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Fiji Legislation |
LAWS OF FIJI
Ed. 1978
CHAPTER 5
PARLIAMENTARY POWERS AND PRIVILEGES
ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
PART I-PRELIMINARY
SECTION
1.
Short title.
2.
Interpretation.
PART II-PRIVILEGES AND IMMUNITIES
3. Immunity from legal
proceedings.
4. Freedom from
arrest.
5. Service of
process.
6. Entry to
*Parliament.
7. Regulation of
admission to *House of
Representatives.
8. Order of
withdrawal from *House of
Representatives.
9. Exclusion of
suspended member.
PART III-EVIDENCE
10. Power to order
attendance of witnesses.
11.
Attendance to be notified by
summons.
12. Power to issue warrant to
compel attendance.
13. Witnesses may
be examined on oath.
14. Objection to
answer question or to produce
papers.
15. Privileges of
witnesses.
16. Evidence of proceedings
in *House of Representatives or the Senate or committee not to be given without
leave.
17. Questions relating to
evidence and production of documents before the * House of Representatives or
the Senate or committee to
be determined in accordance with usage of
Parliament.
PART IV-OFFENCES AND PENALTIES
18. Proceedings to be
deemed judicial proceedings for certain
purposes.
19. Offences relating to
admittance to *Parliament.
20. Other
offences.
21. Acceptance of bribes by
members.
22. Penalty for false
answers.
PART V-MISCELLANEOUS
23. Commons Journals to be
prima facie evidence in inquiries touching
privilege.
24. Journals printed by the
Government Printer to be admitted as
evidence.
25. Penalty for printing
false copy of law, journal, etc.
26.
Protection of persons responsible for publications authorized by the *House of
Representatives or the Senate.
27.
Publication of proceedings without
malice.
28. Exclusion of jurisdiction
of courts.
29. Powers of
officers.
30. Power of
arrest.
31. Speaker or President may
order words out of order not to be
published.
32. Authority for
prosecutions.
33.
Rules.
*Amended by
Order 8th October, 1970.
------------------------------------------
Act No. 26 of 1965
AN ACT
TO PROVIDE FOR THE POWERS AND PRIVILEGES OF *PARLIAMENT.
[26th November, 1965]
PART I-PRELIMINARY
Short title
1.
This Act may be cited as the *Parliamentary Powers and Privileges
Act.
Interpretation
2. In this Act, unless the
context otherwise requires-
t"Clerk" means Clerk to the House of Representatives or Clerk to the Senate as the context may require, and where not so defined, means the Clerk to either House;
"committee" means any standing, sessional, select or other committee of the *House of Representatives or the Senate;
t"House" means either House of Parliament;
"journals" means the minutes of the *House of Representatives or the Senate or the official record of the votes and proceedings thereof;
"member" means any member of *either House of Parliament;
"officer" means an officer of Parliament and includes the Clerks of both Houses or any public officer authorised in writing by the Speaker or President or any person acting within the precincts of Parliament other than when serving a summons under the provisions of subsection (3) of section 2 under the orders of the Speaker or President and includes any police officer on duty within the precincts of Parliament;
t"Parliament" means the Parliament of Fiji as defined in the Constitution;
"precincts of *Parliament" means the chamber and offices of the *House of Representatives and Senate and any places provided for the use or accommodation of strangers, members of the public or representatives of the press and includes, while *either House is sitting, and subject to any exceptions made by direction of the Speaker t or President, the entire building in which the chambers of the *two Houses are situated, and any forecourt, yard, garden, enclosure or open space adjoining or appertaining to such building and used or provided for the purposes of *Parliament;
"President" means the President of the Senate and includes any other member when such other member is presiding at a meeting of the Senate;
"Speaker" means the Speaker of the *House of Representatives and includes any other member when such other member is presiding at a meeting of the *House of Representatives;
"Standing Orders" means the Standing Rules and Orders of either House of Parliament for the time being in force;
"stranger" means any person other than a member or an officer of either House of Parliament.
