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Tag Archives: personal-finance

Professor Wadan Narsey makes a request: March 2026.

17 Tuesday Mar 2026

Posted by fijipensioners in Articles & Reports, Press Releases

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democracy, finance, investing, news, pension, personal-finance, politics, retirement-planning


I request Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka to note that the FNPF, for the first time, has admitted that a Pension Buffer Fund (PBF) had been established in 1975 and also that it had also been invested for income like all other funds in its possession (FNPF Statement, The Fiji Times, March 7, 2026).

In many of my previous articles I had pointed out (as had the late Jackson Mar independently) that with the proper crediting of interest income, the Pension Buffer Fund had accumulated to more than enough in 2011 to pay the 2012 Pensioners without drawing on the funds allocated to the General Members or drawing on government subsidies.

This last FNPF statement, in response to the article by Daniel Fatiaki and me, falsely denied this latter basic fact while still alleging, falsely, that for FNPF to make full restitution to the 2012 Pensioners, they would need to draw on funds belonging to the General Members or Government.

The FNPF statement of March 7, 2026 went on to speculate on a whole range of solvency issues, nothing to do with the claims by the 2012 Pensioners for fulfilment of their lawful contracts with FNPF, unilaterally broken by FNPF in 2012. There is no need to discuss these other issues which are mere red herrings thrown up by the FNPF management and board.

Here I draw on FNPF’s own statement of March 7, 2026, admitting the existence of the Pension Buffer Fund, and my estimates of its likely size in 1999, 2011 and 2025.

I also regret that the FNPF board and management are now acting like accessories justifying the illegal theft of the 2012 Pensioners’ lawful property.

The Pension Buffer Fund (PBF) set up by Parliament

FNPF has now acknowledged that the PBF was set up by the Ratu Mara Government in 1975 through parliamentary approval for a 2 cents injection from all FNPF members.

Of course, it could be seen as “unfair” to those FNPF members contributing, but who would eventually not take the pension option when they reached 55.

But the primary objective of the Ratu Mara Government was to encourage those retiring at age 55 to take the pension option which would support them until the end of their lives, rather than take the lump sum which in Fiji tended to be frittered away all too soon.

Most importantly, the decision to set up the PBF was a parliamentary decision and therefore the “law” which has to be obeyed, not the views of actuaries seeking generous income from FNPF or World Bank experts who are never accountable to local people anywhere in the world.

The late Jackson Mar and myself have independently estimated that by 1999, the PBF with interest would have accumulated to $535 millions, when pension annuities that year were less than $25m annually.

Clearly, the PBF even then was more than capable of paying another 20 years of pensions without resorting to General Members’ Funds or Government subsidies.

So quite sensibly, the 2 cents injection into the PBF was stopped by Parliament in 1999 and that was also the law and had to be obeyed.

What was also passed by Parliament in 1999 was the higher pension annuity rates steadily coming down from 25 per cent to 15 per cent (by 1 percentage point per year), which I had argued against when I was in the Fiji Parliament in 1999.

I had stated then (and it is in the Hansards records) that the Pension Annuity Rate should have been reduced immediately to 15 per cent, but Parliament decided otherwise. Those higher relatively generous Pension Annuity Rates also were approved by Parliament and became the law.

But the PBF kept growing

Despite the high annuity rates and pensions paid, the PBF kept growing, especially if it had been credited properly with interest.

How utterly outrageous that the FNPF statement (FT March 7, 2026) claims “the assertion that interest should have been credited to the PBF has no basis in law. The PBF was not a separate ring-fenced account owed exclusively by pensioners.”

Hullo, we have never said the PBF was “owned” by pensioners. We have said the PBF was set up by the Fiji Parliament precisely for the purpose of paying pensions and receiving the lump sums of those reaching 55 and choosing the pension option.

The FNPF statement (March 7, 2026) itself acknowledges that the PBF “formed part of the over-all pooled investment fund. All assets were invested collectively and investment income was managed as part of the broader fund reserves”.

Clearly, those funds allocated to the PBF by the Fiji Parliament decision through the 2 cents injection were also earning income. So why should there be any law to stipulate that the PBF should have received interest? Why should the PBF be denied the same interest that was credited to other funds invested by the FNPF?

We point out that by 2011, the PBF ought to have had around $903m, when the total pensions being paid out was a mere $49m, i.e. the FNPF even then was in a position to pay another 18 years of pensions at that level – more than enough given that average life expectancy was only around 65 for males and 67 for females.

