Submission
to
The
Constitution
Commission
From
the
Citizens
Constitutional
Forum
2012
Contents
PREAMBLE
...............................................................................................................................................
3
A.
ELECTORAL
SYSTEM
.....................................................................................................................
5
A1.
ETHNICITY
AND
THE
ELECTORAL
SYSTEM
.........................................................................................
6
A2.
THE
CHOICE
OF
ELECTORAL
SYSTEM
..................................................................................................
7
A3.
THE
RIGHT
TO
VOTE
...........................................................................................................................
8
A4.
EQUALITY
OF
VOTING
RIGHTS
............................................................................................................
9
A5.
EQUAL
ACCESS
TO
PUBLIC
POSITIONS
.............................................................................................
10
A6.
ADMINISTRATION
OF
ELECTORAL
LAWS
.........................................................................................
11
B.
JUDICIARY
.........................................................................................................................................
12
C.
HUMAN
RIGHTS
...............................................................................................................................
14
C1.
INTERNATIONAL
HUMAN
RIGHTS
CONVENTIONS
...........................................................................
14
C2.
AFFIRMATIVE
ACTION
......................................................................................................................
14
C3.
BILL
OF
RIGHTS
FOR
FIJI
...................................................................................................................
15
D.
PUBLIC
ACCOUNTABILITY
..........................................................................................................
16
E.
THE
FIJI
MILITARY
FORCES
.........................................................................................................
18
F.
FIJI
POLICE
FORCE
..........................................................................................................................
19
G.
CIVIL
SOCIETY
.................................................................................................................................
20
H.
ENVIRONMENT
...............................................................................................................................
21
I.
ADDITIONAL
CATEGORIES
........................................................................................................
22
2
|
P a g e
Preamble
The
Citizens
Constitutional
Forum
(CCF)
envisions
a
nation
in
which
all
of
Fijis
people
live
together
in
equality,
justice
and
peace,
respecting
the
rule
of
law,
under
a
Constitution
that
guarantees
democracy,
the
rule
of
law
and
human
rights.
The
Constitution
must
include
Directive
Principles
which
should
guide
the
national
government,
other
levels
of
government
and
all
State
institutions
including
the
military
and
political
parties.
While
the
principles
would
not
be
legally
binding,
mechanisms
should
be
developed
to
ensure
that
they
are
followed.
For
example,
legislation
dealing
with
the
military,
the
public
service,
political
parties
and
the
electoral
system
would
need
to
be
changed
to
reflect
them.
These
principles
are:
1. The
Constitution
should
recognise
that
Fiji
is
made
up
of
different
ethnic,
language,
religious,
gender,
income,
regional
and
age
groups.
Public
policy
should
respect
these
differences
but
in
the
spirit
of
national
unity
not
create
permanent
divisions
or
allow
the
domination
of
any
one
group
by
any
other.
To
foster
multiculturalism,
authorities
should
ensure
integration
of
the
public
education
system.
2. Public
policy
should
be
guided
by
the
principles
of
social
justice
3. Decisions
should
be
made
through
dialogue
and
consensus,
and
must
reflect
the
principle
of
proportionality
4. Public
decisions
about
public
funds
should
take
into
account
the
interests
of
future
generations
as
well
as
present
ones.
5. The
State
should
encourage,
protect
and
respect
the
independence
of
non-governmental
organisations
whose
activities
further
the
principles
of
the
Constitution
and
act
as
autonomous
checks
to
State
power.
6. State
actions
must
be
environmentally
sound
and
sustainable,
equitable
and
inclusive
and
must
promote
gender
equality
and
inclusivity.
7. The
State
must
respect
peoples
direct
participation
in
national
affairs
and
ensure
consultation
at
all
levels
of
social,
political
and
economic
decision-making.
3
|
P a g e
Context
approach1
Fiji
is
a
multicultural
society,
where
national
unity
must
move
away
from
racial
or
communal
approaches.
No
ethnic
or
religious
community
is
homogenous
or
united
on
economic,
social
or
political
issues,
however
among
the
people
of
all
communities
there
is
a
desire
for
friendship
and
cooperation
across
ethnic
barriers.
Differences
of
interests
and
attitudes
within
each
community
make
it
unfair
to
impose
a
single
paradigm
upon
whole
communities.
Laws
and
conventions
should
give
individuals
or
groups
the
flexibility
to
decide
how
they
want
to
organise
their
lives.
