History — Key Moments and Movements

Explore Fiji’s defining milestones — from the arrival of the first indentured labourers to independence, coups, reforms, and democratic renewal.

Cakobau and Ma’afu (1871-1874)

Before cession in 1874, Fiji was briefly the Kingdom of Fiji (1871–1874) under Ratu Seru Cakobau.

Girmit Era (1879–1920)

The indenture system that brought Indian labourers to Fiji and forged a new Indo-Fijian identity.

1916 – The Abolition of Indenture

From contract labourers to farmers and merchants — the beginnings of Fiji’s Indo-Fijian society.

1920s – The sugar industry strikes

The Indo-Fijian strikes for equality; the resistance by the Indo-Fijians.

1943 – The sugar industry strikes

The Indo-Fijian resistance continues

1930s–60s — Cane Unions

Kisan Sangh and Maha Sangh link labour rights with politics and community leadership.

1963: Universal Adult Franchise

In 1963, Fiji crossed a historic threshold: for the first time, all adults could vote in Legislative Council elections.

1965 London Constitutional Conference

In July 1965, Fiji’s leaders gathered in London to debate the colony’s constitutional future.

1969–1970: The London Talks and Independence Settlement

Fiji’s leaders and Britain faced a fundamental question: could a divided colony become a united state?

1970 — Independence

Fiji becomes a sovereign nation balancing identity, equality, and unity under a shared constitution.

1987 — Military Coups

Two coups overthrow democracy, sparking Indo-Fijian migration and reshaping national politics.

1990 — Constitution

A racially weighted charter entrenches division and reduces Indo-Fijian representation.

1997 — Reform & Renewal

Cross-party cooperation delivers a more inclusive constitution and renewed civic hope.

2000 — Speight Coup

Parliament is seized; democracy collapses again, testing Fiji’s resilience and rule of law.

2006–2013 — Bainimarama Era

The military takeover ushers in a centralised state and a new constitutional order.

2014 — Return to Elections

The first vote under the 2013 constitution legitimises Fiji’s new political landscape.

2022 — Peaceful Transition

A hung parliament leads to Fiji’s first democratic change of government in 16 years.

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“From Girmit to the ballot box, each generation carried Fiji’s Indo-Fijian story forward with courage, learning and resolve.”

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