It was therefore outrageous for FNPF to claim in 2012 that the PBF would run out in just a few years (as they did in a graph) in order to justify their reduction of the Pension Annuity Rate from 15 per cent to 8.7 per cent.

We do not dispute FNPF reducing the PAR to 8.75% after 2012

Let us be clear that the 2012 Pensioners do not dispute the right of FNPF to reduce the Pension Annuity Rate after 2012 to 8.7 per cent, but that should have been applied only to new retirees at age 55.

What the 2012 Pensioners disputed and took to court was FNPF’s decision to apply that reduction of Pension Annuity Rate to existing pensioners who had lawful contracts signed with FNPF on the 9NOP forms, which declared that they could not change their minds after they signed that Form 9NOP.

FNPF strangely went against the advice from one of their ethical actuaries (Shona Tomkins from firm Promontory) who had stated that reduction of existing pensions would be against “the law of contracts”.

But FNPF callously ignored that sensible advice. Although in a Key Features Statement clearly admitted their guilt when they tried to assure future new retirees “The rates in Table 1 will be regularly reviewed by the FNPF board subject to actuarial advice. Any change in rates in the future will only affect new purchasers, not those who have already purchased the product.”

Ha ha ha. too late for the 2012 Pensioners?

While the FNPF called the reduction of pensions a “reform” it resulted in a total disaster which the FNPF (board and management) to this day have still not acknowledged despite what they can see with their eyes: the total collapse of the Pension Take Up Rate to below 4 per cent by those reaching age 55.

Today, 98 per cent of all retirees at age 55 (yes, 98 out of every 100 new retirees) refuse to take the pension option, but take their lump sums. They do not trust the FNPF after the 2012 robbery.

No amount of costly “rebranding” by the FNPF management and board is going to take away that disastrous reality of totally collapsed Pension Take Up rates. No amount of lipstick on a pig will change the fact that it is a pig.

Note that the FNPF board and all its members blatantly ignore the collapse of the Pension Take Up Rate: It is not even mentioned in their annual reports.

Instead, both FNPF board members and senior management in 2011 went on a propaganda rampage alleging that the FNPF would be made insolvent unless they reduced not just the pension rate for future retirees, but also existing pensioners.

The FNPF article of March 7, 2026, is still making those fallacious arguments against the 2012 Pensioners’ claims when it was abundantly clear that the PBF had more than enough in 2012 to pay the existing pensions without drawing on General Members funds.

We have also shown that the PBF in 2025 with interest credited would have around $1382m.

This massive sum is far more than needed to pay for full restitution of the 2012 Pensioners (backpay plus ongoing pensions at the pre-2012 rate), and still leave some $800m for General Members and the FNPF solvency reserves.

So why do the FNPF board and management keep repeating the falsehood that the General Members or Government will have to “cross-subsidise” the 2012 Pensioners?

Other irrelevant FNPF arguments

Throughout the FNPF statement, over and over, there are claims of FNPF after 2012 needing to satisfy “solvency requirements” set by international “authorities” like World Bank or actuaries.

There is ample data to show that FNPF has never lacked for adequate liquidity.

I see no need to address these arguments as they are totally irrelevant to the claims of the 2012 Pensioners which are based entirely on the illegal trashing of their lawful signed contracts with FNPF (clearly pointed out by former Chief Justice Daniel Fatiaki) and the adequacy of the Pension Buffer Reserve (pointed out by the late Jackson Mar and myself).

FNPF Employees and Board now” accessories” to a robbery

More than a year ago, the FNPF chairman (Daksesh Patel) had lamented to me that while he fully sympathised with the 2012 Pensioners, his “hands were tied” by the 2011 Decrees.

But with this FNPF statement of March 7, 2026, it is clear now that the FNPF management and board members are willing to be accessories to the FNPF’s criminal seizure of the property of the 2012 Pensioners by using all kinds of false arguments to justify it.

Far from being FNPF employees and board members accountable to all FNPF members including the 2012 Pensioners, they have become accessories justifying the 2012 restructuring which the previous Minister of Finance called “illegal”.

Why address PM and not the Minister of Finance?

Why am I addressing Prime Minister Rabuka in this article and not the new Minister of Finance?

Sadly, even though the previous Minister of Finance (Professor of Economics Biman Prasad) had labelled the FNPF action against the 2012 Pensioners as “illegal”, the recent statement by the new Minister of Finance suggests that he does not have the financial acumen to understand the intricacies of FNPF lies about the 2012 Pensioners’ claims.

