George Speight - a former coup frontman in Fiji - is calling on the perpetrators of the country's past political upheavals to confess.
The ex-convict also described the idea of a common identity for the country's citizens as "flawed" and said iTaukei (indigenous) views must not be ignored.
Speight made the comments in a submission to Fiji's Constitutional Review Commission this week, after spending 24 years in a maximum-security jail for treason following the racist 2000 coup.
During his submission to the government-backed panel on Thursday, he slammed the 2013 Constitution and said the immunity provision should be removed.
"The clause is unfair... If you want redemption, you have to confess," he said, adding that Fiji could not achieve genuine reconciliation without first acknowledging past wrongdoing.
Quoting from Proverbs, he said those who admitted their crimes would find mercy, while those who tried to hide would never prosper.
"I have served my time and I don't feel any malice towards anyone, " he said.
The sweeping immunity provisions have protected those involved in past military and political coups from criminal prosecution and civil liability.
Fiji has been rocked by four coups since gaining independence in 1970. The first two, in May and September 1987, were led by then-military lieutenant Sitiveni Rabuka, who is the current prime minister.
In 1999, Mahendra Chaudhry was sworn in as the country's first Indo-Fijian prime minister, but the Labour Party leader's election stoked racial tension in Fiji.
A year later, Speight led rebel soldiers from the military's Counter-Revolutionary Warfare (CRW) Unit in an armed takeover of the then-coalition government. Chaudhry and his government were held hostage for 56 days.
The failed businessman pleaded guilty to treason after the unsuccessful coup and received the death penalty, which was later commuted to life imprisonment. However, he was granted a presidential pardon and released from prison on 19 September 2024.
Indigenous views
Speight condemned the concept of a common name for the people, an issue that has sparked widespread debate in Fiji.
In April the Great Council of Chiefs (GCC), the apex indigenous body in Fiji, told the Commission that the term "Fijian" should be exclusively reserved for the iTaukei (indigenous) population.
The GCC's proposal prompted a backlash from political parties, civil society groups and human rights organisations across the country.
Chaudhry, still the Fiji Labour Party leader, told Pacific Waves at the time that the GCC's call was "racially divisive".
"We [the Labour Party] are opposed to that idea and we've made it very clear that there can be only one nationality in the nation," the veteran politician said.
However, Speight told the Commission the idea was fundamentally wrong.
"I understand the principle behind it, I understand the reasoning behind it, but it's flawed. It makes people second-guess something so special and so unique and God-given, their ethnic identity, unless we fix the justice element," he said.
"All of the different ethnic groups in our country can't live together very long, because it's an unfair society."
"The Bill of Rights is great, it covers everybody, no problem. But each ethnic group has its desire to continue with its uniqueness, and it must be encouraged, but not at the expense of the greater good," he said.
Speight also told the CRC that iTaukei views, including those of the iTaukei Land Trust Board, should not be ignored.
"Those voices have to be heard, the process of hearing those voices and accommodating the issues brought up must never and forever going forward be labelled as racist anymore because they're not, with respect."
"Because iTaukei, when they get up and speak, it has been a common practice to label it all as racist, and that's not the case. No one should feel threatened, no one should feel edited, no one should feel uncertain, because level heads will prevail," Speight said.
"Those that push the agenda that iTaukei issues are not good for the future of this country and should not be addressed specifically, I ask that they reconsider and work together with the iTaukei community."
Speight also told the Commission that although the government-appointed Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) was a "necessary arm of the process of moving forward", he had chosen not to appear before it.
"I just feel that it does not have the teeth or the mandate to go all the way to actually fix things... until [the immunity clause is removed], truth and reconciliation in my mind is premature," he said.
"I'm grateful to be here, grateful for the opportunity of the good lord in heaven, and I'm grateful to the government today, that saw fit to release me."
The Rabuka-led coalition government wants to amend the 2013 Constitution before the upcoming general elections, having set up the independent commission in March to consult widely on the issue.

