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Fiji Pensioners

~ GREY POWER

Fiji Pensioners

Category Archives: Grey Power Editor

Would YOU invest in Fiji ?

07 Sunday Oct 2012

Posted by fijipensioners in Grey Power Editor

≈ 1 Comment

Click on COMMENT to give us your answer and why, or why not.

Pensioners Power

10 Monday Sep 2012

Posted by fijipensioners in Grey Power Editor

≈ 2 Comments

2014 is rapidly approaching; this will be one of our most important elections especially for Fiji Pensioners. Fiji pensioners can make, or break, any political party by using their vote collectively. 

Every politician will promise anything to get into power, we need to use our votes to put effective people into power who can really do something for the pensioners, there is no point in voting for politicians who either acted against pensioners in the past or are too weak or corrupt to concern themselves with pensioners in the future.

As a Pensioner or potential pensioner you are a member of the largest voting block in our country, it is time to show the “would be politicians” that we are not weak, not stupid and will not be trampled on or bulldozed by bullshit.

Do not waste your vote, get together with other pensioners NOW, discuss your problems, start planning and act together for the betterment of the aged of our Nation.

Collectively we are powerful, even though as aged individuals we may be weak.

Greybeard.
If you have an opinion or a question, click on the comment section at the top right of this article

Same Old Story

22 Wednesday Aug 2012

Posted by fijipensioners in Grey Power Editor

≈ Leave a comment

 

Same old song, nothing new, no changes, Mick Beddoes on stage at the Constitution Commission in Nadi.

 

THE NEW UTOPIA ?

20 Friday Jul 2012

Posted by fijipensioners in Articles & Reports, Grey Power Editor

≈ 1 Comment

Did a CCF booklet titled ‘Our Voice, Our Future, Our Constitution drop out of your newspaper on the morning of the 20th? It’s a mere 23 small pages, not too wordy, well written and easy to understand; and comes complete with 5 ruled pages on which to gather one’s thoughts and ideas before writing a submission on the new constitution. 

At a first reading one can be forgiven for imagining that towards the end of 2014 Fiji will become a new Utopia. However, read it through with extra care a second time and you will see that it contains the makings of several conflicts. I shall address only one of them, because it is of prime importance to Fiji pensioners. 

On page 15 there is a list of ‘basic requirements…which the constitution-makers are likely to take a strong stance on’. Among these are: A common and equal citizenry – Elimination of discrimination. 

Now turn to page 16 where Human Rights are discussed. Should there be ‘special rights’ for certain groups of people? One such group is described as being Elderly persons. 

Now flip to page 19 on which is a list of principles which might constitute ‘The Bill of Rights’ that will become an integral part of the new constitution. Many of these rights pertain to Fiji pensioners, but there, right at the bottom of the page is Rights of older members of society. 

Silver Surfers, I ask you this: Isn’t it high time we were no longer shut up in a separate box and labelled in this way? 

It is sensible, right, and just, that society enacts laws to protect children and decide upon an age at which those children become adults. But can anybody say exactly when a human being becomes ‘elderly’? On retirement? 50? 53? 60? 68? It is utterly ridiculous! Our age should not matter one jot or tittle. We are still, and should be acknowledged as, a part of the ‘common and equal citizenry’ and to not be discriminated against. 

How often do we read in the papers a report beginning…an elderly man/woman aged 50…? The media seem to have arbitrarily decided that anybody aged 50 suddenly becomes a redundant human being! Isn’t it high time that the words that denote ‘old’ are no longer used to describe a human being? Aged should refer solely to items such as wine and port. ‘Elderly’ describes 10 to 20 year old pets such as cats and dogs. ‘Older’ should refer to the differing ages of siblings or objects. ‘Mature’ describes a good Stilton or Camembert cheese. ‘Getting on’ should apply merely to those who are making a good go of it, as in getting on with the job; otherwise it should be outlawed. Not getting any younger is not only an impossibly idiotic expression; it is always used with a tone of pity – it’s an insult! 

