Prime Minister John Key says his visit to Fiji and meeting with Fiji's Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama was not futile despite the lack of concrete gains from it.
Mr Key and Mr Bainimarama met in Suva this morning, the day after Mr Bainimarama took a broadside at New Zealand for its stance on the coup he led in 2006.
Mr Key was unable to get a commitment from Mr Bainimarama to rejoin the Pacific Islands Forum. Although lower level Fijian ministers do attend Forum meetings, Mr Bainimarama has said he will not return until New Zealand and Australia have a less influential role on it. Mr Key said he had urged Mr Bainimarama to engage at the leadership level. "We also made the point New Zealand is not going anywhere. We have significant responsibilities across the Pacific and we take those responsibilities very seriously."
Mr Key said he had tried without success to get Mr Bainimarama to lift a ban on some foreign journalists, such as TVNZ's Barbara Dreaver. On Thursday night, Mr Bainimarama had made it clear he would not revoke those bans, saying the journalists' reporting was misleading and mischievous. Mr Key said he had raised the issue of media freedom with Mr Bainimarama but did not believe Mr Bainimarama would change his mind anytime soon.
"It is in the agree to disagree camp. The main point I made is that a healthy part of any democracy is being challenged by both the Opposition and the media, that's what makes democracy stronger."