*
Amended by Order 8th October,
1970.
t Inserted
by Order 8th October, 1970.
PART II-PRIVILEGES AND IMMUNITIES
Immunity from legal proceedings
3.
No civil or criminal proceedings may be instituted against any member for words
spoken before, or written in a report to, *either
House of Parliament or to a
committee thereof, or by reason of any matter or thing so brought by him by
petition, Bill, motion or
otherwise.
Freedom from arrest
4.
No member shall be liable to arrest-
(a) for any civil debt whilst going to, attending at or returning from a sitting of *either House of Parliament or any committee thereof;
(b) within the precincts of *Parliament while *either House of Parliament or a committee is sitting, for any criminal offence without the consent of the Speaker or the President, as may be appropriate.
Service of process
5.
No process issued by any court in the exercise of its jurisdiction shall be
served or executed within the precincts of *Parliament
while *Parliament is
sitting or through the Speaker, the President, the Clerk or any officer of
*Parliament.
Entry to *Parliament
6.
No stranger shall be entitled, as of right, to enter or to remain within the
precincts of *Parliament.
Regulation of admission to *Parliament
7.-(1)
The Speaker is hereby authorized to issue such orders as he may in his
discretion deem necessary for the regulation of the admittance
of strangers to
the precincts of the *House of
Representatives.
(2) The President
is hereby authorized to issue such orders as he may in his discretion deem
necessary for the regulation of the admittance
of strangers to the precincts of
the Senate.
(3) Copies of orders
made under this section shall be duly authenticated by the Clerk to the House of
Representatives or Clerk to
the Senate, respectively and exhibited in a
conspicuous position in the precincts of *Parliament, and such copies when so
authenticated
and exhibited shall be deemed to be sufficient notice to all
persons affected thereby.
Order of withdrawal
8.-(1)
The Speaker may at anytime order any stranger to withdraw from the precincts of
the *House of Representatives.
(2)
The President may at any time order any stranger to withdraw from the precincts
of the Senate.
Exclusion of suspended member
9.
A member who has been suspended from the service of *either House of Parliament
shall not enter or remain within the precincts of
*Parliament whilst such
suspension remains in force, and if any such member is found within the
precincts of *Parliament in contravention
of this section he may be forcibly
removed therefrom by any officer thereof.
PART III-EVIDENCE
Power to order attendance of witnesses
10.
The *House of Representatives or the Senate or any committee may, subject to the
provisions of sections 15 and 17, order any person
to attend before the *House
of Representatives or the Senate or before such committee and to give evidence
or to produce any paper,
book, record or document in the possession or under the
control of such person.
Attendance to be notified by summons
11.-(1)
Any order to attend to give evidence or
to produce documents before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a
committee shall
be notified to the person required to attend or to produce the
documents by a summons, in such form as may be prescribed, under the
hand of the
Clerk to that House issued by the direction of the Speaker for President or, in
the case of a committee, by the chairman
and so described on the face of such
summons. Every such summons, if purporting to bear the signature of the Clerk to
that House,
shall be deemed prima facie to be lawful and to be issued by the
direction of the Speaker for President or the chairman, as the case
may
be.
(2) In every summons under
subsection (1) there shall be stated the time when and the place where the
person summoned is required
to attend and the particular documents which he is
required to produce, and the summons shall be served on the person mentioned
therein
either by delivering to him a copy thereof or by leaving a copy thereof
at his usual or last known place of abode in Fiji with some
adult person; and
there shall be paid or tendered to the person so summoned, if he does not reside
within four miles of the place
of attendance specified in the summons, such sum
for his expenses as may be
prescribed.
(3) A summons under
this section may be served by an officer of *Parliament or by a *Police
officer.
Power to issue warrant to compel attendance
12.
