The National Democratic Party (NDP) was a Fijian political party formed in the early 1960s through a merger of Apisai Tora 's Western Democratic Party with Isikeli Nadalo 's Fijian National Party . It drew its support mainly from indigenous Fijians in the Province of Ba and other Western regions, who were uneasy about potential domination by powerful chiefs from Eastern Fiji. It subsequently merged with the Federation Party , which was supported almost entirely by Indo-Fijians , to form the National Federation Party (NFP).
72-660: The National Federation Party ( Fiji Hindi : नेशनल फेडरेशन पार्टी; Fijian : Mataisoqosoqo ni National Federation ) is a Fijian political party founded by A. D. Patel in November 1968, as a merger of the Federation Party and the National Democratic Party . Though it claims to represent all Fiji Islanders, it is supported, in practice, almost exclusively by Indo-Fijians whose ancestors had come to Fiji between 1879 and 1916, mostly as indentured labourers. However, in
144-629: A coalition government with the People's Alliance and the Social Democratic Liberal Party (SODELPA) , and elect Sitiveni Rabuka as Prime Minister, ending 16 years of the Bainimarama Prime Ministership. Its leader, Biman Prasad, was subsequently named Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Finance , Strategic Planning, National Development and Statistics. Tikoduadua was given the role of Minister of Home Affairs, while Qereqeretabua
216-656: A compromise between the Fijian and European delegates on one side and the Indians on the other; nine of the 36 seats on the Legislative Council would be elected by universal suffrage , but allocated by ethnicity, divided equally among Fijians , Indians , and general electors (which consist of Caucasians, Chinese , and other minorities). The Legislative Council was enlarged to 36 members, consisting of 14 Fijians (9 elected on communal roll, 3 on cross-voting roll and two nominated by
288-590: A distinguished political and chiefly family, was elected President of the party. Three NFP candidates, including Prasad and Draunidalo, were returned in the 2014 elections , the first since the 2006 coup. Prasad was the NFP Leader in Parliament and Shadow Minister for Economy from 2014 to 2022. In June 2016, Draunidalo made remarks against the Fijian Minister for Education, Mahendra Reddy asking him if he thought
360-592: A former Alliance member moved a motion calling for the repatriation of people of Indian origin back to India, Koya was not happy with the measured response of the Alliance Government and accused it of "having elements which wanted to do legally what the Fijian Nationalist Party Leader, Sakeasi Butadroka , was trying to do illegally." Thirdly, the Prime Minister rejected the recommendations of
432-604: A fruit is fal instead of phal ) and between / d͡ʒ / and / z / (in Fiji Hindi land is jameen instead of zameen ). The consonant / n / is used in Fiji Hindi for the nasal sounds / ŋ / , / ɲ / and / ɳ / in Standard Hindi. These features are common in the Eastern Hindi dialects. Some other characteristics of Fiji Hindi which is similar to Bhojpuri and Awadhi are: In Fiji Hindi verb forms have been influenced by
504-414: A little-known small businessman. The NFP Youth Wing had the support of the former Flower faction and also claimed Reddy's support. For his part, Reddy did not openly campaign for either candidate. During the campaign, Koya turned the election into a referendum on himself, and threatened to resign if Rakkha lost. The result was a win for Singh by a narrow margin but Koya did not go ahead with his threat. With
576-573: A mixed language; there are many different dialects amongst the Indian population, and of course much intercourse with the Fijians. The children pick up a little of each language, and do not know which is the one originally spoken by their parents. Other writers, including Burton (1914) and Lenwood (1917), made similar observations. By the late 1920s all Fiji Indian children born in Fiji learned Fiji Hindi, which became
648-584: A number of Hindi dialects in India. First and second person forms of verbs in Fiji Hindi are the same. There is no gender distinction and number distinction is only in the third person past tense. Although, gender is used in third person past tense by the usage of "raha" for a male versus "rahi" for a female. The use of the first and second person imperfective suffixes -taa , -at are of Awadhi origin. Example: तुम मन्दिर जाता हैं / तुम मन्दिर जात हैं। "tum Mandir jaata hai/tum Mandir jaat hai." (You are going to
