'It Could've Been A Lot Worse' - Torika
By Kelera Muavesi: April edition, 2002
Wansolwara
Newspaper (USP)
SUVA (Pasifik Nius): 'It could have been a lot worse if it wasn’t for the coup," claims putsch front man George Speight’s partner Torika Rawlinson.
"The night before the actual takeover, there were plans that the cabinet members of the deposed government were supposed to have been executed in their homes."
Rawlinson has spoken for the first time in an exclusive interview with Wansolwara. the USP journalism newspaper.
She gave details about how she’s coping with her life now that her partner is serving a life sentence for treason, how she is managing her sickly son, and some snippets of information about the attempted coup on May 19, 2000.
However, she skirted many of the tough questions about the takeover of Parliament by Speight and his gunmen who held the Mahendra Chaudhry Government hostage for 56 days.
Rawlinson maintained that truth "will set itself free". Some of the highlights of her claims in the interview:
o Members of the deposed Mahendra Chaudhry government were to have been executed the night before the coup.
o The march led to the riots in the city while the takeover was happening in Parliament.
o Indian businessmen were not involved in the coup.
o Rawlinson wasn’t aware of the coup because she was engrossed in her work as a graphic designer. She remembers talking to Speight on the phone, but the rest was "news" to her.
o The coup days brought with it frightening experiences, especially for the safety of her and her two-year-old son Ely.
o It was "devastating" when she heard from her cousins that George Speight had been arrested. Days after that brought changes to their life as a family. She left work and spent more time with her baby while Speight "gave his life to the Lord".
She also turned to God for spiritual guidance.
"My parents are the greatest. They don’t agree with what George did but they have just been so good to Ely knowing that we are not to mention any name or even talk about it," she said.
Everytime she visits Speight on his prison isle of Nukulau, they "pray together for those ones that have lost their loved ones or have been victimised" following the failed coup.
"We continually pray for them that in due time they will forgive."
* The full interview is in the April edition of Wansolwara, published today.
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