-(1) If a person to whom a summons under section 11 is directed does not attend
before the *House of Representatives or the Senate
or the committee at the time
and place mentioned therein, the Speaker t or President may, upon being
satisfied that the summons was
duly served, or that the person to whom the
summons is directed, wilfully avoids service, direct the Clerk to that House to
issue
a warrant, in such form as may be prescribed, to apprehend him and bring
him, at a time and place to be stated in the warrant, before
the *House of
Representatives or the Senate or
committee.
(2) A warrant issued
under this section shall be executed by a *police
officer.
(3) The Speaker for
President, on directing the issue of a warrant under this section may, if he
thinks fit, by ordering an appropriate
endorsement on the warrant, direct that
the person named in the warrant be released after arrest on his entering into
such a recognizance
before a court for his appearance before the *House of
Representatives or the Senate or committee as may be required in the
endorsement.
(4) Every warrant
issued under the provisions of this section and every endorsement upon such
warrant shall, if purporting to bear
the signature of the Clerk to that House,
be deemed prima facie to be lawful and to be issued or made under the direction
or order
of the Speaker or President.
Witnesses may be examined on oath
13.
The *House of Representatives or the Senate or any committee empowered to order
the attendance of witnesses may require that any
facts, matters and things
relating to the subject of inquiry before the *House of Representatives or the
Senate or such committee
be verified or otherwise ascertained by the oral
examination of witnesses and may cause any such witnesses to be examined upon
oath,
which the Clerk to that House or the chairman of the committee or other
person specially appointed for that purpose by the *House
of Representatives or
the Senate or by such committee is hereby authorised to
administer.
Objection to answer question or to produce papers
14.-(1)
Subject to the provisions of section 15, where any person ordered to attend to
give evidence or to produce any paper, book, record
or document before the
*House of Representatives or the Senate refuses to answer any question that may
be put to him or to produce
any such paper, book, record or document on the
ground that the same is of a private nature and does not affect the subject of
inquiry,
the Speaker for President may excuse the answering of such question or
the production of such paper, book, record or document, or
may order the
answering or production
thereof.
(2) Subject to the
provisions of section 15, where any person ordered to attend or to give evidence
or to produce any paper, book,
record or document before any committee refuses
to answer any question that may be put to him or to produce any such paper,
book,
record or document on the ground that the same is of a private nature and
does not affect the subject of inquiry, the chairman of
the committee may report
such refusal to the Speaker for President with the reasons therefor; and the
Speaker for President may thereupon
excuse the answering of such question or the
production of such paper, book, record or document, or may order the answering
or production
thereof.
Privileges of witnesses
15.-(1)
Every person summoned to attend to give evidence or to produce any paper, book,
record or document before the *House of Representatives
or the Senate or a
committee thereof shall be entitled, in respect of such evidence or the
disclosure of any
communication
or the production of any such paper,
book, record or document, to the same right or privilege as before a court of
law.
(2) Except with the consent
of the *Prime Minister no person in the employment of the Government shall,
before the *House of Representatives
or the Senate or a
committee-
(a) produce any paper, book, record or document; or
(b) give evidence,
concerning
any naval, military or air force matter, nor shall secondary evidence be
received by or produced before the *House of Representatives
or the Senate or a
committee of the contents of any such paper, book, record or
document.
(3) Except when in the
opinion of the *Prime Minister it would be contrary to the public interest and
the *Prime Minister so directs,
no person in the employment of the Government
shall refuse-
(a) to produce before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee any paper, book, record or document; or
(b) to give evidence before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee,
relating
to the correspondence of any department of Government or to any matter affecting
the public service; secondary evidence shall
not be received by or produced
before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee of the
contents of any such paper,
book, record or document which the *Prime Minister
has directed shall not be
produced.
(4) An answer by a
person to a question put by the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a
committee shall not be admissible
in evidence against him in any civil or
criminal proceedings except in the case of criminal proceedings for an offence
against this
Act or for perjury, subornation of perjury or defeating or
obstructing the course of justice.