The new Minister of Finance still calls the 2012 restructure “reforms” the way the FNPF board and management have done consistently.

The new Minister of Finance does not seem to understand that he should not even have issued that statement he did a few weeks ago given that the 2012 Pensioners’ claims are not against Government, but against the FNPF.

Indeed, what role did the FNPF board and senior management have in that statement by the new Minister of Finance?

It is tragic that while the board and FNPF management are supposed to be accountable to all FNPF members and pensioners (including the 2012 Pensioners) they have steadfastly refused to be accountable.

When the previous Minister of Finance (Professor Prasad) had informed me a few months ago that he would consider some compromise solution, I had requested anonymous data on an Excel spreadsheet from the FNPF board on the approximate numbers of 2012 Pensioners, their monthly pensions and their ages, in 2012 and 2025.

I have been contemplating some compromise equitable solution which would fully restore all the low income pensions (including their backpay by three instalments) and put some moderate monthly cap on well-off pensioners so as to reduce the total financial liability for FNPF (I had suggested a cap of around $5000 per month). I am confident most high income pensioners would accept some compromise in order to benefit the low income pensioners.

Sadly, despite all their grand claims in their Vision and Mission Statements about accountability, both the FNPF board and the Minister of Finance have declined to provide me with this information which has absolutely nothing confidential.

How extraordinary and arrogant that FNPF declares in its March 7, 2026, statement “The FNPF does not intend to make further public comments in this matter.”

May I request the Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka to consider the facts that are in this article and discuss a constructive way forward with his new Minister of Finance, the FNPF board chairman and the 2012 Pensioners’ Core Group (chaired by Ross MacDonald) perhaps with the previous Minister of Finance in attendance given that he would understand all the financial issues discussed here.

From the pen of Professor Wadan Narsey, Champion of the Truth. December 2025

15 Monday Dec 2025

Posted by fijipensioners in Articles & Reports

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

economics, finance, personal-finance, politics

The 2012 FNPF Pensioners’ Robbery: the way forward.

  • what the 2025 FNPF Annual Report conveniently ignores
    The 2012 Pensioners have been crying for justice for thirteen long years since the Bainimarama
    Government in 2012 revoked their pension contracts (signed on Form 9NOP) which had been
    offered by FNPF itself.
    Some were forced to take reduced pensions, and some took lumps sums under duress and their
    pensions stopped. Some 1400 are still alive today with some passing away every week without
    seeing justice done.
    Two years ago, the pensioners were heartened when the former Minister of Finance (Professor
    Biman Prasad) announced at his first Budget that the revoking of the 2012 Pensioners’ contracts
    was illegal. He used taxpayers’ funds (not FNPF’s) to restore the pensions of those who had
    accepted the reduced pensions. He did not restore the pensions of those who under duress had
    taken lump sums, and neither did he pay any one’s arrears.
    For the last two years there has been a Core Group of the 2012 Pensioners (all respectable senior
    citizens) who have tried to get the Coalition Government to resolve their case: Ross MacDonald
    (Chair), Matt Wilson, Dewan Chand, Daniel Fatiaki, Hassan Khan, Ronnie Chang, Professor
    Vijay Naidu, Dr Esther Williams, Libby Reade Fong, and Professor Wadan Narsey (from
    Melbourne). The late Jackson Mar was a driving force in the Core Group until he passed away a
    few months ago. Behind them all have been their quiet but equally powerful and supportive
    partners.
    Last week the Prime Minister met with three members of the Core Group, rekindling their hopes
    for full Restorative Justice.
    Sadly, despite the anguish suffered by many Letter Writers, there has been no acknowledgement
    from the FNPF Board of the legitimacy of the 2012 Pensioners’ claims nor any sympathy or
    practical solutions, despite FNPF’s healthy financial state.
    Indeed, FNPF Board Chairman (Mr Daksesh Patel) recently announced with great fanfare that
    for 2025 the “highest interest rate in over 30 years… 8.75%” would be credited to all Members,
    (2025 Annual Report, p. 9).
    But the 2012 Pensioners were not impressed with Mr Patel’s claim “the true measure of our success lies
    in the quality of the service, transparency, and assurance we provide to our members every day. We recognize that
    value is not purely financial; it is holistic, encompassing trust, accessibility, and security.”
    The 2012 Pensioners were also not impressed when the FNPF CEO (Mr Viliame Vodonaivalu)
    stated “To our members, pensioners, employers, and partners- ‘Vinaka” for your continued trust and confidence”
    (p.12).
    It is an utter farce that FNPF has also been spending thousands of dollars in full page media
    advertisements “thanking” the FNPF Members and Pensioners. For what, we may all ask?
    A silent indicator of FNPF’s lack of transparency is that the 2025 Annual Report makes no
    comment on the most important barometer of “trust” and “transparency” – the “Pension Take-
    up Rate” for new Retirees, which indicates a disaster has taken place in “trust of FNPF”.