720-414: A particular ethnic group) and a further 10 representing National constituencies (distributed by ethnicity but elected by universal suffrage ) in the 52 member House of Representatives . A further 8 seats would be reserved for General electors (Europeans, Chinese, and other minorities); 3 of these would be "communal" and 5 "national." With the leaders of both major ethnic groups working together for
792-580: A preference deal with its one-time ally, the Fiji Labour Party, also worked against it. (At the time, Fiji had a system of preferential voting , similar to Australia's). There were subsequently signs of a modest revival of fortunes for the NFP. Municipal elections in October 2003, for which the party formed an electoral coalition with Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase 's Soqosoqo Duavata ni Lewenivanua (SDL), gave
SECTION 10
#1732848868408864-610: A statement of the party's objections to the bill in English, Fijian , and Hindustani to all schools, other organisations, and islands in Fiji. Naidu said the party was opposed not only to the amnesty provisions of the legislation, but also to its compensation provisions, saying that the taxpayer should not have to foot the bill. "Those part and parcel of the 2000 coup should have their properties seized and sold to pay compensation to those affected," Naidu said. He thought, moreover, that those wanting to claim compensation should do so through
936-492: Is an Indo-Aryan language spoken by Indo-Fijians . It is an Eastern Hindi and Bihari language , considered to be a koiné language based on Awadhi that has also been subject to considerable influence by Bhojpuri , other Eastern Hindi and Bihari dialects, and Standard Hindi - Urdu . It has also borrowed some vocabulary from English , Fijian , Telugu , Tamil , Bengali , Punjabi , Gujarati , and Malayalam . Many words unique to Fiji Hindi have been created to cater for
1008-492: Is spoken by Indo-Fijians. Following the recent political upheaval in Fiji , many Indo-Fijians have emigrated to Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the United States, where they have largely maintained their traditional Indo-Fijian culture, language, and religion. Some writers have begun to use Fiji Hindi, until very recently a spoken language only, as a literary language. The Bible has now been translated into Fiji Hindi, and
1080-534: The 2018 general election , the party recorded a considerable change in its support base due to the inclusion of more indigenous Fijian candidates. The formation of the Federation Party was a direct consequence of the dispute between cane farmers and the Colonial Sugar Refining Company (CSR) in 1960 regarding the new cane contract. Farmers contested the 1963 Legislative Council election under
1152-509: The Bhojpuri and Awadhi dialects of the Hindi Belt spoken in rural India , mainly Bihar and Eastern Uttar Pradesh — the consonant / ʃ / is replaced with / s / (for example, saadi instead of shaadi ) and / ʋ / replaced with / b / (for example, bid-es instead of videsh ). There is also a tendency to ignore the differences between the consonants / pʰ / and / f / (In Fiji Hindi
1224-515: The Bihari languages of Bihar , Uttar Pradesh , Jharkhand , Madhesh , Koshi , Bagmati , Gandaki and Lumbini , and the dialects of Eastern Hindi of Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh , Chhattisgarh and Lumbini, but differs in phonetics and vocabulary with Modern Standard Hindi and Urdu . These are the percentages of each language and dialect spoken by indentured labourers who came to Fiji. Indian indentured labourers mainly spoke dialects from
1296-486: The Great Council of Chiefs ), 12 Indians (9 elected on communal roll and 3 on cross-voting roll) and 10 Europeans (7 elected on communal roll and 3 on cross-voting roll). Some of the non-contentious proposals by the Federation Party were accepted. These were the establishment of a Public Service Commission, a Police Service Commission, and a Judicial and Legal Services Commission, as well as a Bill of Rights. The outcome of
1368-468: The Hindi Belt . Initially, the majority of labourers came to Fiji from districts of central and eastern Uttar Pradesh and Bihar , while a small percentage hailed from North-West Frontier and South India such as Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Over time, a distinct Indo-Aryan language with an Eastern Hindi substratum developed in Fiji , combining elements of
1440-462: The Hindi languages spoken in these areas with some native Fijian and English . The development of Fiji Hindi was accelerated by the need for labourers speaking different languages to work together and by the practice of leaving young children in early versions of day-care centers during working hours. Percy Wright, who lived in Fiji during the indenture period, wrote: Indian children born in Fiji will have