Evidence
of proceedings in *House of Representatives or the Senate or
committee
not be
given without leave
16.-(1)
Save as provided in this Act, no member
or officer of the *House of Representatives or the Senate and no person employed
to take minutes
of evidence before the *House of Representatives or the Senate
or any committee shall give evidence elsewhere in respect of the contents
of
such minutes of evidence or of the contents of any document laid before the
*House of Representatives or the Senate or such committee,
as the case may be,
or in respect of any proceedings or examination held before the *House of
Representatives or the Senate or such
committee, as the case may be, without the
special leave of the *House of Representatives or the Senate first had and
obtained.
(2) The special leave
referred to in subsection (1) may be given during a recess or adjournment by the
Speaker or President or, during
any dissolution of the *House of Representatives
or the Senate, by the *Governor-General.
Questions relating to evidence and production of documents before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or committee to be determined in accordance with usage of Parliament
17.
Where at any time any question arises in the *House of Representatives or the
Senate or in a committee in regard to-
(a) the right or power of the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee to hear, admit or receive oral evidence; or
(b) the right or power of the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee to peruse or examine any paper, book, record or document, or to summon, direct or call upon any person to produce any paper, book, record or document before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or committee; or
(c) the right or privilege of any person (including a member of the *House of Representatives or the Senate or committee) to refuse to produce any paper, book, record or document or to lay any paper, book, record or document before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or committee,
that
question shall, subject to the preceding provisions of this Act and except in so
far as express provision is made in those provisions
for the determination of
that question, be determined in accordance with the usage and practice of the
Commons House of Parliament
of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland.
PART IV-OFFENCES AND PENALTIES
Proceedings to be deemed judicial proceedings for certain purposes
18.
When a person gives evidence or produces a paper, book, record or document
before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or
a committee in pursuance
of this Act, the proceedings shall be deemed to be judicial proceedings for the
purposes of a prosecution
for perjury, subornation of perjury or defeating or
obstructing the course of justice.
Offences relating to admittance to *Parliament
19.
Any person who-
(a) being a stranger, enters or attempts to enter the precincts of *Parliament in contravention of any order of the Speaker for the President; or
(b) being a stranger, fails or refuses to withdraw from the precincts of *Parliament when ordered to withdraw therefrom by the Speaker for the President; or
(c) being a stranger, contravenes any order made under the provisions of this Act by the Speaker for the President regulating the admittance of strangers to the precincts of *Parliament or either House thereof; or
(d) attends a sitting of the *House of Representatives or the Senate as the representative of any journal after the general permission granted under an order made under the provisions of this Act or under the Standing Orders to the representative or representatives of that journal has been revoked,
shall
be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding fifty
dollars or, in default of payment thereof, to
imprisonment not exceeding three
months, or to such imprisonment without the option of a fine or to both such
fine and imprisonment.
Other offences
20.