What “trust” and confidence”?
The “Pension Take Up Rate” is the percentage of new retirees who choose the pension option
rather than take their savings away.
This had collapsed to a record LOW of 2% for 2012, hovered around 4% for thirteen years and
is now again 2% for 2025. Thus 98% (or 98 out of every 100 retirees) DO NOT TRUST the
FNPF Board and Management to manage their retirement savings through pensions.
The FNPF has failed to fulfil the original objective for setting up the FNPF – be a “pension
fund” and not just the “savings fund” it is today which is being milked by all and sundry.
In the glossy 2025 Annual Report the Pension Take-Up Rate is shown as a small declining graph for
just the last five years (p.22).
The FNPF Members must ask the FNPF Board, why do the Annual Reports no longer show the
long term graph (see inset) which proves the long term disaster that the Pension Take Up Rate
was once was a record high 37% in 2004, under the Qarase Government (see my inset).

With the threat of the Bainimarama coup against Qarase, this Pension Take Up Rate then began
to decline and fell to 2% in 2012 after the Bainimarama Government and FNPF Board
committed their brutal robbery:
(a) Through an illegal military Decree, they broke the lawful contracts of existing pensioners and
reduced the pension rate to less than 9% for those continuing the pensions, while forcing the
others to take their “lump sums”.
Yet FNPF had warned Pensioners on Form 9NOP which they had signed in good faith “I also
understand that the option I have made on this form is final and cannot be changed or revoked”. But the
FNPF itself callously revoked that contract in 2012.

They ignored the advice of experienced Australian consultancy firm Promontory whose Report
explicitly stated (Paragraph 24) “ Any retrospective adjustment of existing pension benefits would be difficult under
contract law…… it is not further considered …”.
(b) When the David Burness/Dr Shameem case was being heard in court 2011 (supported by my
sworn Affidavit) by Justice Hettiarachchi, the Bainimarama/Khaiyum Government imposed a
Military Decree throwing the case out of court, denying the 2012 Pensioners their basic human
right to go to court with their perceived grievances. The late David Burness eventually passed
away in despair.
Despite their fiduciary duty to the 2012 Pensioners, not a single member of the 2011/2012 FNPF
Board protested or resigned over the fundamental denial of the basic two human rights of the 2012
Pensioners (sanctity of their contracts and property rights, and their right to go to court for
perceived injustices.).
The one noble exception has been the late Parmesh Chand (a Permanent Secretary in several
governments) who just before he passed away recently, expressed regret at the injustice done to the
2012 Pensioners.
The Fiji Law Society made no protests. One legal lion still in the public limelight today even
argued with a straight face to Justice Hettiarachchi that there was no such entity as FNPF which
could be sued in court. He did not care that Article 4 of the old FNPF Act stated that the FNPF
Board shall be a body corporate and shall, by the name of “The Fiji National Provident Fund Board”, have perpetual
succession and a common seal …. The Board may sue and be sued in its corporate name and may enter into contracts.”
That 2011/2012 FNPF Board also committed other illegalities such as making differential
payments to low income and high income pensioners, and also paying out more than the rate of
inflation even though they had not covered all their liabilities (both banned in the original FNPF
Act).
What an irony and a bitter pill for the 2012 Pensioners to swallow that the perpetrator of the
2012 Robbery, the former Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama, having denied the poor
pensioners their day in court, recently went to court arguing for a $770 thousand pension and
gratuity payout (supported by one lawyer who had put the boot into the 2012 Pensioners).
Bainimarama’s outrageous claims were denied by the High Court (though he still receives a
massive prime minister’s pension).
Proof of FNPF Awareness of their Guilt
Clear proof of the guilt that FNPF
Board and Management felt in 2012 was
in a “Key Features Statement” (see inset)
informing all pensioners that after 1
March 2012 while annuity rates may be
changed in the future based on actuarial
advice “Any change in rates in the future will
only affect new purchasers, not those who have
already purchased the product”. Too late.
The Pension Take Up Rate had already
fallen to 2%.

