners are Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and the United Kingdom.Sugar accounts for about one-third of Fiji’s exports.
Clothing, fish, gold, and lumber are also important.
The primary imports are machinery and transportationequipment, petroleum products, and food.
The national currency is the Fiji dollar, which is equal to 100 cents (1.70 Fijian dollars equal U.S.$1; 2006 average).
Many Fijian villagers participate little in the cash economy, living a subsistence lifestyle that requires few purchased goods.
Most Indian villagers, however, live on leased land and must have some income to pay rent.
Fiji’s road system is fairly well developed, particularly the highway on Viti Levu that links Suva with Nausori and Nadi.
Nadi International Airport is an important hub forair travel over the Pacific Ocean, with many flights between North America and Australia, New Zealand, and other Pacific Island countries stopping first in Fiji.
An airportat Nausori, located near Suva, is the principal hub for domestic air travel.
Suva is the largest port, but Lautoka and Levuka are also important.
More than a dozeninternational shipping lines serve Fiji.
Private companies operate automobile ferries between the major islands.
Most of the inhabited islands are linked by telephone or radio telephones.
The government operates a radio and a television station, and one radio station is privatelyowned.
In 2004 there was 3 daily newspaper.
V GOVERNMENT
From 1970 until 1987 Fiji was a member of the Commonwealth of Nations, a voluntary association of political entities that pledge actual or symbolic allegiance to theBritish crown.
A governor-general represented the British monarch as the head of state, while actual executive power was exercised by a prime minister.
Following a military coup in 1987, Fiji was expelled from the Commonwealth.
Lieutenant Colonel Sitiveni Ligamamada Rabuka, the coup leader, declared Fiji a republic,and the former governor-general was named president.
A new constitution, promulgated in 1990, gave ethnic Fijians greater representation in the government,required that the prime minister and the president be ethnic Fijians, and incorporated Fiji’s hereditary clan chiefs into the government structure.
In 1997 thegovernment approved a new constitution that largely removed preferential treatment for ethnic Fijians in the government.
The constitution became effective in July1998.
In October 1997 Fiji was reinstated as a member of the Commonwealth of Nations, but it was again expelled following a military coup in December 2006.
The head of state is the president.
The president is elected to a five-year term by the Great Council of Chiefs (Bose Levu Vakaturaga), which is composed of thehighest-ranking members of the traditional chiefly system.
A prime minister serves as head of government.
The president appoints the prime minister from among themembers of parliament, based on the recommendations of those members.
Under the 1997 constitution, the prime minister may be of any ethnic origin.
Fiji has a bicameral (two-chamber) legislature consisting of a Senate (upper house) and a House of Representatives (lower house).
Under the 1997 constitution, theHouse of Representatives is a 71-member body, with 25 of its seats open to all races and 46 seats reserved on an ethnic basis (23 for ethnic Fijians, 19 for Indians, 3for mixed races, and 1 for Rotuma Islanders).
Representatives are directly elected and serve a maximum of five years.
The 32 members of the Senate are appointed bythe president on the basis of nominations by the Great Council of Chiefs (14 members), the prime minister (9), the leader of the opposition (8), and the Council ofRotuma (1).
The Senate dissolves on the expiration or dissolution of the House of Representatives.
All citizens of Fiji who are at least 21 years old may vote.
The highest court is the Supreme Court, presided over by a chief justice who is appointed by the president.
Fiji is divided into four districts, which are divided into 14provinces.
The provinces are governed by elected provincial councils.
The villages in each province also have council governments.
The national government providesmedical and dental services at a relatively low cost.
The Fiji Police Force has about 1,400 officers.
The Fiji Military Forces, composed predominantly of Fijians, numbered3,500 in 2004.
VI HISTORY
Pottery pieces found in Fiji suggest the islands were settled in the west from Melanesia at least 3,500 years ago.
These settlers farmed and fished and brought pigs andpoultry to the islands.
There was extensive contact with Polynesia, particularly Tonga, and culturally, Fijians became more Polynesian than Melanesian.
Fijian society washighly stratified.
Allegiances to clans and chiefs were complicated, and warfare, including cannibalism, was common as leaders competed for control of the islands.
A European Contact
In 1643 Dutch explorer Abel Tasman was the first European to sight the islands.
Regular European contact did not begin until the early 19th century, however.
Grovesof the valuable sandalwood tree were found by a shipwrecked American on Vanua Levu.
His finding led to a vigorous trade that nearly stripped the island of itssandalwood trees.
A European settlement developed at Levuka on the island of Ovalau in the 1820s and the London Missionary Society began converting the islandersin the Lau Group to Christianity in the 1830s.
In the 1840s the first reliable maps of Fiji were made by the American explorer Charles Wilkes.
Meanwhile, warfare continued on the islands and was aided, in part, by European guns.
Cakobau, a Fijian chief from the small island of Bau off Viti Levu, gained controlof most of western Fiji.
In 1849 the home of John Brown Williams, the American consul at Levuka, was burned and looted during a celebration.
Williams held Cakobauresponsible and ordered payment for damages.
Other incidents followed and to pay the debts, Cakobau sold Suva to an Australian company in 1868.
More Europeansarrived and many purchased land from the Fijians to begin plantations.
B British Colony
Local disorder prompted the Europeans at Levuka to organize a national government in 1871.
They named Cakobau king of Fiji.
The disorder continued, however, andin 1874 Cakobau and other chiefs requested British annexation.
The colony’s first capital was Levuka.
It was moved to Suva in the 1870s.
Suva became a main port of.
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