#header-inner img {margin: 0 auto !important; #header-inner {text-align: Center ;} Coupfourpointfive: What happens when a country loses its 'birth certificate?'

NEWS WORTHY COMMENTS BY YOU!

Few weeks ago Coup 4.5 reported the saga between Fiji One's Satish Narayan and Bainimarama's daughter. Yesterday June 17, 2013 Satish Narayan received his walking papers from Fiji One.

It is understood that Bainimarama called a board member of Fiji One, Padam Lala and told him if Fiji One wants their License in tact, they will have to sack Satish Narayan.

Padam Lala instructed Tarun Patel to sack Satish Narayan immediately, If Patel wanted to keep his job.

The employees of FBC were told of the firing of Narayan way before the employees of Fiji One were made aware of.

Lets hope that Fiji One will not find themselves as part of the FBC in near future.
on Burrow: ITUC will push for Commission of Inquiry on Fiji

@2:36 what illegal AG go underground sorry!!! too late.Mr Illegal AG your file is within the military Intel not with Rokoura(PM's office) whom you paid to hide and destroyed files against you that went straight to PM.

Anything against you that son of Neel sharma in HR RFMF rings the bell to Aziz, then you meant to let the complaint follow the channel where you intercept all files against you at PM's office thru Rokoura who hide and destroyed them and you know what he forges PM's singnature on some files and put a [FA]File Away notice on it.

These meant all complaints against you gather dust at Rokoura's residence or he destroyed it completely.

Your private deals with Ports,AFL,TFL,IF etc all filed and kept not there in Fiji its overseas mate !!!

Khaiyum you are comfortable becoz all complaints against you had been filed away by this man Rokoura,not now Mr illegal want to be smart you are exposed to the root!!!

he too one of those used taukei(bought)by you so you can loot as much as you on Burrow: ITUC will push for Commission of Inquiry on Fiji


Editor, we learn from a Fiji Times report that Minister for Housing, Environment, Local Government and Urban Development Colonel Samuela Saumatua has resigned "for personal reasons" according to a statement issued by the Ministry of Information yesterday (FT 18/6).

Be that as it may, my question is why should the Attorney-general Aiyaz Saiyad-Khaiyum "assume the position om an acting basis until a successor was appointed"?

Is Mr Khaiyum the only capable man in the illegal military regime in Fiji? Doesn't he have enough portfolios already?

What would this new addition take the total number of portfolio being handled by this Fiji superman? sincerely, rajend naidu sydney on Burrow: ITUC will push for Commission of Inquiry on Fiji


Tuesday, October 19, 2010

What happens when a country loses its 'birth certificate?'

BBC:Fiji has admitted to losing the legal document confirming its independence from the United Kingdom. But does that threaten its existence as a state?

About a million people visit Washington DC's National Archives Experience each year, many wanting a glimpse of its prized exhibit - the American Declaration of Independence. Dating from 1776, the parchment document is stored behind bullet-proof glass, in a guarded, humidity-controlled cabinet, to ensure its preservation for future generations.

However, as Fiji celebrated the 40th anniversary of winning independence from the UK, its government admitted it had lost the legal Independence Order presented to ministers by Prince Charles in 1970.

And after five years of scouring files in government departments, it was forced to take the embarrassing step of asking its former colonial masters for a photocopy. 

But when a country loses such a document, does the right to independence go with it? Almost certainly not, according to Catherine Redgwell, professor of international law at University College London.

"If it's recognised as a state and fully participates in the international community, the loss of documents isn't going to affect its existence [as an independent state]."
The UK Parliament's Fiji Independence Act 1970 granted that to the Pacific nation, made up of 800-plus volcanic and coral islands.

"On and after 10 October 1970 Her Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom shall have no responsibility for the government of Fiji," it read, before spelling out the nation's free powers to make laws.

Independence papers, meanwhile, are largely symbolic items. In the same way that losing your birth certificate does not mean you cease to exist, the legitimacy of a state does not rest on a piece of paper, agrees Prof Roda Mushkat.

Neither should its loss affect a state's constitution, says the international law expert from Brunel University, west London.

"I cannot foresee any case where somebody would argue on the basis of constitutional law that Fiji is not an independent state," she says.

Thankfully for Fiji - and any other states which mislay a vital document - copies of many can, in any case, be found at the UK's National Archives at Kew.

All are stored in repositories with controlled temperature and humidity, while some are stored in a safe room. One recent beneficiary of this was research student Julia Gaffield, from Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. In April, she came across Haiti's declaration of independence from France within the National Archives' colonial correspondence relating to Jamaica.

The second-oldest such document in the world, it was attached to a letter sent on 25 January 1804 by Edward Corbet, HM Agent for British Affairs, to Sir George Nugent, Lieutenant-Governor of Jamaica. While several reprints had been made, researchers had spent years trying to find the original.

Given that Haiti has existed as an independent state for more than 200 years, that tale might give the residents of Fiji a little peace of mind.

Picture: Haiti's declaration of independence was found by a student in the National Archives at Kew.

4 comments:

mark manning said...

Does the loss of that Document make Frank Bainimarama, a bastard ?

Jake said...

Nah, he is already a bustard.

Tiger Balm said...

Shows how responsible Fiji's leaders are! I say yep take Fiji back under your control Britain, because Fiji hasn't showed at all that it can move forward! Nuppties!

Anonymous said...

I wonder if any of you are real fijians who have actually lived in a realy fijian village as a fijian, know your village status and can actually welcome guest in the real fijian way, if they were to visit you.

Its so easy, to sit behind a computer and type things up to make one feel good, maybe because they've got depression. Or maybe they just dont have anything constructive for once to say.

You're talking about a community, a race thats no different to yours in many ways.