Hon RT Naiqama Lalabalavu - Decision Adopted Unanimously by The IPU Governing Council at Its 198th Session - 23 March 2016
Hon RT Naiqama Lalabalavu - Decision Adopted Unanimously by The IPU Governing Council at Its 198th Session - 23 March 2016
Hon RT Naiqama Lalabalavu - Decision Adopted Unanimously by The IPU Governing Council at Its 198th Session - 23 March 2016
On 14 May 2015, the Social Democratic Liberal Party (SODELPA) held a public
constituency meeting in Makoi. At the meeting, Mr. Lalabalavu allegedly made
scurrilous and derogatory remarks in the iTaukei language about the Speaker of
Parliament. Communications Fiji Limited, a news media organization, first
covered the story and made audio recordings of the alleged incident;
Following the constituency meeting, a matter of privilege was raised with the
Speaker pursuant to Standing Order 134(1) on 18 May 2015. The Attorney
General and Minister for Finance, Public Enterprises, Public Service and
Communications moved a motion on the matter. The Speaker put the question
to parliament for a vote. The motion was passed and the matter was
subsequently referred to the Privileges Committee, which was given three days
to report back on the matter to parliament. The Committees proceedings, unlike
those of the standing committees, were reportedly subsequently held in camera;
On 19 May 2015, the Privileges Committee met briefly and called three of the
ten witnesses on the list. The first two witnesses were from Communications Fiji
Limited. The third witness was Mr. Lalabalavu. After concluding examination of
the third witness, the Committee decided that it had sufficient evidence before it
to deliberate and decided not to call the other witnesses. The Committees
Secretariat was requested to collate precedents from Fiji and other relevant
jurisdictions to enable the Committee to consider the available options,
including possible sanctions in the event the breach was substantiated;
On 20 May 2015, the Committee met briefly to consider: (i) whether there was
any breach and, if so, the severity; (ii) the available sanctions and appropriate
sanction or penalty that should be recommended to parliament. The Committee,
after deliberating at length, was not able to reach a consensus and resolved
unanimously to make written submissions, which would be consolidated as the
findings of the Committee. Opposition members reiterated that they had
participated in the proceedings under protest: (i) because the Hon. Attorney
General was part of the committee (notwithstanding the Speakers ruling on the
matter); and (ii) because of the Speakers ruling (morning of 20 May 2015)
regarding the matter of privilege raised by Mr. Draunidalo;
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On 21 May 2015, the Committee finalized and endorsed the report in which the majority
held the following:
The report of the Privileges Committee contains a separate chapter with the views of its
members belonging to the opposition, who held the following:
On the morning of 20 May 2015, the Speaker made a Ruling on Privilege in which
she ruled that all matters of privilege were confined to the parliamentary precinct and
this did not include the members constituency visits;
The standard of proof of beyond reasonable doubt required for charges carrying
penalties like breaches of parliamentary privilege was not met in the case at hand;
The quality and state of the recording raises doubts about its accuracy and/or veracity;
it should therefore have been subjected to expert, forensic scrutiny;
The recording was made by Communications Fiji Limited and has not been made
public;
There were many questions during the constituency meeting about the Speaker,
and Mr. Lalabalavu responded to placate the mood towards her from the audience.
His remarks were therefore words of wise counsel of restraint and forbearance and
understanding from a paramount chief;
The opposition members concluded that there had been no breach of privilege and
that, due to the lack of consensus in the Committee, the House needed to hear the
recording in question and read the minutes and verbatim of the Committees
proceedings to pass judgement in their deliberations on the motion fairly;
If the House were to find a breach, the opposition members noted that the usual
practice would be to ask the member to withdraw his/her comments, which would
be the end of the matter. Standing Orders 75 and 76 contain the penalties that are
available to members to deal with breaches of privilege;
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(2)
(3)
The Speaker may order any member whose conduct is highly disorderly or
repeatedly violates the Standing Orders to withdraw immediately from Parliament
or a period of time that the Speaker decides, being no more than the remainder of
that sitting day.
A member ordered to withdraw before or during questions for oral answer may not
return to the Chamber to ask or answer a question and no other member may ask
a question on that member's behalf.
Any member ordered to withdraw from Parliament may not enter the Chamber and
may not vote on any question put during the period of his or her withdrawal.
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
The Speaker may name any member whose conduct is grossly disorderly and call
on Parliament to judge the conduct of the member by immediately putting the
question "That [member] be suspended from the service of Parliament". There is
no amendment or debate on the question.
If the naming occurs while Parliament is in committee, the committee must first
resolve itself into Parliament before the question is put.
If the majority of all members vote in favour, the member is suspended,
(a)
On the first occasion, for three days (excluding the day of suspension);
(b)
On the second occasion during the same session, for seven days (excluding
the day of suspension); or
(c)
On the third or any subsequent occasion during the same session, for
28 days (excluding the day of suspension).
A member who is suspended who refuses to obey a direction of the Speaker to
leave the Chamber is, without any further question being put, suspended from the
service of Parliament for the remainder of the calendar year.
The fact that a member has been suspended under clause (3) or (4) does not
prevent Parliament from also holding the member's conduct to be in contempt.
Considering, finally, that the complainants affirm that the exaggerated suspension imposed on
Mr. Lalabalavu is the culmination of a long-running effort to silence indigenous voices in parliament and to
leave it to the non-indigenous minority to run the country, which allegation the authorities fully deny,
1.
Thanks the Fijian delegation and parliamentary authorities for their cooperation and the
extensive information they provided;
2.
Unequivocally denounces gender slander; and recognizes that Mr. Lalabalavu may have
used words that were offensive and degrading and therefore totally unacceptable;
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3.
Considers nevertheless that the decision by parliament to suspend him for two years for
remarks made outside of parliament at a local party meeting is both inappropriate, also in
the absence of a clearly legal basis for the two-year suspension, and wholly
disproportionate, as it not only deprives him of his right to exercise his parliamentary
mandate, but also deprives his electorate from representation in parliament for a period
covering half the term of parliament; considers also in this regard that alternative, regular
legal avenues could have been pursued instead to obtain redress for the slander or libel
in the case at hand;
Sincerely hopes therefore, all the more so given that Mr. Lalabalavu has already been
excluded from parliament for 10 months, that his suspension will soon be lifted, either
through a new decision by parliament, or as a result of the outcome of the pending
constitutional challenge; eagerly awaits to receive feedback on this prospect;
5.
Requests the Secretary General to convey this decision to the competent authorities, the
complainant and any third party likely to be in a position to supply relevant information;
6.
Requests the Committee to continue examining this case and to report back to it in due
course.