1512-581: The University of the South Pacific has recently begun offering courses in the language. It is usually written in the Latin script though Devanāgarī has also been used. A Fiji Hindi movie has also been produced depicting Indo-Fijian life and is based on a play by local playwright, Raymond Pillai . The phonemes of Fiji Hindi are very similar to Standard Hindi, but there are some important distinctions. As in
SECTION 20
#17328488684081584-675: The 1982 elections and came close to winning the election by winning 24 seats in coalition with the Western United Front (WUF) . Reddy's disagreement with the Alliance Speaker of the House led to his walkout in December 1983 and to resignation from parliament in April 1984. Sidiq Koya, who had returned to Parliament in 1982 under a unified NFP, was elected the leader following Reddy's resignation. He
1656-681: The Alliance Party to bring about change instead of resorting to the divisive policies of A.D. Patel and the later years of Koya's leadership. He enjoyed a brief period of honeymoon with the Alliance and there was again talk of a coalition . Relations between the two sides deteriorated as the Alliance used its massive majority to push through legislations seen to be anti-Indian. In 1980, after Reddy criticised, Alliance's policy of reserving Crown land for use by ethnic Fijians only, he and Ratu Kamisese Mara were no longer on speaking terms. The NFP re-united for
1728-623: The August conference, the party decided that a preference deal with the ruling SDL in the parliamentary election scheduled for 2006 would be conditional on the government withdrawing its Reconciliation and Unity Bill. In the last election in 2001, a similar deal, which allowed votes cast for low-polling NFP candidates to be transferred to the SDL, was crucial to the SDL victory under Fiji's transferable voting system. "You are in power today because of our preferential votes NFP gave you in 2001," said Pramod Rae ,
1800-447: The Fiji Hindi tenses. आना Aana आना Aana आना ānā आना ānā आओ Aao! आओ Aao! आओ! āo! आओ! āo! हम Ham आत aat (आवत) (aawat) National Democratic Party (Fiji, 1960s) The NFP was dominated by personnel from the former Federation Party, which was much larger than the NDP. The merger did, however, make it possible for
1872-503: The Fijian vote at any poll. It did, however, manage to elect several Fijians to what became the House of Representatives after independence in 1970, owing to cross-voting in the renamed national constituencies . Less than a year after the founding of the NFP, Patel died suddenly on 1 October 1969. His deputy, Siddiq Moidin Koya , succeeded him as party leader. The party played an important role in
1944-509: The House of Representatives. Internal dissension, however, prevented the party from forming a government, as the party fractured over disputes about the leadership and the allocation of ministerial positions. The Governor-General , Ratu Sir George Cakobau , reappointed the defeated Prime Minister , Ratu Mara, and ordered a new election for September that year, in which the NFP was heavily defeated. For more information, see Fiji Constitutional Crisis of 1977 . A second election to resolve
2016-524: The Indian vote. After the election, R.D. Patel, one of Koya's critics within the NFP, was elected speaker of the House of Representatives. From mid-1975, the relationship between Koya and Mara worsened. This was firstly due to the announcement by the Minister of Education that the Government would not subsidise school fees for non-Fijians. Sidiq Koya called this "a blatant piece of racial injustice". Secondly when
2088-553: The NFP and the FLP on 18 August 2005. Preferential voting was among the topics discussed, but no serious negotiations were entered into, with both parties indicating that such a move would be premature. Nevertheless, a flurry of media speculation followed, with several major news services reporting in early September that the two parties were close to reaching a deal. Comments by FLP officials led credence to these rumours. On 19 September, however, Pratap Singh distanced himself and his party from
2160-500: The NFP still out-polled the Fiji Labour Party, its arch-rival for the Indo-Fijian vote. In the early 2000s, the party attempted to modernise itself. Under the presidency of Dorsami Naidu , the party made an effort to broaden its appeal to women and the disadvantaged. On 11 April 2005, Naidu announced that the NFP now regarded itself as a multiracial party and would attempt to win the support of all ethnic communities in Fiji. In 2005,
2232-422: The NFP to appeal to a section of the indigenous Fijian electorate. Although it never received more than 10 percent of the indigenous vote, it did elect some indigenous members to what became the House of Representatives following independence in 1970, owing to cross-voting in the renamed national constituencies (seats allocated by ethnicity but elected by universal suffrage). The party is not to be confused with
National Federation Party - Misplaced Pages Continue
2304-406: The NFP was at the forefront of opposition to the government's controversial proposal to establish a Reconciliation and Unity Commission , with the power (subject to presidential approval), to grant compensation to victims of the coup d'état that deposed the elected government in 2000, and amnesty to persons convicted of offences related to it. On 14 May 2005, Naidu called legislation to establish
2376-424: The NFP winning none. In the 2022 elections , the party fielded 55 candidates, 5 of which were elected: Biman Prasad, who won 11,355 votes; Lenora Qereqeretabua , who won 3,741 votes; Agni Deo Singh , who won 2,308 votes; Pio Tikoduadua , who won 2,222 votes and lastly Sashi Kiran , who managed to garner 2,024 votes. The party, in total won 41,830 votes, or 8.9%, an increase from its 2018 total. It managed to form
2448-481: The NFP would aim to hold the centre ground in Fijian politics and would forge alliances with parties that shared its philosophy. NFP Treasurer Ashok Bal Govind said on 21 October that neither the FLP nor the SDL had "good policies," and that the NFP would wait to see whether parties with "better policies" emerged before deciding on any electoral pacts. In the end, the NFP made arrangements with FLP candidates in some constituencies, and with SDL candidates in others. At
2520-489: The President and Vice-President, respectively, of the merged party. Apisai Tora and Isikeli Nadalo , both indigenous Fijians , were leading figures in the NDP, and the merger brought well-known Fijians into the party for the first time. The attempt to position itself as a multi-racial party failed to translate into significant electoral support in the indigenous Fijian community. The NFP never succeeded in getting ten percent of
2592-515: The Ramayana). The third person definite future suffix -ii is found in both Awadhi and Bhojpuri. Example: प्रधानमंत्री हमलोग के पैसा दई। "Pradhanamantri humlog ke paisa daii" (The prime minister will give us money). The influence of Hindustani is evident in the first and second person perfective suffix -aa and the first and second person future suffix -ega . Example: हम करा। तुम करेगा। "Hum karaa, tum karega." (I did, you will do). The origin of
2664-514: The Royal Commission which investigated the voting system, claiming that implementation of the recommendation would cause bloodshed in the country. The inability of the NFP to make significant inroads into the ethnic Fijian vote kept the party in opposition in the years following independence. In the March 1977 election , however, a split in the ethnic Fijian vote enabled the NFP to win a plurality in
2736-565: The Temple). While the third person imperfective suffix -e is of Bhojpuri origin. Example: ई बिल्ली मच्छरी खावे हैं। "Ee billi macchari KHAWE hai." (This cat is eating a fish). The third person perfective suffixes (for transitive verbs ) -is and -in are also derived from Awadhi. Example: किसान गन्ना काटीस रहा। "Kisaan ganna katees raha." (The farmer cut the sugarcane). पण्डित लोगन रामायण पढ़ीन रहा/पण्डित लोगन रामायण पढ़े रहीन। "Pandit logan Ramayan padheen raha/padhe raheen." (The priests read
2808-473: The banner of Citizens Federation . This party was reconstituted as the Federation Party on 21 June 1964, with A. D. Patel as president and Sidiq Koya as vice-president. The merger took place in time for the party to participate in the 1965 constitutional conference which was called to map out a path towards independence from the United Kingdom. The British Government decided to introduce cross-voting as
2880-557: The census) was being spoken in Indo-Fijian households. Hindu schools teach the Devanagari script while the Muslim schools teach the Nastaliq script. Fiji Hindi is also understood and even spoken by Indigenous Fijians in areas of Fiji where there are large Indo-Fijian communities. A pidgin form of the language is used by rural ethnic Fijians, as well as Chinese on the islands, while Pidgin Fijian
2952-416: The charge as false. The election, which was finally held on 6–13 May 2006, was a disaster for the NFP. Its share of the popular vote fell to 6 percent, its lowest ever, and the party again failed to win parliamentary representation. In 2006 the Fijian government was overthrown and the Fijian parliament dissolved in a military coup . In January 2013 the military regime promulgated new regulations governing
National Federation Party - Misplaced Pages Continue
3024-455: The commission "an act of terrorism", and on 20 May he went on to call for public demonstrations against the bill, which he said was "just a cover for providing amnesty to people who committed the May 2000 coup crime acts." On 27 June, Naidu announced that the NFP had started a petition against the bill, and expected to gather 150,000 signatures. The party was sending copies of the petition, along with
3096-490: The common language in Fiji of North and South Indians alike. Later, approximately 15,000 Indian indentured labourers, who were mainly speakers of Dravidian languages ( Tamil , Telugu , Malayalam , Kannada , Tulu , Gondi , and Kodava ), were brought from South India . By this time Fiji Hindi was well established as the lingua franca of Indo-Fijians and the Southern Indian labourers had to learn it to communicate with
3168-400: The constitutional conference was a major issue during the election, which was the first election in Fiji contested on Party lines. The Federation Party was expected to win at least the three cross-voting seats in the western division because of its predominantly Indian population but managed to win only the 9 Indian communal seats. The Alliance Party won 22 seats but the three independents and
3240-530: The courts. He said that the petition would be presented to the parliamentary committee on Justice, Law and Order, along with the party's submission. Naidu resigned from the presidency of the party in July 2005, following his arrest on common assault and sexual assault charges. At the party's annual conference attended by more than 600 delegates in Nausori on 31 July, Raman Pratap Singh , a lawyer and former parliamentarian,
3312-665: The emergence of Fiji Labour Party (FLP), the NFP lost further ground. In the Suva City Council election of October 1985, it failed to field any candidate and the FLP won most seats and occupied the Lord Mayor 's chair. In the by-election for the North Central National Seat (based in Ba district), brought about by the resignation of Vijay R. Singh, the Alliance won by a narrow margin over the FLP candidate, Mahendra Chaudhry . NFP
3384-533: The first time in Fiji's history, the transition to independence was peaceful and the euphoria of independence continued for some time. Sidiq Koya travelled with the Prime Minister to India and the United Nations and there was talk of a coalition government. There were those within the National Federation Party (NFP) who were not happy with the close relationship between Sidiq Koya and Ratu Kamisese Mara,
3456-490: The general secretary of the party. "If you are going to pass this bill, do not count on us. We will not support you if you rail road this evil bill in Parliament." Fiji Village reported on 9 March 2006 that Prime Minister Qarase had offered the NFP Cabinet posts, assuming the party won parliamentary representation, in exchange for a preference deal. A meeting, described as a "courtesy call", took place between officials of
3528-470: The house (polite)). The suffix -be , from Bhojpuri, is used in Fiji Hindi in emphatic sentences. Another suffix originating from Awadhi is -it . Example: ई लोगन पानी काहे नहीं पीत हैं। "Ee logan paani kahey nahi peet hai." (Why aren't these people drinking water?), but is at present going out of use. Fiji Hindi tenses are relatively similar to tenses in Standard Hindi . Bhojpuri and Awadhi influence
3600-606: The impasse was held in September that year, resulting in a heavy defeat for the NFP after it had split into two factions known as the Dove and Flower factions. Koya lost his parliamentary seat to Jai Ram Reddy , who became the new leader of the NFP. Koya's Dove faction had won only 3 seats compared to 12 won by the Flower faction. Reddy followed a policy, which had been tried once before by Koya, that of moderation in which he sought to work with
3672-519: The imperative suffix -o can be traced to the Magahi dialect. Example: तुम अपन मुह खोलो। "Tum apan muh khulo." (You open your mouth). Spoken in the Gaya and Patna districts, which provided a sizeable proportion of the first indentured labourers from Northern India to Fiji. Fiji Hindi has developed its own polite imperative suffix -naa . Example: आप घर के सफा कर लेना। "Aap ghar ke sapha kar Lena." (You clean
SECTION 50
#17328488684083744-424: The more numerous Northern Indians and their European overseers. After the end of the indenture system, Indians who spoke Gujarati and Punjabi arrived in Fiji as free immigrants. A few Indo-Fijians speak Tamil, Telugu, and Gujarati at home, but all are fluently conversant and able to communicate using Fiji Hindi. The census reports of 1956 and 1966 shows the extent to which Fiji Hindi (referred to as 'Hindustani' in