We must demand that we shall never again in the future be labelled ‘elderly’ and classed as a ‘special’ group, for we are not. We are human beings who worked hard, raised families, were in most cases forced to take out a pension and stop work. As a group, ‘pensioners’ are legitimate – but think about the fact that if you win the lottery or come into a huge inheritance at age 20, you can opt to retire from the banking job you have held since leaving school, take out your FNPF lump sum, or even a piddly pension, and become a ‘pensioner’! No age discrimination there. 

Simply because the language says that we are ‘elderly’ or ‘old’ or older’ or ‘getting on’ or ‘not getting any younger’ or ‘aged’ does not mean that we should become second class citizens. That mind-set simply has to go, and has no relevant place in Fiji’s new constitution. 

There is a downside to all this, as there is to every controversial idea – it would mean giving up those concessions which we ‘elderly’ people around the world enjoy, such as free bus passes. But wouldn’t you give up those things which are merely patronisation disguised as a right? A patronisation that ensures that we stay in our box and shut up? The message is ‘You are old – so think ‘old’.’ 

It is time for us Jacks and Jills to jump out of our boxes and tell those who have youth on their side – you might have a clear skin, all your teeth, no wrinkles, no specs, no arthritic fingers, and few health problems; but we have the experience, learning, and wisdom that you will have to work for many more years to come. We deserve to be listened to and we deserve respect because, Fiji’s future needs us more than it needs twenty year old greenhorns. 

So are we, Fiji’s pensioners, going to be acknowledged as being a useful part of this new Utopia? This year we have been discriminated against: we have been insulted, harangued, labelled ‘greedy’, our pensions were cut, and the law court let us down. We need to do something about that by way of a joint submission to the Constituent Assembly. 

Fiji’s youth has to learn that age bestows upon human beings so much more than any societal value granted to firm flesh and an absence of white hairs. Yes, Fiji’s future lies in the hands of its young people – but to build a true Utopia, Fiji’s young people need to respect, listen to, and heed those of us who have the experience that our extra years have granted us. 

The new constitution must acknowledge this. We must ensure that we become fully integrated into the new Utopia as equal citizens and are no longer labelled in a manner that degrades and humiliates us.

Air Pacific & FNPF

06 Friday Jul 2012

Posted by fijipensioners in Articles & Reports, Grey Power Editor

≈ 1 Comment

Congratulations to Air Pacific and HFFT Dave for the apparent improvement in profitability. Perhaps both FTHF Dave and Taito could answer a very simple question.

Has Air Pacific been paying FNPF interest on the F$400,000,000 (Four hundred MILLION dollars) loan they took from the Fiji Pensioners Funds, which at a very low 5% interest equates to  $1,666,667.00 per month, or TWENTY MILLION DOLLARS per annum.

Greybeard

“PIE IN THE SKY”

15 Tuesday May 2012

Posted by fijipensioners in Grey Power Editor

≈ 4 Comments

Fast Talking High Flying Dave has got the support of the Air Pacific Board and the Fiji Government to agree to renaming the airline what it was named 42 years ago Fiji Airways.
Shakespeare said a rose by any other name would smell as sweet. Well unless FTHF Dave lifts his game the name change will not mean a thing. Heaven forbid it might even reflect badly on everything Fiji
With total mismanagement, FTHF Dave has promised much and delivered little, the airline has not been keeping to promised schedules, has demoralised staff, has pre-packed cardboard carton meals that clearly FTHF Dave has not been eating himself.. (getting to be a Fat Cat Dave), have all contributed to the downturn of Air Pacific. (read our previous posts before the name change was suggested, it was obvious to everyone who travelled)

Prior to receiving the new aircraft ( which research exercises have shown will not be able to handle Fiji’s essential cargo exports ), FTHF and getting FAT Dave, must lift the airlines standards and prove that the airline can be dependable by showing good management and not making promises he is incapable of keeping. Otherwise he should make the new name “PIE IN THE SKY”

BREAKING NEWS!!!

27 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by fijipensioners in Grey Power Editor, Health Hints

≈ 4 Comments

Greetings to all of those who have grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. A truly enjoyable and fun activity for young people is coming to Fiji – and it is healthy, too!

Silver surfers who attended Marist or Suva Grammar will probably remember workouts in the ‘gym’, but for many years gymnastics has been a forgotten sport. No longer – for gymnastics is returning to Fiji.

