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  2. Local government in Fiji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_government_in_Fiji

    In addition, municipal governments have been established for the cities of Suva and Lautoka, and for ten towns. Each has a city or town council elected for a three-year term, presided over by a Mayor chosen by the councillors from among their own members. On 15 February 2006, the government announced legislation to change the local government ...

  3. Suva City Council - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suva_City_Council

    Suva has had a somewhat turbulent electoral history. In the 1985 municipal election, the newly founded Labour Party won 8 of the 20 seats on the City Council to become the largest single party, and succeeded in electing Bob Kumar as Lord Mayor in a harbinger of the national election two years later, when an FLP-led coalition ousted the long-time Alliance Party government.

  4. Korovou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korovou

    Korovou (Fijian pronunciation: [koroβɔu̯]; literally "New Village") is a village in the Fijian Tailevu Province, 31 km from Nausori. It is considered the centre of Fiji's dairy industry, which was established at the end of the First World War by British settlers, on land donated by Fijian chiefs .

  5. List of cities and towns in Fiji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_and_towns...

    This list shows the population of the top 10 cities/towns in Fiji by population, by the most recent years each of them were counted. Suva, the capital, is the most populous urban place in the country, with a population of 100,237 as of 2024. [2]

  6. Suva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suva

    Suva has municipal status and, until 2009, was governed by a lord mayor and a 20-member city council. The Suva City Council was the municipal law-making body of the city of Suva, Fiji's capital. It consisted of 20 councillors, elected for three-year terms from four multi-member constituencies, called wards.

  7. House of Chiefs (Fiji) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Chiefs_(Fiji)

    The House of Chiefs in Fiji consists of the Fijian nobility, composed of about seventy chiefs of various ranks, majority of which are related. It is not a formal political body and is not the same as the Great Council of Chiefs, a political body which had a prescribed role under the 1997 Constitution of Fiji, although the membership of the two bodies did overlap to a great extent.

  8. Local elections in Fiji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_elections_in_Fiji

    Local elections in Fiji are held for two cities (Suva and Lautoka) and ten towns (Ba, Labasa, Lami, Levuka, Nadi, Nausori, Nasinu, Savusavu, Sigatoka, and Tavua).Each city or town has a council comprising between 8 and 20 members, elected for three-year terms, although the government announced legislation on 15 February 2006 to extend the term to four years.

  9. 2005 Fijian local elections - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005_Fijian_local_elections

    Local elections were held in Fiji on 22 October 2005 to elect the councils of eleven municipalities. In Suva, the elections for the Suva City Council were postponed until 12 November due to the death of two candidates; the death of a candidate in Lautoka also resulted in the poll postponement in one of the four wards.