Although
the
CCF
rejects
racial
approaches
it
recognizes
the
need
for
inter-
ethnic
equity.
Priority
is
placed
on
social
justice
and
support
for
policies
that
would
bring
about
better
re-distribution
of
resources,
incomes
and
opportunities,
proportionate
to
demographic
contextual
change.
The
need
for
each
community
to
be
confident
that
its
vital
interests
are
secure
and
however
particularistic
should
be
protected
in
a
way
that
it
does
not
bring
disadvantage
to
other
communities
or
compromise
national
welfare
and
progress.
Fairer
electoral
system,
without
racial
distinctions.
Principle
of
shared
governance
to
be
the
mandate
for
the
government,
whereby
institutions
must
learn
and
observe
consensual
ways
of
decision-making,
democracy
and
public
accountability.
Equally,
we
must
ensure
that
human
rights
principles
and
practices
inform
policies
and
actions
of
all
public
bodies.
There
must
be
effective
protection
and
advancement
of
human
rights,
notably
those
of
women,
children,
sexual
minorities
and
persons
with
special
disabilities.
Tolerance,
sustainable
democratic
values
and
practices,
and
fairness
must
be
observed
by
all
social
and
private
organizations.
1
CCF:
One
Nation
Diverse
Peoples
1995
(p.8-12)
4
|
P a g e
A.
Electoral
System
In
considering
these
issues,
the
CCF
bore
in
mind
international
human
rights
standards
and
in
particular
Article
21
of
the
Universal
Declaration
of
Human
Rights:
i) Everyone
has
the
right
to
take
part
in
the
government
of
his
country,
directly
or
through
freely
chosen
representatives.
ii) Everyone
has
the
right
to
equal
access
to
public
service
in
his
country
iii) The
will
of
the
people
shall
be
the
basis
of
the
authority
of
government;
this
will
shall
be
expressed
in
periodic
and
genuine
elections
which
shall
be
by
universal
and
equal
suffrage
and
shall
be
held
by
secret
vote
of
by
equivalent
free
voting
procedures.
5
|
P a g e
A1.
Ethnicity
and
the
Electoral
System
In
the
view
of
the
CCF,
neither
of
the
electoral
systems
established
by
the
1970,
1990,
1997
constitution
is
suitable
for
Fiji
at
the
present
time.
Both
electoral
systems
divided
rather
than
unite
the
people
of
Fiji
and
do
not
encourage
them
to
work
together
for
the
national
interest.
Mutual
respect
requires
an
acceptance
of
the
basic
equality
of
all
Fijians,
no
matter
what
their
ethnic
group.
Recommendation:
That
the
new
Constitution
establishes
an
electoral
system
that
is
inclusive
and
equitable
in
its
application
to
Fijis
diverse
communities.
6
|
P a g e
A2.
The
Choice
of
Electoral
System
The
new
electoral
system
must
suit
and
consider
the
demographics
of
this
nation
and
must
also
do
justice
to
the
history
of
this
nation
and
its
people.
CCF
is
aware
of
fears
of
some,
that
voting
together
as
a
nation
will
somehow
harm
the
interests
of
their
particular
ethnic
group,
hence
recommendation
of
a
proportional
representation,
which
by
its
very
nature,
assures
proper
representation
for
any
group
of
reasonable
size.
With
that
in
mind,
we
recommend
below
the
adoption
of
a
suitable
system
of
mixed
member
proportional
system
(MMP)
which
is
a
form
of
proportional
representation
system
and
by
its
very
nature
assures
proper
representation
for
any
group
to
be
represented
in
Parliament.
Recommendation:
That
the
new
Constitution
adopts
a
suitable
form
of
proportional
representation
chosen
with
the
particular
circumstance
of
Fiji
in
mind
preferably
an
Open-List
system.
7
|
P a g e
A3.
The
Right
to
Vote
Recommendation:
The
voting
age
to
be
lowered
to
18
based
on
Universal
Suffrage
It
is
only
fair
that
youths
be
allowed
the
right
and
responsibility
of
political
choice
as
well.
Youths
make
up
42.3%
of
Fijis
population
and
contribute
to
the
overall
national
effort
in
many
ways.
8
|
P a g e
A4.
Equality
of
Voting
Rights
Equal
suffrage
no
one
persons
vote
is
worth
more
than
anothers
No
ethnic
or
other
group
will
be
predefined
as
entitled
to
more
seats
per
ratio
of
its
population
than
another.
