What Australian CSR
Company Stole from Indo Fijians in Cane Fields of Fiji
By
Thakur Ranjit Singh, Auckland, New Zealand
Brisbane India Times- Feature Article for
August 2005 Issue
A joke going
around grog bowls in Fiji is that somebody was filling a form to
go to Australia and the question in the form wanted to know
about any criminal records. The person filling it asked “Is that
still a criteria to enter Australia?” Do you get it? This is
because Australia was initially settled by British convicts. On
the other hand Fiji had its share of cannibals and coolies. The
three Cs played an important part in Fiji’s history: Australian
convicts, Indian coolies and Fijian cannibals, and these are
reflected in a recently written book that tried to fill a
historical vacuum where a generation was stolen by the
colonists.
Rajendra
Prasad, a third generation Indo Fijian, a descendant of Indian
indentured labourers to Fiji, (white men called them “coolies”
in a derogatory way) launched his book, “Tears in Paradise”
in Brisbane on 14th May to coincide with 126 years of arrival of
first girmitiyas to Fiji.
The book
tells about tears that created a paradise in Fiji that would
otherwise had remained relatively undeveloped and poorer, like
some of its other Pacific neighbours. This was done through the
suffering of indentured Indian labourers from India. The book
tells about the suffering these indentured labourers,
girmitiyas, as they were known, went through, at the hands
of colonialists, who comprised British and Australians (the
latter descending from “convicts”, as history tells us.)
In one of my
earlier writings, I had mentioned about the forgotten history of
our forefathers. In that forgotten history was also hidden the
theft committed from Indo Fijians by Australians, hiding behind
Colonial Sugar Refining Company, that we call CSR.
Australia’s
CSR Company, which operated sugar mills, had been a tool of
oppression for decades for Indians in Fiji. History
substantiates enormous degree of exploitation of Indian cane
farmers by the sugar milling company, both in physical terms, as
well as in financial terms.
Prasad talks
about the wounds of indenture that caused great pain and
suffering to subsequent generations of Indo Fijians. He accuses
British Government, the CSR Company and the Australian
Government of being the axis of evil who robbed a generation of
freedom, liberty and rights of the indentured labourers.
In a book
titled ‘A Short History of Fiji” D. Scarr quotes
J. B Thurston, Colonial Secretary in 1880 (later Governor of
Fiji- 1888- 1897) labeling CSR as ‘the most selfish company in
the Australasias.’
He told Sir
Arthur Gordon, the first Governor of Fiji:
“With all our ‘highfalutin’ to the contrary, the wrongs we
have committed in the name of Christianity, civilisation,
progress are manifold. We are, as a race, a race of robbers
and spoilers”
According to
Prasad, Australia as the beneficiary of the ill-gotten gains of
the CSR Company in Fiji was in a position to exert its influence
to reduce the suffering of the girmitiya, but economic
considerations outweighed human ones. In addition to this, the
victims were coloured while the perpetrators were white and
their own people, hence the expediency that justified injustice.
Was CSR
Company really the evil predator that it was branded as? The
author had a revelation of this when he sought permission to
publish some photos from its publication covering Fiji
operations. They agreed on the condition that materials used
were not injurious to its reputation and they sought right to
review his work for fairness, seeking copy of any such material.
The author felt that, the company was still domineering, and
felt it could still intimidate and dominate the lives of
descendants of the people they milked to make millions.
The author
concluded that…“ For who would otherwise ask an author to
submit their work for review for fairness before publication. By
its response, the CSR Company reconfirmed the notion that
leopards do not change their spots”
One other
matter of interest was CSR’s claims to ‘fairness’, a word that
did not exist in CSR’s vocabulary in its dealing with Indo
Fijians during and after the indenture era. CSR was concerned
about tarnishing of its reputation. However, reputations of
individuals or multinationals are built on transparency, honesty
and integrity. These terms did not exist for CSR in its dealings
with indentured labourers. The company that earned wealth by the
oppression of innocent and ignorant people could hardly qualify
to lay claim to a reputation for fairness.
The author
Scarr further revealed about profitability of CSR that was
beyond and far above average for any company. As a sole miller
of sugar in Fiji, CSR was able to boost its profits during and
after World War 1. From 1915 to 1923, shareholders received four
million pounds from Fiji, an average of 14.25 per cent return on
investment. During that period, the benchmark for return on safe
investment in Australia was 8 %. CSR reaped profitability that
was 75% above the safe margin. It had capacity to reduce the
poverty of farmers, but chose to ignore it for greed and
profitability.
It continued
to wage hardship and atrocities on indentured labourers and
increased punishing methods to increase productivity and
profitability, without any corresponding improvement in quality
of life or increase on any wages. For girmit era, CSR was an
epitome of a heartless monster bereft of any ethics or humanity.
In addition
to such suffering at the labour front, it also indulged in
manipulative accounting practices to hide its real profits from
any scrutiny. Over valuation of dilapidated assets and claiming
unusually high value of depreciation, CSR was able to hoodwink
any inquiries and hence retained the lion’s share of sugar
proceeds.
One of areas
where CSR hoodwinked the farmers was through molasses, which
farmers were made to believe, was waste. While CSR Company sold
molasses to itself at one pound per ton, the prevailing price in
Jamaica was over seven pounds.
CSR was
minting money by exporting molasses to its subsidiary in
Australia for producing industrial alcohol. From 31, 240 tons in
1945, it more than doubled in less than ten years to 71021 tons
in 1954. In one estimate, value of 3,000 tons of molasses in
Nausori in 1952 was 21,735 pounds while farmers were paid only
2,000 pounds.
All the
commissions that sat to mete justice to Indian farmers always
tended to favour the oppressor, CSR, like Indians say, hasuan
aapan taraf gheeche hai or a sickle pulls to its own side –
the case of white men siding with white company and the white
men’s justice system. Thus, Indo Fijians suffered injustice
through an unjust company and an unjust system.
Tears in
Paradise gives more grim accounts of CSR, a ruthless corporate,
whose empire today stands on the grave, moans and cries of
indentured Indian cane farmers, who it shortchanged and
exploited from 1879 till their departure from Fiji in 1970s.
One wonders
whether any right thinking Australian can be proud of such a
corporate the hallmark of which is exploitation of ignorant and
innocent farmers. They certainly cannot blame history for their
inhumane treatment of Fiji Indians for three generations.
Rajendra
Prasad has already written to CSR Company regarding atrocities
and robbery committed on our forefathers by the Australian
colonist on the sugar farms. He will cover this later in an
article in this paper in the next issue.

E-mail:
thakurji@xtra.co.nz
(ABOUT THE AUTHOR: The author of this article, Thakur Ranjit
Singh is a human rights activist, a third generation Fiji
Indian, former Executive of Carpenter Group of Companies in
Fiji, National Bank of Fiji, former Publisher of Fiji’s daily
newspaper, Daily Post, and former Director Administration and
Operations of Suva City Council, Fiji. Currently he resides in
Auckland. The views are his personal.)

“Tears in
Paradise” can be purchased on the web at
www.tearsinparadise.co.nz. Also
available in: