Indians in Fiji


Indians in Fiji — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1874 Fiji formally becomes a British Crown Colony. Governor Sir Arthur Gordon initiates the indentured labour policy.
1879 First batch of Indian indentured labourers arrives in Fiji.
1879–1916 Approximately 60,000 Indians transported under indenture (Girmit system). [S1]
1916 Indenture system formally abolished following sustained agitation by Indian leaders including Totaram Sanadhya and pressure from India.
1920 Indian labourers' strike; demands for equal rights and land access.
1926 British Commons debate on Fiji Educational Commission — no educational infrastructure for Indian children (The Hindu archive). [S4]
1947 India's independence galvanises Indo-Fijian political consciousness.
1970 Fiji gains independence; National Federation Party (largely Indo-Fijian) plays a central role.
1987 Two military coups led by Lt. Col. Sitiveni Rabuka overthrow the Indo-Fijian–backed coalition government. [S1]
1990 New constitution entrenches indigenous Fijian (iTaukei) political supremacy.
2000 Third coup — George Speight hostage crisis.
2006 Fourth coup by Frank Bainimarama; promised racial equality.
2013 New Fijian constitution eliminates race-based voting.

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Historical

Geopolitical / Strategic

Social

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The term "Girmit" is a phonetic corruption of the English word "Agreement" (the indenture contract). [S1]
  2. The first ship carrying Indian indentured labourers to Fiji was SS Leonidas, arriving on May 14, 1879 — commemorated as Girmit Day. [S3]
  3. Approximately 60,000 Indians were transported to Fiji under indenture between 1879 and 1916. [S1]
  4. The indenture system in Fiji was abolished in 1916 (global abolition of indenture across all British colonies: 1920).
  5. Hugh Tinker's landmark study on indenture is titled "A New System of Slavery" (1974). [S2]
  6. Indo-Fijians declined from 48.6% (1986) to 37.5% (1996) of Fiji's population following the 1987 military coups. [S3]
  7. The 1987 coups were led by Lt. Col. Sitiveni Rabuka after an Indo-Fijian–backed coalition won general elections. [S1]
  8. Fiji Hindi is the language spoken by Indo-Fijians — a creole based on Awadhi and Bhojpuri, not standard Hindi. [S3]
  9. The 2013 Fijian Constitution eliminated race-based voting and reserved seats, establishing equal citizenship. [S3]
  10. A 1926 British House of Commons debate noted that no educational facilities existed for Indian boys and girls in Fiji. [S4]
  11. In colonial Fiji, the Governor of the Colony (not elected representatives) appointed commissions like the Fiji Educational Commission (1926). [S4]
  12. Col. Amery (Leo Amery, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Colonies) responded to the Fiji education question in the 1926 Commons debate. [S4]
  13. The Arya Samaj was the leading organisation for Hindi-medium education among Indo-Fijians in the post-indenture era. [S3]
  14. Girmit Day = May 14 (not to be confused with Pravasi Bharatiya Divas = January 9).
  15. Fiji is part of the Pacific Islands Forum — India engages with it under the SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region) policy framework.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-I Indian History — Modern India, Indian Diaspora; Society — Communalism, Regionalism
GS-II India's Foreign Policy; Bilateral relations (India–Pacific); Indian Diaspora and MEA policy
GS-IV Ethics — Colonial exploitation, Social justice, Duty of the state to diaspora

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Girmit system of indentured labour was slavery by another name." Critically examine this assertion in the context of the Indian experience in Fiji, and analyse India's post-independence policy towards the Indo-Fijian diaspora. (GS-I / GS-II) 2. The repeated military coups in Fiji (1987–2006) exposed the fragility of multicultural democracies. Discuss the socio-political factors behind Fiji's ethnic conflict and India's diplomatic response. (GS-II) 3. Colonial-era denial of education to Indian communities in Fiji as reflected in the 1926 Parliamentary debate underscores how structural deprivation is reproduced across generations. Comment. (GS-I / GS-IV)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Indian Indentured Labour in the Caribbean (Trinidad, Guyana, Suriname) Parallel Girmit systems; same 1879–1920 period
Pravasi Bharatiya Divas & OCI/PIO framework India's legal and diplomatic engagement with all diaspora, including Indo-Fijians
India's SAGAR Policy and Pacific Island engagement Fiji as part of India's expanding Pacific outreach
British Colonial Labour Policy in Asia-Pacific Broader context of indentured labour across Burma, Ceylon, Malaya, Mauritius
Mauritius — Indian Diaspora Largest % of Indian diaspora in any country (~68%); contrasting post-colonial outcomes
Fiji's Constitutional History (1970–2013) Four coups; race-based constitutions; relevance to ethnic federalism
ILO Conventions on Forced Labour Retrospective evaluation of Girmit against C29 (Forced Labour Convention, 1930)
Indian National Movement's influence on Overseas Indians Gandhi's South Africa → influence on Indo-Fijian political consciousness

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong abolition year: Indenture in Fiji ended 1916 (last recruitment); the global system formally abolished 1920. Do not conflate the two.
  2. Girmit Day vs. Pravasi Bharatiya Divas: Girmit Day = May 14 (arrival in Fiji). PBD = January 9 (Gandhi's return to India from South Africa, 1915). Frequently mixed up.
  3. Rabuka confusion: Sitiveni Rabuka led the 1987 coups against Indo-Fijian political gains — but returned as elected PM in 2022 under a multiracial coalition. Two opposite roles.
  4. Language error: Indo-Fijians speak Fiji Hindi (Awadhi/Bhojpuri-based creole), NOT standard Hindi or any South Indian language — even though ~15–20% of Girmitiyas were from Tamil/Telugu regions.
  5. Education Commission appointor: The 1926 Fiji Educational Commission was appointed by the Governor of the Colony (not the British Parliament or elected body) — important for questions on colonial governance structures. [S4]
  6. "Indians refused WWII service" reason: Often misattributed to loyalty to Japan. Correct reason: political protest against unequal treatment and denial of rights by the colonial government. [S1]

11. Sources