Recommendation:
Constituencies
and
the
number
of
seats
per
constituency
be
so
defined
that
the
ratio
of
electors
to
seat
is,
as
nearly
as
practicable,
equal
throughout
the
country.
An
independent
Electoral
Commission
should
make
initial
determinations
and
changes
to
allow
for
shifts
in
population
numbers.
9
|
P a g e
A5.
Equal
Access
to
Public
Positions
Fears
and
concerns
that
resulted
in
a
racially
based
electoral
system
have
influenced
the
constitutional
rule
and
practices
for
appointment
to
other
positions
as
well.
Therefore,
these
rules
and
practices
should
be
abandoned.
Specifically:
o The
office
of
the
President
should
be
an
elected
office
o Presidency
to
be
open
to
all
citizens
of
Fiji
o All
public
positions,
including
that
of
the
PM
should
be
open
to
Fiji
citizens.
Subject
to
affirmative
action,
there
should
be
no
bias
in
admitting
people
to
the
public
service
or
appointing
them
to
any
public
office.
Merit
should
be
the
basis
for
appointment
and
promotion
Recommendation:
The
new
Constitution
should
allow
equal
access
to
all
public
positions
by
citizens
of
Fiji,
irrespective
of
their
ethnicity,
gender,
sexual
orientation
and
physical
disability.
CCF
submits
also
that
there
should
be
a
set
of
criteria
of
eligibility
for
candidates
for
all
public
position
including
candidacy
for
elections.
10
|
P a g e
A6.
Administration
of
Electoral
Laws
Recommendation:
i)
That
an
Independent
Electoral
Commission
should:
Draw
the
initial
electoral
boundaries
on
the
basis
of
accepted
principles;
Determine
and
implement
future
boundary
changes,
with
appropriate
consultation;
Conduct
and
monitor
elections;
Design
and
carry
out
educational
programs
on
electoral
matters;
Ensure
that
political
parties
select
their
candidates
democratically
including
fair
representation
of
gender,
youth,
and
certain
groups
which
may
be
relatively
under-represented.
At
the
same
time,
legislation
should
require
the
parties
to
be
more
open,
transparent
and
accountable
to
their
membership.
Be
independent,
transparent
and
accountable
to
the
State/people.
That
political
parties
which
intend
to
nominate
candidates
for
elections
must
register
with
the
Independent
Electoral
Commission
and
must
satisfy
the
Commission
that:
a) They
hold
annual
meetings;
b) They
conduct
periodic
elections;
c) They
file
annual
returns
and
accounts
disclosing
their
sources
of
finance;
d) Their
membership
must
be
open,
inclusive
and
reflects
the
diversity
of
Fijis
population;
e) They
promote
the
overall
aims
of
national
unity
and
integration;
iii)
The
Commission
itself
must
also
be
appropriately
accountable.
ii)
11
|
P a g e
B.
Judiciary
The
Judiciary
is
part
of
the
Constitutional
system
of
checks
and
balances.
Ensure
liberty
of
individuals
and
groups,
public
bodies
do
not
exceed
their
powers
and
that
they
exercise
these
powers
reasonably
and
fairly.
The
loyalty
of
the
courts
is
to
the
Constitution
Judiciary
must
be
independent
to
determine
all
legal
and
constitutional
questions
Competent
judiciary
is
necessary
All
judges
and
magistrates
(except
Chief
Justice)
should
be
appointed
by
an
independent
Judicial
and
Legal
Services
Commission
which
should
consist
of:
a. Chief
Justice
b. Speaker
of
Parliament
c. Ombudsman
d. Respective
legal
profession
e. Chairperson
of
the
Public
Service
Commission
No
judge
or
magistrate
should
be
dismissed
except
for
inability
to
perform
his
or
her
functions
or
for
gross
misconduct,
after
an
enquiry
by
an
independent
tribunal
presided
over
by
a
judge
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
or
the
Supreme
Court.
Courts
should
have
enough
resources,
including
well-stocked
library,
translation
services
and
access
to
electronic
database
and
supplementary
staff.
Access
to
courts,
especially
to
redress
grievances
against
the
State
should
be
easy
and
inexpensive,
if
necessary
through
the
provision
of
state
aided
legal
assistance,
particularly
for
the
disadvantaged.
The
fair
and
impartial
administration
of
justice
also
requires
that
there
should
be
an
independent
prosecutorial
service,
headed
by
a
Director
of
Public
Prosecutions
who
would
be
appointed
by
the
Judicial
and
Legal
Services
Commission.
