Litia Qionibaravi
[1] She trained as a lawyer, then worked as a civil servant, serving more than thirty years in the Fijian Affairs Ministry.[1] On 17 June 2005 she was appointed for a five-year term as chief executive officer of the Fijian Affairs Board (FAB).[5] Following her dismissal, the military regime accused her of corruption, claiming she had misused government funds to buy a personal vehicle and to pay the two workers renovating her house in Ma'afu Street, Suva.[6] On 23 December she held a press conference and angrily denied the allegations, saying that she owned no house in Ma'afu Street; she had an FAB office there, she said.[12] In December 2020 she was charged by the Fiji Independent Commission Against Corruption with providing false information to a public servant and obtaining financial advantage by lying about her place of residence to access parliamentary allowances.