Foreign Minister Winston Peters has "hung…out to dry" Fiji's suspended Kiwi director of public prosecutions (DPP) who wrote to him seeking assistance, a former Fijian government advisor-cum-critic says.
On 11 July, Christopher Pryde, who was stood down for alleged misconduct in April 2023, wrote to Peters seeking New Zealand government intervention after his salary was "unilaterally" cut off by the Fijian government midway into his seven-year employment contract.
"The sudden cessation of my salary at the eleventh hour whilst I am in the middle of instructing legal counsel in Fiji to defend myself against charges brought by the Fijian government is a denial of natural justice that has left me with little choice but to seek your assistance," Pryde said in a five-page letter to the Minister.
A spokesperson from Peters' office told RNZ Pacific on Monday: "This is a matter between Mr Pryde and the Government of Fiji. It is not a matter for the Minister to comment on."
However, according to the Fiji Sun, Peters - in an exclusive interview with the newspaper - said that "he was not happy" with the New Zealander's "approach to seek assistance from him".
"He (Pryde) wrote to everybody and sent me a copy", he was quoted as saying in a frontpage news story with the headline Winston slams Pryde's email action for help.
"He sent me a copy? He wrote me a letter and sent it to everyone else at the same time!. What do you think about somebody that wrote to you - asking for help and then sent it to everyone else at the same time? What would you think?", the newspaper reported.
The Deputy Prime Minsiter's comments reported in the Fijian daily have been labelled by a former Fiji government communications advisor and Grubsheet blog publisher, Graham Davis, as "highhanded and bereft of principle".
"Winston Peters has clearly hung Christopher Pryde out to dry," Davis said.
"His dismissive attitude to suspended DPP Pryde now being unable to defend himself against a false charge of misbehaviour because his salary has been severed is…highhanded and bereft of principle.
"And it sends an ominous message to every New Zealander working in the Pacific or contemplating doing so that if they fall foul of their host governments, Winston [Peters] will cut them loose. They are on their own."
Fiji Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka told local media that Pryde was entitled to receive all salaries until he was removed from office.
The Kiwi lawyer was suspended 15 months ago after he allegedly "spent about 30 to 45 minutes conversing alone" with former Attorney-General Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum at a public event hosted by the Japanese Embassy in the capital Suva.
In April last year, Rabuka said people in high office needed to be "very aware of who is watching what we do".
"For the DPP [Pryde] to be seen to be fraternising with high profile person under investigation would not be the right thing for the DPP to be done."
Pryde, who has held the top prosecutor's role since 2011, warned other New Zealand citizens who have taken up positions in Fiji's criminal justice system "may potentially be adversely impacted if the Fijian government is permitted to ignore due process and the rule of law".
"The NZ government provides substantial aid to Fiji in support of the rule of law which is being undermined," he wrote to Peters.
The Fiji Law Society and the New Zealand Law Society (NZLS) have expressed concerns on the issue.
NZLS president Frazer Barton has encouraged for the "respect for and compliance...of the rule of law".