Sneha Girap (Editor)

Charles Walker (Fijian politician)

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Preceded by
  
Adi Losalini Dovi

Succeeded by
  
Robin Yarrow

Name
  
Charles Walker

Party
  
Alliance Party

Preceded by
  
Ratu Tui Cavuilati

Political party
  
Alliance Party (Fiji)

Role
  
Fijian politician

Charles Walker (Fijian politician) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu
Succeeded by
  
Parliament Abrogated along with 1970 Constitution; Constituencies reorganised under 1990 Constitution

Constituency
  
Eastern General National Seat (1972–1977) Vanua Levu/Lau/Rotuma (1977–1987)

Born
  
12 June 1928 (age 95) Sawana Village, Lomaloma District, Vanua Balavu Island, Lau Province, Fiji (
1928-06-12
)

Charles Walker (born 1928) is a retired civil servant and Alliance Party politician and former diplomat of Fiji. He was born in the village of Sawana in the Lomaloma district on Vanua Balavu island in the Lau Archipelago. He was registered under Luseane Wainiqolo, his maternal grandmother, in the rolls of the Vola ni Kawa Bula (Native Land Register), the Fijian register of births and the only legal way to claim associated communal rights to native land, fishing rights (qoliqoli) and claim to hereditary chiefly titles. His father Ernest Fearon Walker was a Scottish settler and worked for the Hedstrom and Hennings families managing a local trade store. Walker was fortunate to have the choice and ability to move between two very different worlds: the traditional Fijian/Tongan way of life in the village and as the son of a European settler in the Western world of rapidly modernising Suva City.

Contents

Education

Walker was educated at the Levuka Public School, then completed his secondary education at the Marist Brothers High School in Suva. After attaining his Senior Cambridge, he was accepted into the University of Otago at Cantebury in New Zealand, receiving a BSc in Agricultural Science in 1948. He later completed a MSc in Agriculture at the University of Trinidad & Tobago.

Career

Walker began his career in the Colonial Civil Service in the Colonial Department of Agriculture in the late 1940s as a Senior Agricultural Officer. By the time he married in 1958 he had progressed to the post of Director Agriculture and remained in that post until 1966, when responsible internal self-government was introduced, he became Deputy Secretary of the newly formed Ministry of Agriculture. He became Permanent Secretary for Agriculture in 1969 and after Independence came in 1970, he served in various portfolios including Finance and Foreign Affairs until he became Permanent Secretary to the Public Service Commission, effectively the first local to head the civil service.

He was invited by his paramount chief and leader of the Alliance Party Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara to resign from the Civil Service and stand for the Eastern General National seat in 1977, replacing his sister-in-law Adi Losalini Dovi (who was to transfer to a Fijian communal seat), which he won and held until 1982 after which he won the Vanua Levu/Lau Rotuma seat which he held until the military coup-d'etat of 1987 after the Alliance defeat to the Labour/NFP Coalition. He served invariably as Minister of Agriculture, and then Finance and was Acting Prime Minister on a couple of occasions in the Alliance Administration. He resigned as Finance Minister due differences with the Prime Minister over how to handle an industrial dispute and served out the rest of his parliamentary term as a backbencher.

After the 1987 coup, he served for a short stint as Interim Minister for Information for the military junta before being appointed Fiji's Ambassador to the Empire of Japan in late 1988.

After returning to Fiji in 1993, he was appointed Chairman of the Public Service Commission, Chairman of the Police Services Commission, a member of the Higher Salaries Commission as well as Chairman of the Civil Aviation Authority of Fiji.

He resigned from all those positions after a strong disagreement with the SVT government led by Major General Sitiveni Rabuka, coup-maker cum elected Prime Minister.

Shortly afterwards, he accepted the Chairmanship of Fiji Pine Limited and Directorship of its subsidiary Tropik Woods Limited. He also accepted board positions two private companies with BOC Gases and Golden Manufacturing Ltd.

After the failed civilian overthrow of George Speight in 2000, he tendered his resignations for Fiji Pine and Tropik Wood Limited due to perceived conflicts with the new interim military administration's handling of these government subsidiaries.

After Parliamentary Democracy was restored in 2001, he accepted appointment as Chair of the Sugar Industry Restructuring Committee by the leader of the SDL Government Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase. When the Committee concluded its work in 2004, he accepted an appointment as Consultant/Advisor to Government on the Sugar Industry Restructure until he was removed by the military regime of Frank Bainimarama after the military overthrow of December 2006.

Walker then retired to his family home in Suva.

Personal life and family ties

Walker is the youngest of the three children of Ernest Fearon Walker of Fife in Scotland and Vilimaina Saulo Fotofili, of the Yavusa Tonga, Sawana in the district of Lomaloma on Vanua Balavu island in the Lau Group.

Through his father he traces descent from the earliest European settlers including his namesake and grandfather Charles who settled in Fiji via Tonga and Canada and his uncle Leslie who was the colony's first Post Master General. The Walkers trace kinship to the Dukes of Fife through Princesses Maud and Arthur of Connaught. Through Walker's paternal great grandmother Martha Helen Walker nee Leslie, they also trace descent from the Earls of Leven. His paternal granduncle Wilfrid was an explorer and author of Wanderings Among South Sea Savages: And in Borneo and the Philippines, Wilfrid dedicated the book to his brother Charles, Walker's grandfather/namesake and a signed copy remains with his descendants.

Through his mother he claims descent from Wainiqolo, the ambitious Tongan chief and loyal lieutenant of Ma'afu, who conquered much of Eastern and Northern Fiji before being reined in by Fiji's cession as a crown colony to the United Kingdom in 1874.

He is married to Adi Alisi Davila Walker nee Uluiviti (born 12 August 1937), a lady of rank from the village of Natauloa on the island of Nairai, Lomaiviti Province. She is a member of the Methodist Church of Fiji and Rotuma, an elder and laypreacher in Fiji and regionally through participation in International Christian Groups like Aglow International and ICEJ. Her elder sister Adi Losalini Raravuya Dovi was one of three pioneer lady Members of the Legislative Council (MLC), although she was not elected but nominated as were the majority of iTaukei MLCs at the time (Irene Jai Narayan and Loma Livingstone were elected in the same – 1966 session – as Indian and European MLCs respectively). Her nephew Ratu Joni Madraiwiwi, a former Vice-President of Fiji, is a paramount chief, prominent lawyer and former Judge of Fiji's High Court.

They had three children Martha Jean Walker (born 25 September 1959 – died December 2008), Lilian Davila Walker (born 23 July 1961) and Ernest Fearon Walker (born 31 August 1972).

References

Charles Walker (Fijian politician) Wikipedia