3816-446: The most notable of whom was R. D. Patel , but for the time being dissent was not being expressed openly. The first general election since independence was held in May 1972 without the ethnic tension characteristic of the 1966 general election and the 1968 by-elections . The NFP won only 19 of the 52 seats in the House of Representatives, with Alliance Party actually increasing its share of
3888-667: The negotiations that led to Fiji's independence from the United Kingdom in 1970. Their original demand for a universal franchise threatened to stall the independence process, but at a conference in London in April 1970, Sidiq Koya, eventually negotiated a compromise with Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara, the leader of the Alliance Party , the main ethnic Fijian-dominated party. According to this compromise, ethnic Fijians and Indo-Fijians would each be allocated 22 seats, with 12 representing Communal constituencies (comprising voters registered as members of
3960-515: The new environment that Indo-Fijians now live in. First-generation Indians in Fiji , who used the language as a lingua franca in Fiji, referred to it as Fiji Baat , "Fiji talk". It is closely related to Caribbean Hindustani and the Bhojpuri-Hindustani spoken in Mauritius and South Africa . It is largely mutually intelligible with the languages of Awadhi and Bhojpuri , as well as with
4032-565: The opposition side were " dumb natives " for which she was taken to the Privileges Committee who recommended that she was suspended from parliament for the remainder of the term of Parliament which ends in 2018. In January 2017 she resigned from the NFP and from parliament. Her seat was taken by Parmod Chand . The party ran 51 candidates in the 2018 elections , ten of which were women. It gained 33,515 votes, increasing its vote share to 7.38%, but gained just three seats. On April 8, 2022,
4104-489: The party control of six municipalities, either in its own right or together with the SDL. Its more significant victories included gaining control of the Nadi Town Council and re-electing Chandu Umaria as Mayor of Suva . In the 2005 municipal polls , their performance was more modest, but Ba and Nadi remained in NFP hands, while an NFP/SDL coalition retained its hold on Sigatoka . In Suva, despite losing some seats,
4176-573: The party formed an electoral pact with the People's Alliance , led by Sitiveni Rabuka to contest the upcoming general election. It was the second time the party allied itself with Rabuka, the last being in 1999 , when the NFP, then led by Jai Ram Reddy , formed a coalition with the Rabuka-led Soqosoqo ni Vakavulewa ni Taukei (SVT) . The NFP-SVT coalition was wiped out, with the SVT winning only 8 seats, and
4248-455: The registration of political parties, requiring all parties to have at least 5,000 members. The NFP applied for registration on 14 February, becoming one of only two existing parties to do so. Registration was granted on 3 May 2013. The NFP elected Biman Prasad , Professor of Economics at the University of the South Pacific , as its new leader in March 2014, while Roko Tupou Draunidalo , scion of
4320-413: The removal of Value added tax from basic items, reduction of telephone and postal bills, national healthcare insurance for all workers, and consolidation of the independence of the judiciary. Its fortunes sank further, however. The NFP ended up with only about ten percent of the popular vote and only one parliamentary seat – which it subsequently lost in a court challenge. The party's refusal to agree to
4392-524: The removal of the guaranteed ethnic Fijian majority from Parliament. In the election that followed in 1999, the NFP surprised many observers by forming an electoral coalition with the Soqosoqo ni Vakavulewa ni Taukei , led by their former enemy, Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka. This may have been a tactical mistake: many Indo-Fijians had not forgiven Rabuka for his role in the overthrow of the Bavadra government and
SECTION 60
#17328488684084464-509: The speculation that a deal with the FLP was likely. The NFP did not believe that the FLP truly represented the Indo-Fijian community, he said, who had gained nothing from what he called the "confrontational" posturing of the FLP. According to the Fiji Sun (27 February 2006), NFP trustee Attar Singh accused the FLP of having stolen the NFP's 1982 election manifesto and using it for the 1999 election. FLP Parliamentarian Lekh Ram Vayshnoi rejected
