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Fiji Travel Guide
  1. Weather
  2. Holidays
  3. Tours
  4. Travel Tips
    1. HISTORY
    2. LIFE
    3. EVENTS
    4. CULTURE
    5. ECONOMY
    6. EDUCATION
    7. LANGUAGES
    8. ACTIVITIES
    9. GOVERNMENT
    10. ENVIRONMENT
    11. MEDICAL FACILITIES
  5. Car Rental
  6. Transfers

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Fiji Island
 

FIJI ISLAND

Fiji was once known as the 'Cannibal Isles' and its people were believed to be fierce and hostile; a recent history of coups has done nothing to dispel this notion in the minds of some travellers. Despite this, Fiji is beautiful, it has a pleasant tropical climate, the diving and snorkelling are superb and it has excellent facilities for tourists, whether they are on a tight budget or indulging in the luxuries of a plush resort
 

Fiji Islands Adventure

 
HISTORY
 

The first Lapita settlers settled in Fiji around 1500 BC, mostly from other parts of Melanesia. Initially they were coastal fishing people, but a shift in emphasis towards agriculture around 500 BC spurred a dramatic increase in population and tribal feudalism.Around 1000 AD Polynesians invaded from Tonga and Samoa, engaging the Melanesians in large scale wars. Cannibalism was common and people lived in mataqali (extended family groups) in fortified villages presided over by polygamous hereditary chiefs (turaga-ni-koro). Intertribal marriages were an important way of binding communities together, but rivalries and disputes were common and interclan warfare often pitted family members against one another.The first known European to sight the Fijian islands was Abel Tasman, who passed by on his way to Indonesia in 1643. He negotiated the treacherous reefs northwest of Vanua Levu and Taveuni, but his accounts of the dangers kept other sailors away from Fijian waters for another 130 years. James Cook was next to visit when he stopped at Vatoa in the Lau Group in 1774. Fifteen years later William Bligh dropped in under some duress after the mutineers of the HMS Bounty set him and 18 crew adrift in a tiny open boat. They passed through the Lau Group and between the big islands of Vanua Levu and Viti Levu (this body of water is still called Bligh Water).In the early part of the next century, traders came seeking sandalwood and bêche-de-mer (succulent sea cucumbers prized in Asia), and suddenly Fijians had access to metal tools, tobacco, cloth and guns. The impact of this was enormous: violent clan warfare broke out and Fijian society began to change rapidly. Shipwreck survivors, deserting sailors and escaped convicts from the British penal settlements in Australia also began to play an important part in Fijian societies.

Many found out why the islands were nicknamed the 'Cannibal Isles', but a few, most notably Swede Charles Savage, came to be well integrated into the upper echelons of the feuding Fijian clans, serving chiefs as interpreters, go-betweens, carpenters and armsmen.The Tongan military and English missionaries were other prominent invaders of the mid-1800s. The missionaries sought to convert the tribal chiefs, but they had notable failures - the Reverend Thomas Baker was eaten in 1867 and his shoe is exhibited in the Fiji Museum. Levuka, on Ovalau island, became an important South Pacific trading post where American, French and British interests nervously squabbled and suspected one another of imperialist intentions. Levuka became a lawless place and relations with the local people reached a nadir in 1847 when the settlement was razed by fires.Cakobau, the self-proclaimed King of Fiji, attempted to form a Western-style government in 1871, but it collapsed after just two years. In 1873 the acting British consul JB Thurston sought British annexation of Fiji, and on 10 October 1874 it was pronounced a British colony and a capital was established at Suva

Governor Sir Arthur Gordon sought economic self-sufficiency for the colony through plantation crops such as cotton, copra and sugar cane, and productivity was boosted when Gordon began importing indentured labour from India. Hopeful Indians saw Fiji as an escape from poverty but plantation life was a predictable melange of human rights abuses, crime, suicide, rape and disease.By the time indentured labour was abolished in 1919 there were more than 60,000 Indians in Fiji. The Indian community, which had been prevented from owning land, moved into small business holdings, trade and bureaucracy, or took out long-term leases on farms. Australians came to dominate the local economy through sugar production and gold mining, while Europeans manipulated the racial tensions between the Fijians and the Indians in an effort to maintain a stranglehold on economic and political power.After WWII (to which Fiji committed 8000 troops to fight the Japanese in the Solomons), a greater political awareness permeated the Fijian and Indian people, but racial segregation continued. Fiji became independent on 10 October 1970 and introduced a Westminster political system. The political parties were organised along racial lines. The 1987 elections were won by a shaky coalition, and while there was a Fijian prime minister and a cabinet with a Fijian majority, the new government was seen as Indian dominated.