Most of the better educated retirees knew that with the retirement age at 55 and an annuity rate of
less than 9%, they would need live to more than age 67 in order to get back their life savings.
They already knew that many of their peer group were dying before the age of 65, the average life
expectancy in Fiji for males, and 67 for females.
Sad lack of Board Accountability
Over the last two years, Fiji Times readers will have seen dozens of letters and articles written by
law abiding senior citizens who have given their working lives to Fiji while contributing to FNPF,
with the honest expectation of pensions for life they had signed up to.: Ronnie Chang, Dewan
Chand, Rick Rickman, Daniel Fatiaki, Professor Vijay Naidu, Libby Reade-Fong, Tahir Ali, as well
as many others. There are also independent voices of Fiji’s conscience like Colin Deoki and
Rajendra Naidu from Australia.
But sadly, to my knowledge, not a single current FNPF Board Member today (three of whom are
friends of mine) has ever communicated with any of the Core Group to express sympathy at the
grossly unfair treatment of the 2012 Pensioners.
Today’s Board Members make a mockery of their fiduciary duty to be accountable to ALL FNPF
Members and pensioners, past and present, as proudly boasted by every Annual Report.
I remind that the 2011 Annual Report’s Mission and Vision Statements specifically had among its
Values “accountability” (being answerable and having the courage and honesty to take ownership
of our actions) and “fairness” (treating everyone in an equitable and non-discriminatory manner).
Was it a coincidence that by 2016, the word “fairness” had disappeared from the Mission and
Vision Statements, and by 2017 the word “accountability” had also disappeared. Neither of these
two values are to be found in the 2025 Annual Report.
The 2025 Annual Report (in which there is now a supporting signed statement by the Board
Members including the Chairman) gives not a hint that the FNPF, as a corporate body, may be legally
liable for the restoration of the 2012 Pensions illegally revoked by the Bainimarama Government
and a previous FNPF Board.
Neither does the KPMG Audit Report give any hint in its Audit Statements that FNPF needs to
have contingency funds to settle claims by the 2012 Pensioners.
FNPF’s Board Member’s False Rebuttal
Far from being sympathetic to the robbed 2012 Pensioners, one FNPF Board Member at a
recent meeting with the 2012 Pensioner Core Group, alleged that doing justice to the 2012
Pensioners will require funds to be taken from current Members. This is a gross misconception,
no doubt shared by some other Board Members and some in the FNPF Management.
This Board Member clearly had no idea that the lawful Ratu Mara Government had created in
1975 a “Pension Buffer Fund” specifically for the payment of all pensions and receive the lump
sums of those taking the pension option, and it would have been more than enough to pay all
pensions.

It was to the Core Group’s dismay that a once well respected lawyer for FNPF present at the
meeting (and a long term personal friend of mine) pompously declared (with the former Chief
Justice present) that the FNPF had to follow the LAW, without admitting that the LAW was an
illegal military Decree.
Where is the Pension Buffer Fund?
This PBF had initially been supplemented by a 2 cent deduction from all Members but that was
stopped in 1999 when the PBF had grown large enough.
But the 2012 Annual Report had a false graph of severely declining Pension Buffer Funds allegedly
dropping to a mere $81 million in 2011.
Then the Pension Buffer Fund strangely disappeared from the Annual Reports.
There was another false graph showing that General Members would have to subsidise the
pensioners for forty years to the year 2054. This was another blatant lie perpetrated by the FNPF
Management and the Board (then chaired by Ajit Godagoda).
This Pension Buffer Fund was invested by FNPF and should have received the interest income that all FNPF
funds received. But it was not credited with any interest.
My Table 1 below shows that the PBF far from declining to $81 million by 2011 (as FNPF falsely
alleged), the balance available for paying pensions would have been around $903 million in 2011,
had interest been properly credited to it.
Table 1 Pension Buffer Fund (1975 to 2025) ($million)
(Without Interest and With Interest) 
 

Without interest ($m)
(False numbers)

With Interest ($m)
(Corrected numbers)
1975 1 1 
1980 20 22
1990 96 173
2000 233 578
2010 107 883
2011 81 903
2020   1050
2025   1382

Table 1 Pension Buffer Fund (1975 to 2025) ($million)
(Without Interest and With Interest)
Without interest ($m)
(False numbers)

With Interest ($m)
(Corrected numbers)
1975 1 1
1980 20 22
1990 96 173
2000 233 578
2010 107 883
2011 81 903
2020 1050
2025 1382

