Amnesty International has claimed Fiji's police, corrections officers and military use torture against people accused of crimes or in custody.
In a report, Beating Justice: How Fiji's Security Forces Get Away with Torture, Amnesty has detailed beatings, rape, attacks by police dogs and murder.
"An ingrained culture of torture take root among its security forces" says the Amnesty report.
The report details five cases where people have been beaten to death in police or military custody in Fiji since the 2006 military coup.
Amnesty says Sakiusa Rabaka, 19, was beaten, sexually assaulted and forced to perform military exercises in January 2007. He died from his injuries. The report says eight police officers and one military officer were ultimately convicted over his death and sentenced to prison terms. All were released within a month.