Demonstrations followed and the extremist Taukei movement set about destabilising the new government. Indian-owned businesses were petrol-bombed and there were violent attacks on Indian communities. One month later, on 14 May 1987, Colonel Sitiveni Rabuka invaded the parliament and seized power in a bloodless coup. In October, Fiji was dismissed from the Commonwealth. Rabuka was re-elected in 1991, and gave up his military career to pursue politics full time. He tried to soften his hardline image by making concessions to labour groups and trade unions.In 1999, Fiji elected its first prime minister of Indian descent, Mahendra Chaudhry. Chaudhry instituted land reforms, which indigenous Fijians saw as a threat to their landholdings, and introduced a social justice bill which reduced government programs for indigenous people. Fijian resentment coalesced around the Taukei movement, and after some months of anti-government protests, Chaudhry's government was overturned by a coup led by George Speight in May 2000.

Backed by a 100-man private army, Speight stormed parliament and took more than 30 MPs hostage, calling for a new constitution to guarantee political supremacy for the indigenous population. With the weight of international and internal pressure against them, Speight and his followers were eventually arrested, and Speight was sentenced to life imprisonment. The continuing political instability has led to economic decline and many Indo-Fijian professionals leaving the country.With Indo-Fijians effectively cast out of the political (and to a large extent, economic picture, the indigenous Fijian leaders have effectively lost their scapegoat; it will be interesting to see what the future holds. As the economy slowly struggles to its feet and tourists return to Fiji, racial issues continue to simmer behind the scenes with no resolution in sight.

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LIFE
The lifestyle in Fiji varies between ethnic Fijians and Indians. Rural Fijians practice subsistence agriculture. Some live in orthodox bures, one-room houses with woven mat walls and thatched roofs. many bures have been replaced by concrete houses that withstand cyclones better. Furniture is sparse, as floor mats are preferred to sofas and chairs. Village life is communal, with everyone expected to share in ceremonial preparations and village upkeep. People are respectful of orthodox patricentric authority; the village chief, usually a man, leads the villagers and presides over valuable rituals. Kava, a non-alcoholic drink made from the crushed root of a pepper plant, is the ceremonial drink.
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EVENTS
 
Fijians celebrate New Year's Day with gusto and the festivities can last a week (or even a month!) in some villages. In February or March Hindu Holi (Festival of Colours) sees people squirt each other with coloured water. Ram Naumi (Birth of Lord Rama) is a Hindu festival held in March or April and includes a religious festival and party on the shores of Suva Bay.The Prophet Mohammed's Birthday is celebrated in May, and on the first Monday in June, the nation honours Ratu Sir Lala Sukuna with a public holiday. He is considered Fiji's greatest statesman, soldier, high chief and scholar, and the day is celebrated with regional cultural shows and games. The Constitution Day holiday falls in July. The Sugar Festival is celebrated in September at Lautoka, and Fiji Day (Independence Day) falls in early October. During October or November Hindus celebrate the Diwali Festival (Festival of Lights). They worship Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth and prosperity, decorate their houses and settle up their business affairs.Public Holidays
1 Jan - New Year's Day
Mar/Apr - National Youth Day
Mar/Apr - Easter
May - Prophet Mohammed's Birthday
1st Mon in Jun - Ratu Sir Lala Sukuna Day
mid Jun - Queen's Brithday
Jul - Constitution Day
Aug/Sep - Birth of Lord Krishna
Oct - Fiji Day (Independence Day)
Oct/Nov - Diwali
25 Dec - Christmas Day
26 Dec - Boxing Day

CULTURE

Fijians still practise many traditional arts and crafts, some of which have endured the destructive impact of Western influences and the relentless campaigning of the Christian missionaries, and some which have been modified and embellished to satisfy the demands of tourism.Fiji has been famous for pottery since the Lapita people began trading their wares deep into the South Pacific thousands of years ago. The most famous of the contemporary potters are Dian Tugea and Taraivini Wati, both of whom are featured in the Fiji Museum. Wood carving is still important, perhaps mostly because of the steady tourist demand for souvenirs to take home. Fijian carvers make war clubs, spears and cannibal forks. Drinking bowls, or tanoa, are still in daily use in Fijian households. Carvings in areas that have a Polynesian influence (from Tongan and Samoan settlers) feature inlays of shell and bone. Bark cloth, known in Fiji as masi, was traditionally made throughout the Pacific and was usually known as tapa. Ceremonial robes, waistbands, trains and turbans were once made from masi and the cloth was decorated with symbolic motifs in ochre-rusts and charcoal-blacks. The cloth is made from the bark of the mulberry tree and its production is very laborious. Traditionally, large and highly decorated masi cloths were used as ceremonial gifts and there was much prestige associated with their ownership.