The
same
Commission
should
also
appoint
the
professional
staff
of
the
Directors
office.
12
|
P a g e
Recommendation:
A
range
of
measures
to
secure
and
preserve
the
independence
of
the
judiciary
of
Fiji
as
prescribed
under
the
Bangalore
and
Beijing
Principles,
including:
Minimum
qualifications
for
the
appointment
of
judges
and
magistrates;
Independent
appointment
procedures;
Protection
of
the
tenure
and
remuneration
of
judges;
Adequate
court
resources;
Public
access
to
the
court
system;
An
independent
and
strong
prosecutorial
system;
An
independent
and
strong
public
defence
system
(legal
aid
commission)
to
balance
the
scale
of
justice
An
independent
legal
services
commission
Acceptance
of
the
principle
that
decisions
of
all
public
bodies
are
subject
to
review
by
the
courts.
13
|
P a g e
C.
Human
Rights
C1.
International
Human
Rights
Conventions
Improve
machinery
for
the
protection
and
promotion
of
human
rights.
There
should
be
a
re-establishment
of
a
Human
Rights
Commission,
which
should
be
located
in
a
strengthened
Office
of
the
Ombudsperson
and
resourced
adequately
with
special
responsibility
to
monitor,
enforce
and
promote
rights
and
have
extensive
powers
of
investigation.
Fijis
obligation
to
the
ratified
and
signed
conventions.
At
most
to
aspire
to
sign
off
on
all
human
rights
conventions
of
the
UN.
Include
and/or
expand
the
definition
to
include
the
principles
of
Equality
Laws
and
the
Non-Discrimination
laws
which
handle
the
issues
of
affirmative
action
and
protection
of
rights
in
a
very
substantive
and
considered
manner.
C2.
Affirmative
Action
The
main
principle
underpinning
the
establishment
of
the
UN
is
equality
of
all
people.
Everyone
is
equal
and
there
cannot
be
unfair
discrimination
on
any
ethnic
or
racial
ground
imposed
on
anyone
by
the
State.
It
is
the
States
duty
under
international
law
to
ensure
everyone
in
its
territory
is
treated
the
same
as
everyone
else.
Recommendation
Affirmative
actions:
o should
be
based
on
need
and
not
ethnicity
o should
be
based
on
the
principles
of
equality.
[Annexed
hereto
and
marked
as
Annexure
A
is
the
Declaration
of
Principles
of
Equality].
o consideration
being
made
to
Fijis
obligation
to
the
ratified
and
signed
conventions.
At
most
to
aspire
to
sign
off
on
all
the
conventions.
o to
expand
the
definition
to
include
the
principles
of
the
Equality
Laws
and
the
Non-Discrimination
laws
which
handle
the
issues
of
affirmative
action
and
protection
of
rights
in
a
very
substantive
and
considered
manner.
14
|
P a g e
C3.
Bill
of
Rights
for
Fiji
Recommendation:
That
the
following
guidelines
for
the
structure
of
a
new
constitutional
Bill
of
Rights
for
Fiji:
o It
should
be
comprehensive
(extending,
for
example,
to
discrimination
against
women;
access
to
government
information;
the
application
of
the
rules
of
natural
justice
and
fair
administration)
o It
should
be
written
in
simple
language
and
translated
into
the
official
languages
of
the
country.
o There
should
be
strict
limitations
on
authorised
restriction
of
rights,
including
during
a
state
of
emergency.
o Some
guidance
should
be
given
on
the
interpretation
of
the
Bill
of
Rights.
For
example,
this
should
place
the
burden
of
justifying
restrictions
on
those
who
wish
to
rely
on
them.
o There
should
be
a
right
of
access
to
the
courts
to
enforce
rights
and
provide
effective
and
efficient
remedies
o Recognise
the
various/diverse
religious
and
belief
systems
so
long
as
it
does
not
impinge
on
the
rights
of
others.
The
Constitution
must
consider
and
incorporate:
o relevant
conventions
that
have
been
ratified
and
signed
by
Fiji
o make
allowances
to
the
other
international
Conventions
as
well
o
expand
the
Bill
of
rights
to
have
provisions
which
address
Freedom
of
Information
and
the
principles
of
the
International
Covenant
on
Economic
Social
&
Cultural
Rights
(ICESCR).
15
|
P a g e
D.