4536-425: The subsequent drafting of a constitution that they widely considered to be racist, and the NFP, for the first time in 36 years, lost all of its seats in the House of Representatives. The NFP contested the 2001 election , on a platform calling for the establishment of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission to look into the Fiji coup of 2000 , which had deposed the elected government of Prime Minister Mahendra Chaudhry,
4608-631: The two Council of Chiefs nominees joined it to give it a total strength of 27. Ratu Kamisese Mara of the Alliance Party became the Chief Minister and A.D. Patel became the Leader of the Opposition. Ethnic tensions escalated following the adoption of responsible government in 1967, when Patel's arch-rival, the Lauan chief Ratu Kamisese Mara was appointed Chief Minister on 20 September. Mara's Alliance Party
4680-501: The votes cast. A.D. Patel won by 7903 votes to 2772 for Manikam Pillai . There were demonstrations by ethnic Fijians and calls to not renew native land leases and extreme elements called for Indians to be deported from Fiji. Relations between the Indo-Fijian and indigenous communities were at a new low. In November 1968, the Federation merged with the National Democratic Party to form the National Federation Party. Patel and Koya became
4752-610: Was a coalition of indigenous and European factions, with minimal Indo-Fijian participation. Patel and the NFP were consigned to the opposition benches. In protest at the new government's refusal to call a second constitutional conference, Patel led the nine Federation Party legislators in a mass walkout in September 1967. Missing two consecutive sections of the Legislative Council resulted in the forfeit of their seats, forcing by-elections. The ensuing by-elections were marked by inter-ethnic violence. All nine Federation Party legislators were returned with increased majorities, winning 78.55% of
4824-789: Was elected Deputy Speaker of Parliament. It was the first time in more than 30 years that the NFP was in government, the last being in 1987 , when it was a coalition partner to the 1-month Bavadra Government. Party leadership has been divided between leader of the party and the president of the party. The leaders of the party have been: A. D. Patel 1968–1969, Sidiq Koya 1969–1977, Jai Ram Reddy 1977–1984, Sidiq Koya 1984–1986, Harish Sharma 1986–1992, Jai Ram Reddy 1992–1999, Biman Prasad 2001, Attar Singh 2001–?, Prem Singh ?–2004, Dorsami Naidu 2004–2005, Raman Pratap Singh 2005–2014 and Biman Prasad since 2014. Fiji Hindi Fiji Hindi ( Devanagari : फ़िजी हिंदी ; Kaithi : 𑂣𑂺𑂱𑂔𑂲⸱𑂯𑂱𑂁𑂠𑂲 ; Perso-Arabic : فجی ہندی )
4896-474: Was elected to replace him. A priority for the NFP was to attempt to revive sufficient support to gain Parliamentary representation in the general election scheduled for 2006. On 12 August 2005, Pramod Rae said the party was experiencing financial difficulties. Speaking on Radio Sargam, he denied perceptions that the NFP was a "rich man's party" and said that sometimes it could not afford telephone bills, and
4968-506: Was having to go door to door asking for donations to keep it going. Many businessmen who had once supported the NFP were now supporting the Fiji Labour Party (FLP), he lamented. Under Fiji's so-called alternative ballot system, votes cast for low-polling candidates may be transferred to higher-polling candidates, as specified by the candidates. These transferred votes are known as "preferences." Rae said on 20 August that in pursuing negotiations with other parties for exchanges of preferences,
5040-471: Was not far from controversy, and was accused of favouring his own supporters for crucial appointments within the party. He barred the NFP Youth Wing from a Working Committee meeting further raising allegations of dictatorial rule. Internal dissension reached a climax when a Koya supporter from Ba , Dr Balwant Singh Rakkha , was selected to contest the Lautoka seat vacated by Reddy's resignation. The NFP Youth Wing, put up its own candidate, Davendra Singh ,
5112-435: Was overthrown a month later in a military coup led by Lieutenant Colonel Sitiveni Rabuka . A new Constitution was promulgated, providing for a built-in ethnic Fijian majority in the legislature. This condemned the NFP to permanent opposition status. When the government agreed to revise the Constitution in 1997, however, the NFP, now led by Jai Ram Reddy, played a key role in the ensuing negotiations, which resulted in
5184-411: Was placed last. In December 1985, three prominent NFP parliamentarians resigned. With his party falling apart, Koya resigned from the leadership of the NFP and was replaced by Harish Sharma . For the 1987 election , therefore, they formed an electoral coalition with the Fiji Labour Party under the leadership of Timoci Bavadra , an ethnic Fijian. The coalition won the election, but the new government
#407592