Pacific Islands Forum says it is in consultation with government after former presidents called on it to send observers

This article is more than 4 years old

This article is more than 4 years old

The Pacific Islands Forum is “in consultation” with the government of Nauru over its forthcoming election but would need to be invited to send electoral monitors.

This week the two former presidents, Marcus Stephen and Sprent Dabwido, accused the government of trying to manipulate the election. Among their grievances were new laws that require a candidate to pay $2,000 – a 20-fold increase in the entry fee – and to resign their public service job three months before polling day.

Nauru election: former presidents say moves to 'rig' result under way Read more

This meant “the current government will be the only one who can afford to run an election campaign”, Dabwido told Guardian Australia.

The former presidents wrote to the Pacific Islands Forum and the Commonwealth Secretariat, requesting them to send international observers early to ensure the election was “free and fair”.

On Tuesday the forum’s secretary general, Dame Meg Taylor, acknowledged receipt of the letter, which she said “raised a number of important governance issues”, and said the forum was in consultation with the government of Nauru.

But no discussions about observer missions could have occurred before the passing of the Nauru’s Electoral Commission Act last week. “If an invitation is issued by the government of Nauru, the forum is ready to look at the issues raised with a team of suitably qualified regional electoral experts,” Taylor said.

The letters sent by Stephen and Dabwido, seen by Guardian Australia, accused the government led by Baron Waqa of taking actions which “unfairly alter the course of election preparations”. “The Waqa government is contemplating further actions which would directly influence the outcome of the election in order to ensure they retain power,” they said.

A failure to examine the allegations “would be a failure of both organisations to come to the aid of the people they were established to protect” and they hoped early observer missions could intervene before the election was over.

Taylor said: “Free and credible elections are the foundation of all democracies, and the forum takes any allegations of electoral impropriety very seriously.



“All forum electoral missions take into account the pre-election environment, polling, counting, and the post-election environment.”