A similar figure was independently calculated by accountant and fighter for justice, the late Jackson
Mar.
This Pension Buffer Fund would have more than adequately covered the $49 million annual
pension payment then, and indeed the entire $565 million of long term “vested benefits for
pensioners” calculated by FNPF actuaries (as given in the 2011 Annual Report).
I estimate that, even allowing for $130 million (my rough estimate) paid out of the Pension Buffer
Fund in 2012 for those who were forced to take “Lump Sums”, the same Pension Buffer Fund
would today amount to $1,382 million.
Of course, this sum is hidden in all the huge “accounting” Reserves that the FNPF created
thereafter.
FNPF not a normal business but Gold Mine
I remind that the FNPF is not a “normal” business which has to struggle and compete in the
market for revenues and profits. Instead it is a veritable “gold mine” the envy of all commercial
banks in Fiji, where BY LAW 18% of the Total Wages and Salaries Bill in Fiji pours into its lap,
EVERY YEAR, as Member Contributions. In 2025, this legal inflow amounted to an incredible
$962 million.
On the negative side, they had to pay out a mere $531 million in legal benefits: consisting of
$300 million for retirement lump sums;
$82 millions for emigration;
$56 million for housing
$40 million for death; and a mere
$26 million for pensions.
Taking into account the compulsory contributions alone., FNPF easily makes a net $431 million
surplus annually.

In addition to that you can add all the profits and dividends from their investments, and loans
especially to Government which has borrowed more than $4 billion currently (perhaps earning
$240 million in interest annually).
For financial year 2025, FNPF enjoyed AN INCREASE IN NET ASSETS OF SOME $931
MILLION.
FNPF accounts show a total FNPF Reserve of $2,303 million (more than 2 billion dollars) of
course beefed up by the Pension Buffer Fund;
FNPF also had cash holdings of $765 million. WOW. (Did the FNPF not know where to invest?)
FNPF today is a “Gold Mine”, helped by their robbery of the lawful property of the 2012
Pensioners who are today still crying for Restorative Justice.
The Way Forward
May I humbly suggest that the Prime Minister (and the new Minister of Finance) pay heed to the
call by the former Chief Justice (Mr Daniel Fatiaki) for the speedy Repeal of the two illegal FNPF
Decrees that facilitated the 2012 Robbery (just as speedily as they repealed the Media Decree).
May I humbly suggest that the Prime Minister through the Finance Minister also instruct the
FNPF Board to provide them, the FNPF Members and the public the following:
(a) their estimated current value of the original Pension Buffer Fund, fully credited with annual interest
which the FNPF has credited to all its funds used for investment purposes) to be compared with
my Table 1 rough estimates);
(b) the annual cost to FNPF of immediately renewing all the pensions that the 2012 Pensioners
were receiving before 1 March 2012;
(c) the cost of paying all Arrears to the 2012 Pensioners after allowing for whatever they received
from 1 March 2012 till now (reduced pensions, lump sums, annuity payments). These arrears could
be payable in three annual instalments if FNPF so wishes; and payable to the Estates of Deceased
Pensioners;
The above would amount to full Restorative Justice for the 2012 Pensioners.
I have also personally suggested to the Board Chairman that some high income pensioners might
even accept some decent monthly cap (I suggested $5,000 per month) on their renewed pensions
from 1 March 2012, if that expedited full restoration and restitution for the low income pensioners
who comprise more than 90% of the original 2012 Pensioners.
I would suggest to the Prime Minister and Minister of Finance that if the current FNPF Board
declines to co-operate with Government, then the new Minister of Finance is surely entitled to
appoint new members who have full respect for the lawful contracts that the 2012 Pensioners signed in good
faith with FNPF before 1 March 2012 as implied in the FNPF Mission and Vision Statements.

Doing justice to the 2012 Pensioners and correcting a grievous wrong done by the Bainimarama
Government would go towards fulfilling an election promise made by the Coalition Government –
to return Fiji to Democracy and Rule of Law, that had been denied by the Bainimarama
Government between 2006 and 2022.
[I pay tribute to the late Jackson Mar who fought the injustice of the 2012 Pensioner Robbery till
he passed away a few months ago without seeing justice. Two years ago he and Dr Esther Williams
met with the former Minister of Finance hoping to progress the case. When there was no progress
from the Government end, Jackson strongly pushed for the Core Group to mount a legal case but
the consensus then was that a political solution would be speedier, with which Jackson strongly
disagreed. The jury is still out on that option.
I also pay tribute to the 2012 Pensioners who through the Pensioners Website used to publish my
articles during the dark days of the Bainimarama/Khaiyum censorship when the local media would
not publish them.]

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