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Articles Tagged: rulers

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight

Fiji's rulers heading for trouble

Chris Merritt, Legal affairs editor, The Australian Newspaper | May 09, 2008 ON Thursday last week, when newspaperman Evan Hannah was seized in Fiji, he had just enough time to call his lawyers. That call triggered a plan that had been put in place soon after Fiji's military-appointed interim government expelled another Australian media executive, Russell Hunter, in February. Hannah, who is managing director of The Fiji Times, believed he would be next, but he was not going without a fight
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