(Notwithstanding the provisions of section 17, any person who-
(a) disobeys any order made by the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee for attendance or for production of papers, books, documents or records, unless such attendance or production be excused as hereinbefore provided; or
(b) refuses to be examined before, or to answer any lawful and relevant question put by the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee unless such refusal be excused as hereinbefore provided; or
(c) offers, whether directly or indirectly, to any member or officer of *Parliament any bribe, in order to influence him in his conduct as such member or officer, or offers to any member or officer of *Parliament any fee, compensation, gift or reward for or in respect of the promotion of or opposition to any Bill or matter submitted to or intended to be submitted to the *House of Representatives; or
(d) assaults, obstructs, molests or insults any member coming to, being within, or going from the precincts of *Parliament or endeavours to compel any member by force, insult or menace to declare himself in favour of or against any proposition or matter pending in or expected to be brought before the *House of Representatives; or
(e) assaults, molests, insults, resists or obstructs any officer of *Parliament while in the execution of his duty or while proceeding to or from *Parliament knowing or having reasonable grounds for believing him to be such an officer; or
(f) creates or joins in any disturbance, or incites any other person to create or join in any disturbance, which interrupts or is likely to interrupt the proceedings of the *House of Representatives or the Senate or any committee while the *House of Representatives or the Senate or such committee is sitting; or
(g) presents to the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee any false, untrue, fabricated or falsified document with intent to deceive the *House of Representatives or the Senate or such committee; or
(h) utters or publishes any false or scandalous slander or libel on *Parliament or upon any member in his capacity as such; or
(i) attempts, directly or indirectly, by fraud, or by threats or intimidation of any kind, to influence a member in his vote, opinion, judgement or action, upon any question arising in the *House of Representatives or the Senate or in a committee, or to induce him to absent himself from the *House of Representatives or the Senate or any committee; or
(j) threatens or assaults a member or an officer of *Parliament on account of his conduct as such member or officer; or
(k) gives false evidence (in the case of witnesses not examined on oath), or is guilty of misconduct as a witness before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee; or
(l) destroys any document which has been ordered to be produced before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee; or
(m) abstracts any record or other document from the custody of the Clerk to either House, or falsifies or improperly alters any records or documents presented to the *House of Representatives or the Senate or any committee; or
(n) endeavours, directly or indirectly, to deter or hinder any person from appearing or giving evidence before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee; or
(o) tampers with a witness in regard to evidence to be given by him before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee; or
(p) threatens or in any way punishes, damnifies or injuries, or attempts to punish, damnify or injure, any person for having given evidence before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee, or on account of the evidence which he has given before the *House of Representatives or the Senate or a committee, or
(q) publishes any evidence taken by, or document presented to, a committee where such evidence has been taken or such document presented within closed doors, and where its publication has been expressly prohibited by the *House of Representatives or the Senate or the committee,
shall
be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding four
hundred dollars or, in default of payment thereof,
to imprisonment not exceeding
two years or to such imprisonment without the option of a fine or to both such
fine and imprisonment.
Acceptance of bribes by members
21.
Any member who accepts or agrees to accept, or obtains or attempts to obtain for
himself or for any other person, any bribe, fee,
compensation, reward or benefit
of any kind for speaking, voting or acting as such member or for refraining from
so speaking, voting
or acting or on account of his having so spoken, voted or
acted or having so refrained, shall be guilty of an offence and liable
on
conviction to a fine not exceeding four hundred dollars or, in default of
payment thereof, to imprisonment not exceeding two years
or to such imprisonment
without the option of a fine or to both such fine and
imprisonment.
Penalty for false answers
22.
A person who, whether he has or has not taken an oath or made an affirmation,
wilfully makes a false answer before the *House of
Representatives or the Senate
or a committee to a question material to the subject of inquiry which may be put
to him during the
course of examination after he has been cautioned of his
liability to punishment under this section, shall be guilty of an offence
and
liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding six hundred dollars or, in default
of payment thereof, to imprisonment not exceeding
three years or to such
imprisonment without the option of a fine or to both such fine and
imprisonment.
PART V-MISCELLANEOUS
Commons Journals to be prima facie evidence in inquiries touching privilege
23.
Subject to the provisions of this Act, a copy of the Journals of the Commons
House of Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain
and Northern Ireland
printed or purporting to be printed by the order or by the Printer of the
Commons House aforesaid shall be received
as prima facie evidence without proof
of its being such copy upon any inquiry touching the privileges, immunities and
powers of *Parliament
or of any member thereof.
Journals printed by the Government Printer to be admitted as evidence
24.
Upon any inquiry touching the privileges, immunities and powers of *Parliament
or of any member, any copy of the journals printed
or purporting to be printed
by the Government Printer shall be admitted as prima facie evidence of such
journals in all courts and
places without any proof being given that such copy
was so printed.
Penalty for printing false copy of law, journal, etc.
25.