With the support of the Department of Youth and Sport, a company, ‘Gymnastics (Fiji)’ has been registered and eagerly awaits the arrival of gymnastics coach Robert Yeal in early August, in time for the start of term 3 on September 3rd.

Gymnastics maintains good health and fitness levels, strength and flexibility. But in addition it teaches high discipline, co-ordination, concentration, body posture and awareness, and focus – all of which greatly improve a pupil’s learning ability. The minimum age for gymnastics is 5 years.

The sport is progressive; starting with floor work, the young person learns the correct way to walk and run, cartwheel, somersault, back-flip and more; eventually joining these acrobatic moves together to create a variety of routines. This eventually leads to work on the ‘horse’, the bars and the rings.

Robert will set up his first gymnastics club in Suva, where he will also begin to train 2 local coaches – hopefully one from Vanua Levu since Gymnastics (Fiji) plans to eventually open gymnastics clubs in all the main centres. Robert will travel Fiji-wide to set these up.

It is hoped that there will be enough young gymnasts to compete, at a basic level, in the 2013 Coca-Cola Games. Perhaps even the South Pacific Games in 2014 – and who knows – one day even the Olympics!

Robert wants Fiji to lead the way for gymnastics in the South Pacific and hopes that other island nations will soon send young adults to Fiji to train as coaches and spread the good word about gymnastics.

Finally, gymnastics is not an expensive sport. There are some rules and regulations concerning clothing worn for classes; and there are also rules concerning safety. For competition an official ‘Gymnastics (Fiji)’ uniform with our logo will be worn; we hope to find sponsors to provide these when the time comes.

But there is more! Robert is a qualified dance teacher and will be giving dance classes too, as dance is an integral part of gymnastics. He teaches ballet; but also jazz dance and street dance, both of which young people today really enjoy.

Silver Surfers; please spread the word! For those who wish to express an interest in taking up this sport or training to be a coach, please contact our Press & Promotions Officer, Paulini at gymnasticsfiji@gmail.com  with your contact details and Robert will get in touch when he arrives.

Robert Yeal completed his secondary education at Suva Grammar School and has always vowed to return one day to contribute something positive toFiji’s young people. He is a UK qualified gymnastics and dance teacher who worked on the London stage for a number of years in musicals such as CATS and STARLIGHT EXPRESS. He is affiliated with the UK governing body the ‘British Gymnastics Association’. He teaches in more than 30 schools in the UK and has founded 6 gymnastics clubs. His own club employs 3 coaches and teaches over 200 children; competitive and non-competitive

Delayed payout by FNPF is shameful-Beddoes

23 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by fijipensioners in Articles & Reports, Grey Power Editor

≈ 1 Comment

The delayed payout by Fiji National Provident Fund to pensioners on Friday has been labeled as outrageous and shameful by a Former Opposition Leader.

Mick Beddoes said that this latest delay was not the first that expecting pensioners have had to endure waiting for their payout and that it will do nothing to improve the lack of trust that people have for FNPF.

GREY POWER SAYS:
It goes far beyond shameful, Aisake Taito has been erratic and incompetent since he took control as CEO of our pension funds. Firstly he stated that the changes would take place over five years, then he changed his tune, and has kept changing it ever since. There is no TRUST in the FNPF any longer, Taito’s word is worth less than a cup full of cold water, as a result of this, all trust in the FNPF is gone, and if this man continues to mismanage the fund, the end result is inevitable, the fund will collapse. Why is Frank doing nothing about this ??

Greybeard

A CHIEFLY RESPONSIBILITY

18 Wednesday Apr 2012

Posted by fijipensioners in Grey Power Editor, Letters

≈ 1 Comment

Many, many years ago my father remarked upon a mixed-race marriage about to take place with some disgust, ‘One of these days the whole bloody world will be khaki coloured!’

Anderson Cooper of CNN has initiated a debate about racism. CNN research has shown that children of all races, aged 6 and under, have zero racial prejudice. By the time that they have turned 13, the white kids have a 70% racial prejudice against black kids – but the black kids have only a 40% prejudice against white kids. The consensus seems to be that this is due to their parents’ inability to contemplate the possibility of a mixed-race marriage and so, as their kids begin to grow towards puberty, in subtle and not-so-subtle ways, their brainwashing of their kids begins. It goes so far as parents forbidding their kids to bring home friends of another colour – and even forbidding them to even have friends of a different colour. So much for ‘Christian’ America.

