Rights groups call for Fiji to investigate alleged prison beatings and culture of intimidation

Fiji Corrections Commissioner Commander Francis Kean.
Fiji Corrections Commissioner Commander Francis Kean. The government faces calls to investigate claims he ordered the beating of prisoners. Photograph: Fiji Corrections Service

International human rights groups have called on Fiji to launch an independent investigation into the commissioner of corrections, Francis Kean, after allegations from former officers that he routinely ordered the beating and mistreatment of prisoners.

The reports, published in the Guardian on Saturday, are based on detailed accounts from four former officers who have since come to Australia and claimed asylum.

The men claim Kean, who is the brother-in-law of the prime minister, waged a brutal campaign of intimidation, coercion, bullying and violence on both prisoners and staff that human rights campaigners say may amount to torture.

“These allegations are very disturbing,” said Elaine Pearson, Australia director at Human Rights Watch. “The Fijian government should order a full independent investigation into these allegations and if Kean committed these crimes he should be held accountable, because those events described involve cruel and inhumane treatment.”

The former officers allege Kean instructed them to mistreat inmates by keeping them in isolation in cells with no bedding, and only a bucket for a toilet that was emptied once a day, and spraying them with a hose throughout the night to keep them from sleeping.

The officers also allege that Kean ordered prison guards to get a fellow officer drunk and “beat his arse up” as punishment for supposed failure to do his job and that they themselves were subject to harsh punishments from the commissioner, including being forced to jump into a pond of sewage, having their wages docked for weeks and being ordered to walk 20km (12 miles) before and after work each day.

Kean and the Fiji Corrections Service did not respond to the Guardian’s request for comment about the claims.

“On the face of it, these allegations are sufficient to warrant an independent, impartial and effective investigation,” said Kate Schuetze, Amnesty International’s Pacific researcher. “It needs to be a separate body with sufficient powers, sufficient resources to look into that and make clear findings into whether there should be any prosecutions.”

However, Schuetze expressed concern that Kean would be held to account, given his connections.

“I’m not overly optimistic of accountability of someone as senior as Francis Kean,” she said, citing the fact that he was made commissioner of corrections in 2016, despite having been convicted of manslaughter in 2007.

Kean pleaded guilty to manslaughter after he beat a man at the wedding of his niece, the daughter of the prime minister Frank Bainimarama, Kean’s brother-in-law. The man died of a brain haemorrhage. Kean was convicted for manslaughter and sentenced to 18 months in prison, though he was released after just a few months.

The Guardian’s story has been widely read across Fiji, but the government and opposition have not commented on the allegations.

“For many years there’s been a culture of intimidation and silencing not just of media but also of civil society speaking out on abuses of power in Fiji,” said Schuetze. “We’ve seen journalists and human rights activists arrested for peaceful protests, for publishing articles that the government doesn’t like.”



source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/may/18/rights-groups-call-for-fiji-to-investigate-prisons-commissioner-over

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