The weaving of pandanus leaves into mats and baskets has a long tradition, too. Most village girls still learn the craft, and there are all sorts of variations in style and colour (achieved by scraping the leaves, burying them in mud and boiling them with other plants, for example). The borders of pandanus mats used to be decorated with parrot feathers, but these days brightly coloured wool and yarns are used.Fiji has a small but strong writers' community. Notable figures include Joseph Veramu, who has published a short-story collection called The Black Messiah and a novel called Moving Through the Streets about teenagers in Suva. Playwrights Jo Nacola, whose works include the play I Native No More, and Vilsoni Hereniko, and short-story writer Marjorie Crocombe are also worthy of mention.
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Indo-Fijians, including Subramani, Satendra Nandan, Raymond Pillai and Prem Banfal write in both Hindi and English, and a central thread in their work is the unjust plight of indentured labourers.The missionaries brought hymns and choir singing to Fiji, and local church singing is truly divine. Popular local musical artists include Seru Serevi, Danny Costello, Michelle Rounds, Karuna Gopalan, Laisa Vulakoro, the Freelancers and the Black Roses. Cassettes and CDs of local music are available in Fijian stores. Music from Bollywood films (Indian melodramas) is popular amongst Indo-Fijians and local bands play covers of Indian songs. At Indian cultural centres performances are given in traditional Indian music featuring vocal, harmonium, tabla and sitar ensembles.

Dance is still strong in Fiji and the narrative meke performances rest on strong oral traditions. Dances are passed down from generation to generation, and in their strict forms the dancers' bodies are said to take on spirits of the netherworld. Meke accompanied special events like births, deaths, calls to war, marriages and property exchanges. At times of war men would perform cibi with spears and clubs, while women performed dele or wate - dances which sexually humiliated enemy captives.
Traditional Indian dances are still taught in Indian communities.Homosexuality is illegal in Fiji, and as a gay or lesbian couple, public displays of affection are frowned upon. The arrest and subsequent jailing of an Australian man and a Fijian national for two years in April 2005 shows the current government are willing to enforce anti-gay laws.There are, however, plenty of gay-friendly nightclubs and accommodation; check out mygayweb.com for the latest. As a solo traveller you should tread carefully in pursuing relationships with locals as this is viewed very dimly by the Fijian government and locals alike.For pre-trip travel advice and around-the-world info on the gay scene, both Spartacus International Gay Guide and Outrage magazines are a good place to start.
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ECONOMY
 

Fiji, endowed with forest, mineral, and fish resources, is one of the most developed of the Pacific island economies, though still with a large subsistence sector. Sugar exports and a growing tourist industry - with 300,000 to 400,000 tourists annually - are the major sources of foreign exchange. Sugar processing makes up one-third of industrial activity, but is inefficient. Long-term problems include low investment, uncertain land ownership rights, and the government's ability to manage its budget. Yet short-run economic prospects are good, provided tensions do not again erupt between indigenous Fijians and Indo-Fijians. Overseas remittances from Fijians working in Kuwait and Iraq have increased significantly.
 
EDUCATION
 
Education is not compulsory in Fiji, virtually all children attend primary school. The government provides free education for eight years. Tuition is charged for levels 9 through 12, but some financial assistance is available. In 1996, 70 % of secondary school aged children were listed. An around 99 % of the population age 15 and older can read and write.

THE PEOPLE
 

The population of Fiji (2001 estimate) is 844,330, giving the nation an overall population density of 46 persons per sq km (119 per sq mi). About 20 % of the people live in Suva (population, 2000, 77,366). The second and third largest urban areas are Lautoka (36,083) and Nadi (9,170), also located on Viti Levu. Some 58 % of Fiji’s population is rural, with most people living in fishing or farming villages of less than 600 people.

The indigenous Fijian people are usually classified as Melanesian, they are larger in stature than Melanesians from Vanuatu, Solomon Islands, or New Guinea; their social and political organization is closer to that of Polynesia; and there has been a high level of intermarriage between Fijians from the Lau Islands of eastern Fiji and the neighbouring Polynesian islands of Tonga. Almost all indigenous Fijians are Christian, mostly Methodist and Roman Catholic Since World War II, indigenous Fijians have been outnumbered by Indians, most of whom are descendants of indentured labourers brought to work in the sugar industry. A few, particularly in commerce and the professions, are descended from free migrants. Most of the Indians are Hindus,though a remarkable number are Muslims. Some Indo-Fijians have been displaced by the expiration of land leases in cane-producing areas and have moved
into urban centers in pursuit of jobs. Similarly, a number of indigenous Fijians have moved into urban areas, particularly Suva, in search of a better life. Meanwhile, the Indo-Fijian population has declined due to emigration and a declining birth rate. Indo-Fijians currently constitute 40% of the total population, down from over 50% in the 1940s. Indo-Fijians dominate the professions and commerce.
 
LANGUAGES
 




About 52 % of the people are Christians, with Methodists and Roman Catholics forming the largest groups. Hindus comprise 39 % of the population, and Muslims, 8 %. Fijians are mostly Christians, while most Indians are either Hindus or Muslims. English is the official language and nearly everyone can speak it. With one another, the ethnic Fijians usually speak Fijian, while most Indians speak Hindi.


