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Fiji's Daily Post - logo. The Fiji's Daily Post ( FDP) was a newspaper in Fiji that was founded in October 1987 by Wame Waqanisanini, Jr, who owned 50 percent of the shares. Taniela Bolea was the original publisher. The majority shares were later owned by the Fijian government. The newspaper suspended publication and has remain closed since 2010.
This is a list of newspapers in Fiji. Daily Post; Fiji Focus; Fiji Live; Fiji Samachar; Fiji Sun; Fiji Times; Fiji Village; The Jet Newspaper; Shanti Dut; The Stallion; South Sea Times; Nai Lalakai; Kaila; Fiji Newswire; Fiji One; Fiji Broadcasting Corporation; Islands Business (magazine) Mai Life (magazine)
The Fiji Daily Post mocked the restrictions, publishing stories under "Man gets on bus" and "Breakfast as usual". [34] [35] On 13 April two of the last remaining foreign journalists in Fiji were called to Government House by the Ministry of Information.
Fiji will maintain a policing cooperation deal with China after a review of the agreement which has sparked concern in Australia, the Guardian Australia news site reported. “We are now back on ...
Fiji will strike a deal with Australia to upgrade ports and shipbuilding infrastructure, months after its prime minister said it was likely to partner with China on the project, the government of ...
English (primary), Fijian. Headquarters. Suva, Fiji. Circulation. 72,993 (as of 2010) [1] Website. www .fijitimes .com. The Fiji Times is a daily English-language newspaper published in Suva, Fiji. Established in Levuka on 4 September 1869 by George Littleton Griffiths, it is Fiji's oldest newspaper still operating.
By Alasdair Pal and Kirsty Needham (Reuters) -Fiji's former long-serving prime minister Frank Bainimarama was on Thursday sentenced to a year in prison for perverting the course of justice, the ...
2022. v. t. e. The Fijian coup d'état of December 2006 was a coup d'état in Fiji carried out by Commodore Frank Bainimarama against Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase and President Josefa Iloilo. It was the culmination of a political crisis that had begun the previous year when the Qarase government introduced three bills to the Fijian Parliament.