SUVA, Fiji (AP) Fiji's military regime passed a new constitution Friday in a step that's raising both hopes and concerns among many who want democracy restored to the South Pacific island nation.
The regime that seized power in a 2006 coup says the constitution is another step toward it holding free elections next year. The document lays out the framework for a democracy, including a Parliament consisting of 50 representatives elected every four years on the basis of one person, one vote.
But many say the constitution also curtails freedoms and is self-serving to the regime. The constitution allows for some freedoms to be suspended when leaders perceive a threat to public safety, order or morality exemptions that critics say are broad enough to allow rulers to repress opponents.
Fiji police on Friday arrested about a dozen people, including a former prime minister, who were apparently peacefully protesting the new constitution, highlighting the restrictions that opposition groups continue to face.
It's the country's fourth constitution since 1970. It was signed by President Ratu Epeli Nailatikau and will take effect Saturday. It comes after a draft prepared by an outside expert, Yash Ghai, was discarded by the regime, which then came up with its own version.