Fiji's former prime minister Frank Bainimarama sentenced to one year in jail after interfering in police investigation
Frank Bainimarama being led out of the court in handcuffs. (ABC News)
Fiji’s former prime minister Frank Bainimarama has been sentenced to one year in jail after being convicted of perverting the course of justice.
Bainimarama, who led Fiji for 16 years, faced the country’s High Court in the capital Suva on Thursday.
The conviction relates to Bainimarama’s role in influencing a police investigation into funding of the region’s biggest university, the University of the South Pacific, in 2019.
The courtroom went silent after the sentence was read out, with Bainimarama later being led out in handcuffs, surrounded by police, and into a waiting police van.
He did not react after the sentence was read out, but his wife, who was sitting by his side, broke down in tears.
Bainimarama’s legal team indicated it will appeal after its attempt to have the former prime minister receive bail was rejected by the High Court.
There was a heavy police presence in and outside the court, with increased security across Fiji’s capital on Thursday.
Outside court, a small number of supporters sang a hymn as Bainimarama, who still commands strong support in sections of the community, emerged from the building.
Thursday’s conviction is just one in a string of charges the former military coup leader is facing after he was ousted from office in the December 2022 general elections.
Back and forth in court
Bainimarama was sentenced along with Sitiveni Qiliho, his former police commissioner during his final years in power.
Both men were found guilty of directing police to halt investigations into financial mismanagement at the university in 2019.
The university had filed complaints to state criminal investigators, alleging that mismanagement and abuse of funds had occurred over 10 years.
Bainimarama and Qiliho both pleaded not guilty and escaped conviction last year in the Magistrates Court when it ruled there was insufficient evidence to convict them.
The case bounced back and forth between the courts, and on Thursday both were sentenced, with Qiliho receiving a two-year jail term.