Public
Accountability
Recommendation
A
range
of
measures
to
enhance
accountability,
these
include:
Establishment
of
a
Leadership
Code
or
a
Code
of
Ethics
to
prevent
abuse
of
power,
to
avoid
conflict
of
interests
and
to
maintain
the
dignity
of
public
officers
including
Parliamentarians
and
Senators.
The
provisions
of
the
Code
should
be
binding
on
holders
of
political
offices
and
senior
administrators
and
applied
even
if
they
have
left
office;
Establishment
of
an
independent
constitutional
office
or
Commission
to
appoint,
terminate
or
discipline
public
officials
responsible
for
ensuring
accountability
such
as
the
Ombudsman
and
members
of
the
Ombudspersons
Commission,
the
Auditor
General,
the
Directory
of
Public
Prosecutions,
the
Public
Service
Commission,
the
Judicial
Review
Commission,
the
Commissioner
of
Police,
the
Police
Services
Commission,
the
Public
Trustee
and
the
Head
of
the
Reserve
Bank,
the
Commander
of
the
Military
and
other
senior
public
office
holders.
The
Commission
would
comprise
the
Prime
Minister,
the
Leader
of
the
Opposition,
the
Chief
Justice,
the
Speaker
of
the
House
of
Representatives,
and
the
Ombudsperson
(except
when
dealing
with
the
Ombudspersons
own
appointment);
Ensuring
that
the
system
for
appointment,
promotion,
and
appeal
against
the
promotion
of
all
other
public-office
holders
is
transparent;
Ensuring
that
offices
responsible
for
public
accountability
have
empowering
legislation
and
adequate
resources
to
be
effective;
Members
of
the
Parliament
and
government
should
be
elected
regularly,
i.e.
every
four
years.
It
should
be
possible
to
recall
a
parliamentarian
after
a
year
in
office
through
a
petition
by
one
third
of
an
electorate;
Enactment
of
freedom
of
information
legislation,
to
provide
public
access
to
information
on
government
decision-making
and
the
implementation
of
government
policies;
It
should
be
possible
to
indict
any
public
office
holder
including
the
highest
office-bearers
in
the
country;
There
should
be
a
clearly
stated
list
of
penalties
for
breaches
of
public
trust
by
public-office
holders.
These
should
be
enforced
in
conjunction
with
liability
to
prosecution
under
criminal
law
and
should
entail
the
confiscation
of
illegally
acquired
assets
and
proceeds.
16
|
P a g e
Office
of
Ombudsman
to
have
extensive
powers
of
investigation
over
the
legislature
and
executive.
17
|
P a g e
E.
The
Fiji
Military
Forces
Recommendation
The
military
to
be
bound
by
the
sovereignty
of
our
constitution
and
accountable
to
civilian
institutions
such
as
the
legislature;
The
size
of
the
military
should
be
of
a
scale
appropriate
to
Fijis
national
security
requirements;
The
recruitment
and
appointment
of
military
personnel
must
be
based
on
merit;
Immunity
clause
for
coup
perpetrators
should
be
revoked
Need
to
review:
i) the
role
of,
size,
membership
of
the
military
ii) roles
of
the
security
forces
including
the
Navy,
Military,
Police
and
Correction
services
be
redefined.
iii) Laws
that
give
these
bodies
arbitrary
powers
should
be
reviewed.
18
|
P a g e
F.
Fiji
Police
Force
Recommendation
The
role
and
responsibility
of
the
Police
is
to
maintain
law
and
order;
There
must
be
a
clear
separation
of
duties
and
responsibilities
of
the
Police
and
the
Military.
National
security
is
the
role
of
the
Police
and
the
Military
must
only
become
involved
through
a
defined
constitutional
process.
19
|
P a g e
G.
Civil
Society
Capacity
of
civic,
popular
and
non-governmental
organizations
to
promote
and
protect
rights
and
democracy
and
facilitate
inter
ethnic
understanding
and
cooperation
must
be
recognized
and
strengthened.
Independent
from
state
structures
Its
independence
from
State
structures
must
be
protected
and
guaranteed.
Must
be
transparent
and
accountable.
Recommendation
That
the
new
Constitution
recognise
the
role
of
non-governmental
organisations
in
civil
society
as
a
principle
means
of
allowing
the
people
to
pursue
and
protect
popular
social
reforms.
It
must
mandate
the
State
to
respect
their
independence
as
autonomous
checks
to
state
power.
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|
P a g e
H.
Environment
Constitution
to
include
a
section
which
clearly,
thoroughly,
and
irrevocably
establish
and
declare
a
nuclear
free
Fiji.
