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# JUSTICE DELAYED IS JUSTICE DENIED. A MAGISTRATE SPEAKS OUT

Posted on August 29, 2024 5 Comments

Resident Magistrate Krishan Prasad (LinkedIn photo)

It is seven weeks tomorrow since the Prime Minister said the suspended DPP, Christopher Pryde, was entitled to continue to be paid his salary – which was summarily cut off by the Acting Chief Justice, Salesi Temo – and it still hasn’t been restored. It is almost 17 months since Christopher Pryde was suspended for alleged misbehaviour and still there has been no judicial tribunal hearing date set – as the Constitutional stipulates – to hear the allegation against him.

Salesi Temo told the nation in a statement last month that the Pryde Tribunal hearing would commence on August 19. Ten days later, there is still no sign of that happening. And the outlaw Temo – having given a specific undertaking on a hearing date – doesn’t even see fit to update the Fijian people on why the undertaking he made so publicly hasn’t been honoured. It is a gross dereliction of the Acting CJ’s duty to the Fijian people to maintain the integrity of the criminal justice system. And it is being enabled by the Attorney General, Graham Leung, and Sitiveni Rabuka as PM.

We found out from the Tribunal judges last week (Justice Anare Tuilevuka, Justice Samuela Qica and Justice Chaitanya Lakshman) that the state still hasn’t finalised all of its affidavits in the case despite the fact that it is approaching 17 months since Christopher Pryde was suspended.

The whole thing is a national scandal that reflects extremely poorly on Justice Temo and the Attorney General, who may not be able to tell the outlaw Acting Chief Justice what to do but certainly carries responsibility for the astonishing inability of the State to get its prosecution together.

What are we to make of all of this? On any reasonable assessment, it is this: The original charge against Christopher Pryde 17 months ago was that he was seen in conversation with Aiyaz Sayed–Khaiyum at a Japanese Embassy function. Then a year later came a fresh allegation that he had received unauthorised superannuation payments since 2012, a charge he strongly denies. And recently came news that government investigators were still ferreting around trying to find fresh evidence against Christopher Pryde, which presumably accounts for the latest delay that has exposed the Acting Chief Justice as a liar.

Let’s call this for what it is. A stitch-up. Because if there was a genuine allegation of misbehaviour against Christopher Pryde, this would have been done and dusted long ago. Instead Fiji has presented with legal world with a textbook example of the old adage that justice delayed is justice denied. And to add insult to injury, the Acting Chief Justice severed the DPP’s salary to prevent him from being able to adequately defend himself.

Seriously. How can anyone in Fiji continue to have confidence in the criminal justice system when there is such a blatant case of victimisation, so much so that the Prime Minister himself has been made to look like an idiot by giving the Acting Chief Justice a lesson in what should have been done and is simply ignored. The old fool is a law unto himself and a threat to the entire system.

Now someone from within the system is calling out this kind of unconscionable conduct, not specifically in Christopher Pryde’s case but in the case of delays in the FICAC case being brought against the Acting Corrective Services Commissioner, Salote Panapasa.

Resident Magistrate Krishan Prasad hasn’t been in the job for very long. He was among a group of judicial officers sworn in in March 2023 ( see photo below). But it also hasn’t taken very long for Magistrate Prasad to make his presence felt by stating the bleeding obvious, which has so scandalously escaped his boss:

You would think that this was a lesson that Salesi Temo, Graham Leung, Siromi Turaga and the other sorry bunch of characters in the Pryde saga would have had figuratively etched on their foreheads as young lawyers. Yet the quality of the criminal justice system in Fiji has been so degraded that one of the most fundamental tenets of the rule of law has simply been thrown out the window.

While the nation wrings its hands about the breakdown of law and order, the corruption of the police, the breakdown of community morality and standards of conduct and endures lessons from a degenerate, drug-taking hypocrite in the form of Lynda Tabuya , no-one seems to understand the most basic of facts. That when the criminal justice system is degraded to the point that the rule of law is threatened, everything else simply falls apart.

It is the root of all evil in any society. And sadly, it is precisely what is happening in Fiji.

Krishan Prasad (far left) The Outlaw (third from left)

Christopher Pryde. A textbook example of injustice

From yesterday’s Fiji Sun

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Stating the obvious says

    August 29, 2024 at 4:01 am

    Welcome to the change

    Reply
  2. Get Up Fiji says

    August 29, 2024 at 4:48 am

    Absolutely not!!! With Biman now in the headlights of the undeclared interests, this coalition is going to be tossed out in 2026. Narube needs to bring his campaign now. But l, can we trust any of our political leaders atm?

    Reply
  3. Lorraine says

    August 29, 2024 at 6:56 am

    There is a void in the heart of this Coalition Government where accountability and the rule of law should be.

    Reply
  4. FIJI BOY says

    August 29, 2024 at 7:01 am

    Let’s shift all our attention from Rambo and his sickening coalition party and move our attention to UNITY FIJI PARTY to clean up all the mess created by the current government.

    Right now Narube is the only one which can change the current political mess and the down grading of Fiji’s legal system, then bring down the national debt through his expertise in running the reserve bank of Fiji for many years. He is the guy who know numbers.
    The Failing export and import trends show we import so much rice from China and other countries when we can grown our own. Look at Lakena Rice scheme the project is defunct.
    So i am asking all Fijians and itaukeis who want a change and a better Fiji to vote for UNITY FIJI PARTY in the next election. Joining hands together will solve the current situation Fiji is in. God Bless Fiji

    Reply
  5. Phil O says

    August 29, 2024 at 8:48 am

    God Bless Fiji??
    Have a blessed day??
    This signature while well meaning is a bit misused.
    What (more) is God to bless Fiji with….. It is probably more a time of God’s punishment or wrath IF God is observing the happenings in Fiji.
    In conclusion – make someone’s day better by doing your own job well. Don’t leave everything to God!

    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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