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.
Fijian ParliamentSocial Democratic Liberal PartyFijianParliament of FijiVerataTailevu Provincechief executive officerProvincial CouncilsGreat Council of Chiefs2006 Fijian coup d'étatFrank BainimaramaMeli BainimaramaCabinet MinistersEpeli GanilauMinister for Fijian Affairs2018 electionsVeena BhatnagarFijian languageFiji Independent Commission Against Corruption2022 electionTupeni BabaTeimumu KepaSitiveni RabukaViliame GavokaMitieli BulanaucaMosese BulitavuAnare JaleAtonio LalabalavuNaiqama LalabalavuMikaele LeawereSuliano MatanitobuaNiko NawaikulaSalote RadrodroJese SaukuruFilipe TuisawauTanya WaqanikaIfereimi VasuAseri Radrodro1997 Constitution of FijiReconciliation and Unity CommissionSoqosoqo Duavata ni LewenivanuaQoliqoli Bill