First
and
foremost,
all
development
policies
must
address
questions
of
environmental
protection
and
sustainability.
The
Government
must
be
required
to
make
public
in
a
timely
manner
all
reports
on
environmental
assessments
and
safeguards
when
proposing
any
development
policy
Recommendation
Need
to
review:
i) expand
the
issues
to
include
climate
change,
sustainable,
equitable
and
responsible
use
of
resources.
ii) adopt
Rio+20
recommendations
and
iii) must
be
aligned
to
MDG
goals
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|
P a g e
I.
Additional
Categories
Recommendation
Fijians
as
national
identity
for
all
citizens
of
this
country
Principles
of
good
governance
such
as
an
independent
&
participatory
approach
be
applied
throughout
the
process
(no
military
influence)
The
make-up
of
the
Assembly
should
be
inclusive
of
diverse
groups
irrespective
of
ethnicity,
gender,
sexual
and
physical
orientation
and
or
status
Deliberation
of
the
Assembly
should
be
open
to
public
scrutiny
Category
Citizenship
Constituent
Assembly
Size
of
Constituencies
CCF
wishes
to
submit
that
the
size
of
constituencies
be
reduced
to
5.
i.e.
Central,
Northern,
Western,
Eastern,
International
diaspora.
Should
not
have
any
part
to
play
in
the
politics
of
the
land
but
may
be
given
social,
economic
advisory
or
provincial
development
management
role.
If
given
a
national
advisory
role,
the
GCC
must
take
into
consideration
the
needs,
and
welfare
of
Fijis
diverse
population
and
not
just
one
ethnic
group
where
citizens
can
come
to
for
redress.
It
must
also
be
open
to
discussion
during
the
Constitution
Development
Process
by
the
people.
Should
therefore
be
revamped
to
cover
indigenous
governing
structure
Support
principles
of
Constitution,
democracy
and
the
rule
of
law
in
Fiji
based
on
Milbrook
Commonwealth
Action
Programme
on
the
Harare
Declaration
(1995).
Military
independent
process
led
by
suitable
civilian
administration
for
return
to
democracy.
Role
of
Great
Council
of
Chiefs
(Bose
Levu
Vakaturaga)
Interim
Administration
Type
of
Government
(Westminster)
The
CCF
submits
that
we
continue
to
adopt
the
basic
Westminster
system
since
it
provides
an
Opposition
which
provides
some
checks
and
balance
to
the
22
|
P a g e
government
of
the
day
with
the
Senate
and
President
to
be
elected.
It
is
further
submitted
that
the
size
of
the
House
of
Representatives
be
reduced
to
51
seats
and
the
Senate
to
be
reduced
to
approximately
25.
It
is
further
submitted
that
an
enabling
mechanism
be
established
after
the
new
Constitution
is
adopted
to
take
Fiji
to
the
general
elections,
that
is
a
caretaker
administration
be
appointed
to
allow
this
transition.
Security
Forces
FICAC
Dissolution
of
Parliament
Constitutional
Review
1997
Constitution
There
must
be
a
clear
delineation
of
roles
between
the
Military,
Police,
Navy,
and
Corrections
Services.
The
Commission
must
be
ensured
to
be
independent
of
the
legislature,
executive
and
judiciary
and
must
not
be
subject
to
influence
by
any
outside
party.
Whenever
the
circumstances
arise,
the
only
authority
to
declare
dissolution
of
Parliament
would
be
the
President
and
also
to
appoint
a
caretaker
administration
in
the
absence
of
a
Parliament.
CCF
acknowledges
that
the
Constitution
will
be
a
living
document
and
to
this
end
expects
that
the
provision
for
review
of
the
new
constitution
should
be
for
all
provisions
and
articles
of
the
document
should
be
open
for
review
through
a
democratic
process
subject
to
the
context
and
the
voice
of
the
people
of
Fiji.
CCF
submits
that
some
part
of
the
1997
Constitution
which
are
progressive
for
Fiji
should
be
adopted
and
carried
forward
in
the
new
constitution.
Further
in
this
regard
CCF
submits
that
the
issue
of
the
abrogation
of
the
1997
Constitution
will
be
an
issue
of
legal
challenge
and
that
the
constitution
commission
and
the
final
document
must
address
this
by
finding
some
provision
for
legal
coherence
between
the
1997
document
and
the
new
constitution.
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P a g e
ANNEXURE
A
24
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P a g e