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ACTIVITIES
 
There are fringing reefs all over the islands for splendid diving and snorkelling, but good surf breaks are fewer and farther between. The Mamanucas have some dedicated surfing resorts and good waves but you need to hire a boat to get to the offshore reef-breaks. There are a few good breaks off Viti Levu including those near Sigatoka and the Suva lighthouse, and off Yanuca island.On dry land you can go cycling, trekking and horse riding, or engage in the more cerebral 'activities' of bird-watching and exploring archaeological sites. Fiji is well set up for tourists and there are facilities everywhere offering equipment for hire and day tours.
 
GOVERNMENT
 


The president (head of state) is appointed for a 5-year term by the Great Council of Chiefs, a orthodox ethnic Fijian leadership body. The president in turn appoints the prime minister (head of government) and Cabinet from among the members of Parliament. Both houses of the legislature have some seats reserved by ethnicity. Other seats can be filled by persons of any ethnic group.

The Senate is appointed; the House of Representatives is elected. Fiji maintains an independent judiciary consisting of a Supreme Court, a Court of Appeals, a High Court, and magistrate courts. The judiciary remained independent through the coups and the consequent absence of an elected government. All but one of the five judges on the Supreme Court also is a serving judge in Australia or New Zealand. There are four administrative divisions--central, eastern, northern and western--each under the charge of a commissioner. Ethnic Fijians have their own administration in which councils preside over a hierarchy of provinces, districts, and villages. The councils deal with all matters affecting ethnic Fijians. The Great Council of Chiefs (Bose Levu Vakaturaga) is made up of 55 hereditary chiefs, most of whom are nominated to the Council by their respective provincial councils. It is accomplished under the Fijian Affairs Act and recognized by the constitution.

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ENVIRONMENT
 
The Fiji islands are situated in the South Pacific, midway between Melanesia (Solomons, Vanuatu, New Caledonia and Papua New Guinea) and Polynesia (Tonga, Samoa, the Cooks and French Polynesia). They are south of the equator, just north of the Tropic of Capricorn and west of the International Dateline. The territorial limits enclose an area of 1.3 million sq km (half a million sq mi), but only 1.5% of this is dry land. About 300 islands make up the nation.Viti Levu at 10,400 sq km (4052 sq mi), and Vanua Levu at 5587 sq km (2160 sq mi) are the biggest islands. Suva, the country's capital is on the south-western coast of Viti Levu, and the island also has the country's highest peak - Mt Tomanivi (Mt Victoria) at 1323m (4339ft). Taveuni and Kadavu are also substantial islands, but the rest of the country is made up of small islands divided into the Lomaiviti, Lau, Moala, Yasawa, Mamanuca and Rotuma Groups.
Many of these islands are relatively untouched and there are many beautiful reefs, lagoons and harbours, as well as natural vegetation.Since the 1960s, around 15% of the country's forests have been cleared and erosion is a problem. Management of the environment has been poor, and pollution and waste continue to sully the waterways and lands around the urban areas, particularly around Suva. In some areas, fish consumption is a health hazard.Of the 3000-odd plant species identified on the Fiji islands, around one-third are endemic. Fijians developed uses for much of the native flora for food, medicine, dyes, implements and building materials.Around 3500 years ago the first settlers brought poultry, dogs and pigs, and this coincided with the extinction of at least three of the indigenous bird species - two megapodes and a giant fruit pigeon. Bats are the only remaining indigenous land mammals but introduced animal species have taken to the local habitats with relish. Happy and established interlopers include the Indian mongoose (introduced to control rats in the sugar-cane plantations), feral dogs, cats, pigs, goats and rats. The 20 species of land-dwelling reptiles include turtles and snakes, but the migration of the crested iguana from South America is a bit of a mystery. There are about 100 bird species, 23 of which are native. Sea life is abundant and varied, and many species of coral, sponges, tropical reef fish, rays, sharks, dolphins and whales call the Fijian waters home (or call in on their way home).
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MEDICAL FACILITIES
 


Health-care facilities in Fiji are adequate for routine medical problems.  Two major hospitals, the Lautoka Hospital in the western city of Lautoka, and the Colonial War Memorial Hospital in Suva, the capital, provide emergency and outpatient services.  There is a private hospital in Suva that provides Western-style medical care, and maintains the Fiji Recompression Chamber for the benefit of scuba divers.  Other hospitals and clinics provide only a limited range of health services.  Medical emergencies may be referred to Australia, New Zealand, or the United States.  Serious medical problems requiring hospitalization and/or medical evacuation to the United States or elsewhere can cost thousands of dollars or more.  Doctors and hospitals expect immediate cash payment for health services.
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