Fiji government again cancels Methodist conference

Fiji government again cancels Methodist conference

The annual conference of Fiji’s Methodist Church, due to start August 23, was cancelled by Fiji’s military government for the third consecutive year after church leaders defied a government directive to step down from their positions.

Fiji’s Land Force Commander Colonel Mosese Tikoitoga also directed that no Methodist Church minister be allowed to leave the country, and banned permits under the Public Emergency Regulation for all official Methodist Church meetings.

There are concerns that the ban will lead to the collapse of the Methodist church administration and severely affect funding.

Michael King, World Church Relationships Team Leader for the Methodist Church in Britain, said he was “concerned and very disappointed by what’s happened”.

“It seemed as though the situation had eased and relationships had improved,” he said. “This is a massive setback in the relationship between the Church and state in Fiji. If the conference had been allowed to go ahead, there would have been a normal and constitutional change in church leadership and a sense of returning to normality.”

About 1,000 delegates who had already arrived in Fiji were told to go home.

Tikoitoga told the news website Fijilive that Methodist church President Ame Tugauwe and General Secretary Tuikilakila Waqairatu should have stepped down from their positions ahead of the conference as they were charged earlier with breaching emergency laws.

“They refused to accept that explanation. They maintained that a person is innocent until proven guilty,’’ Tikoitoga said, adding that a meeting with church officials “ended … with no clear direction so we cancelled the [conference] altogether.”

Church members were charged with attending an unauthorised meeting held in April 2009 and were held for questioning by police in July that year. In September last year, the Fijian Government dropped most of the charges against church leaders.

Earlier this month, Commodore Frank Bainimarama, prime minister of the Pacific Island nation, had lifted a ban on the conference until 2014, on the condition that each conference would be no longer than three days, and the two leaders would not speak. Church executives attempted to meet government officials on August 22 to decide who would chair conference meetings. But no government official attended so the executives decided that Tugauwe would chair meetings.

The Methodist Church is the main faith for indigenous Fijians and was aligned to the government overthrown in a 2006 bloodless coup.

Since the coup, Fiji has suspended the constitution, detained opponents and suppressed freedom of speech. Meanwhile the church cancelled a news conference which was to be held August 25.

The Methodist Church in Britain is calling for prayer, particularly for Methodist Church leaders in Fiji as well as for the country’s interim Prime Minister.

British Methodists’ prayer for Fiji on August 25 declares: “We give thanks for the diversity of people in Fiji and pray that they may live together in unity. We give thanks for the Methodist Church of Fiji and Rotuma and pray that it can continue to bring a message of hope and spiritual transformation.”

Mr King said, “We are praying for the Church in Fiji and for the nation, and we continue to watch developments with concern.”

By David Crampton, Ecumenical News International, and Ekklesia.

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