And now, here in Fiji ‘the way the world should be’, one of our paramount chiefs, a mere two and a half years or so before elections, has opened the bidding with a race card. (She reminds me of the parliamentarian, also a woman, who some years ago called Fiji’s Indians ‘weeds’ – televised in Parliament no less.)

Well, this chief gets it half right when she claims that ethnicity ‘is a fact of life’. It is indeed a fact of life – an irrational, unintelligent, and hate-filled fact of life which no chiefly leader should condone, support or propound.

Racism yanks schoolyard bullying out of the playground and into the adult world and it all boils down to S E X sex. Not fear of sex, no – but fear of what sex between people of different races might produce. Someone who is not like US! Someone who is different, and different is unknown, and unknown is scary, and scary is to be avoided at all costs.

Has this paramount chief thought this through? Does she realise what she might have unleashed? One has to ask, does she read anything at all? Does she pay attention to world affairs? Has she ever read a history book? After reading Graham Davis’ report (unfortunately given prominence by the Sun on its front page) I think not.

He refers to this person as the Boadicea of the South Pacific – I’d call her the female Ian Paisley – the rabidly poisonous parson of Northern Ireland who promoted religious intolerance and hatred there, spitting his venom into people’s faces and TV cameras.

The problem is that that sort of venom, religious or racist, actually works. It works for the simple reason that we human beings – each and every one of us – likes to think that we are ‘special’; and the easiest way to  go about that is not to work hard to truly be special, but to claim a superior ‘otherness’ compared to others.

Royalty, nobles and chiefs are actually born superior to the rest of us, and therefore ‘special’ – but think about this: they are only ‘special’ because we, the so-called commoners, are prepared to grant them their special status. They are superior because we permit them to claim so: and special because we allow them to be. (This of course ignores the very obvious economic advantages of being ‘superior’ and therefore ‘special’)

So – if we are neither prepared to work hard to become special people in our own right, nor simply accept our lot, there are two (im)-perfect solutions. Religion or Race. We can simply claim that our religion or race is superior, and therefore ‘special’. If we can claim superiority of both religion and race we’ve can really feel ‘special’!

And we human beings have been doing that since time immemorial. Just look at all those ‘hosts’ and ‘nations’ who vanished in biblical times. Remember Ireland and later, Northern Ireland. Think back to Bosnia and Herzegovina; and Cambodia. And as I write, consider Africa and the Middle East. It is all about religion and race.

Most chiefs are getting on a bit – but they unfortunately have a very real grey-power: no longer the GCC and the dough, but certainly the influence, and they are not likely to give that up without a struggle, no matter how many sevu-sevus and apologising ceremonies they grant the PM.

So – here we have an extremely important and ‘special’ chief who one day very soon might have to look back on a blood-bath and eat her words. She has chosen to be divisive rather than inclusive. I quote…’racial calamity’. She is warning us all about a possible ‘racial calamity’? She’s herself will be the cause of it! It is her responsibility to promote understanding, tolerance, and unity.

So what did I reply to my father all those years ago? I told him that the sooner the world was all khaki coloured the better the world would be.

Who Really Pays ?

24 Saturday Mar 2012

Posted by fijipensioners in Grey Power Editor

≈ 2 Comments

Aisake Taito continues to keep saying FNPF members should not subsidise the pensions of other members who have retired. Totally ignoring the fact that people currently drawing pensions subsidised others in the past.

Does Aisake Taito ever ask himself who pays his salary and who will pay his civil service pension??..

IT IS OTHERS !, it is the taxpayers of Fiji, including pensioners and children who pay tax in the form of VAT on nearly everything they buy. It is these people who pay Aisake Taito his wages and who will be paying his civil service pension.

Is he really as stupid as he appears to be. Because if he is, Frank should either arrange for him to have a scholarship in logistics, or boot his useless arse out into the private sector. where he would surely starve.

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