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# APPLICATIONS FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW OF THE COI SET DOWN FOR HEARING ON DECEMBER 12

Posted on October 15, 2025 3 Comments

Justice Dane Tuiqereqere

The High Court judge, Justice Dane Tuiqereqere, will start hearing the applications for judicial review of the Supreme Court Commission of Inquiry into the Malimali affair in just under two month’s time – on December 12.

The Judge has evidently consolidated all applications into a single hearing – that of Barbara Malimali herself, the Judicial Services Commission (Salesi Temo and Tomasi Bainivalu) and the application by Wiley Clarke, the President of the Fiji Law Society, and Graham Leung , the sacked attorney general.

Get set for a clash of the legal titans and some hefty fees. Both Wiley Clarke and Graham Leung say they will be represented by legal counsel from overseas – presumably kings counsel or senior counsel also presumably representing them pro bono or free of charge.

Justice David Ashton-Lewis

The immediate consequence of that is that the CoI Commissioner – Justice David Ashton- Lewis – and his former counsel assisting, Janet Mason, will be pressing the government for equal representation from overseas, which is likely to run into the hundreds of thousands when some overseas counsel charge $30,000 a day or more.

It is inconceivable that we would see an unequal contest in the court between overseas counsel representing Wylie Clarke and Graham Leung and local counsel representing the CoI. But lots of things that we had previously thought inconceivable have come to fruition so let’s see what happens.

The first thing Justice Tuiqereqere is going to have to decide is whether he has jurisdiction to grant an application for judicial review of a Supreme Court Commission of Inquiry in the first place. These haven’t been decisions in a court of law which can be appealed in the normal manner but recommendations from a CoI for further investigation, which is an altogether different thing.

We can be sure that counsel for the CoI will be arguing that a High Court judge like Justice Tuiqereqere doesn’t have the power to overturn the findings of a CoI Inquiry by a Supreme Court Judge in the form of Justice Ashton-Lewis because the Supreme Court is Fiji’s highest court.

So there is a lot of legal argy-bargy to come and if the arguments on whether Justice Tuiqereqere can grant leave to appeal don’t begin until December 12, this is going to be a long and tortuous process that goes well into the New Year. Election Year.

One of the biggest questions that is yet to be answered is what happens to media coverage of the court hearing. It stands to reason that a great deal of the detail of the CoI Report that remains redacted while police and FICAC investigations continue will need to be aired in the leave to appeal application. Will this hearing be closed in the same manner that the CoI itself was closed?

Lots of questions and as yet, no firm answers.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Daniel says

    October 15, 2025 at 1:45 pm

    Justice – now that is an injustice.

    The monies spent on this very growing circus could be put to better use propping up the beyond euthanizing health system.

    Reply
  2. Charan Jhaatu Singh says

    October 15, 2025 at 3:23 pm

    Let’s not be surprised when the decision is made by the Court. We all know how this will end especially since Temo is implicated.

    Reply
  3. Alex Forwood says

    October 15, 2025 at 3:46 pm

    The COI parties have not been served. PM has not issued any instruction at all.

    Reply

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About Grubsheet

Graham Davis
Grubsheet Feejee is the blogsite of Graham Davis, an award-winning journalist turned communications consultant who was the Fijian Government’s principal communications advisor for six years from 2012 to 2018 and continued to work on Fiji’s global climate and oceans campaign up until the end of the decade.

 

Fiji-born to missionary parents and a dual Fijian-Australian national, Graham spent four decades in the international media before returning to Fiji to work full time in 2012. He reported from many parts of the world for the BBC, ABC, SBS, the Nine and Seven Networks and Sky News and wrote for a range of newspapers and magazines in Australia, New Zealand and Fiji.

 

Graham launched Grubsheet Feejee in 2011 and suspended writing for it after the Fijian election of 2014, by which time he was working at the heart of government. But the website continued to attract hits as a background resource on events in Fiji in the transition back to parliamentary democracy.

 

Grubsheet relaunches in 2020 at one of the most critical times in Fijian history, with the nation reeling from the Covid-19 crisis and Frank Bainimarama’s government shouldering the twin burdens of incumbency and economic disintegration.

 

Grubsheet’s sole agenda is the national interest; the strengthening of Fiji’s ties with the democracies; upholding equal rights for all citizens; government that is genuinely transparent and free of corruption and nepotism; and upholding Fiji’s service to the world in climate and oceans advocacy and UN Peacekeeping.

 

Comments are welcome and you can contact me in the strictest confidence at grubsheetfeedback@gmail.com

 

(Feejee is the original name for Fiji - a derivative of the indigenous Viti and the Tongan Fisi - and was widely used until the late 19th century)

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