Any person who shall print or cause to be printed a copy of any Act, or a copy
of any report, paper, minutes or votes and proceedings
of the *House of
Representatives or the Senate as purporting to have been printed by the
Government Printer or by order or under
the authority of the *House of
Representatives or the Senate or by order or under the authority of the Speaker
for President, and
the same is not so printed, or shall tender in evidence any
such copy as purporting to be so printed knowing that the same was not
so
printed, shall be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to a fine not
exceeding four hundred dollars or, in default of
payment thereof, to
imprisonment not exceeding two years or to such imprisonment without the option
of a fine or to both such fine
and imprisonment.
Protection of persons responsible for publications authorized by the *House of Representatives or the Senate
26.
Any person, being a defendant in any civil or criminal proceedings instituted
for or on account or in respect of the publication
by such person or by his
servant or agent, by order or under the authority of the *House of
Representatives or the Senate of any
reports, papers, minutes, votes and
proceedings may, on giving to the plaintiff or prosecutor, as the case may be,
twenty-four hours'
written notice of his intention, bring before the court in
which such civil or criminal proceedings are being held a certificate
under the
hand of the Speaker for President, stating that the reports, papers, minutes,
votes and proceedings in respect whereof
such civil or criminal proceedings have
been instituted were published by such person or by his servant or agent by
order or under
the authority of the *House of Representatives or the Senate,
together with an affidavit verifying such certificate, and such court
shall
thereupon immediately stay such civil or criminal proceedings and the same and
every process issued therein shall be deemed
to be finally
determined.
Publication of proceedings without malice
27.
In any civil proceedings instituted for publishing any report or summary of or
any extract from or abstract of any report, paper,
minutes, votes and
proceedings of the *House of Representatives or the Senate, if the court is
satisfied that such report, summary,
extract or abstract was published in good
faith and without malice, judgment shall be entered for the
defendant.
Exclusion of jurisdiction of courts
28.
Neither the Speaker, Deputy Speaker, President or Vice President nor any other
officer of *Parliament shall be subject to the jurisdiction
of any court in
respect of the exercise of any power conferred on or vested in such officer by
or under this Act.
Powers of officers
29.
Every officer of *Parliament shall, for the purposes of this Act and for the
application within the precincts of *Parliament of the
provisions of the
criminal law, have all the powers and enjoy all the privileges of a *police
officer.
Power of arrest
30.
An officer of *Parliament may arrest without warrant-
(a) any person who commits in his presence any offence contrary to the provisions of sections 19 or 20; or
(b) any person within the precincts of *Parliament whom he reasonably suspects of having committed, or being about to commit, an offence contrary to the provisions of either of the said sections.
Speaker or President may order words out of order not to be published
31.-(1)
Where the Speaker for President under the provisions of the Standing Orders
rules any words used by a member to be out of order
the Speaker for President
may, in his absolute discretion, order that such words, or any words out of
which they arose or arising
out of them, shall not be published in any
manner.
(2) Any person who
publishes any words which are the subject of an order made under the provisions
of subsection (1) shall be guilty
of an offence and liable on conviction to a
fine not exceeding four hundred dollars or, in default of payment thereof, to
imprisonment
not exceeding two years or to such imprisonment without the option
of a fine or to both such fine and imprisonment.
Authority for prosecutions
32.
No prosecution for an offence under this Act shall be instituted without the
written authority of the Attorney-General and the consent
of the Speaker for
President.
Rules
33.
*Parliament may by notice in the Gazette make rules prescribing anything which,
under the provisions of this Act, may be or is to
be
prescribed.
*Amended by Order 8th
October, 1970.
t Inserted by Order 8th
October, 1970.
°Amended by Act 14
of 1975.
• Amended by Act 24 of
1976.
_____________________________________
Subsidiary
Legislation
CHAPTER
5
PARLIAMENTARY
POWERS AND PRIVILEGES (EVIDENCE) RULES
SECTION 33-PARLIAMENTARY POWERS AND PRIVILEGES (EVIDENCE) RULES
TABLE OF PROVISIONS
REGULATION
1.
Short title
2.
Interpretation
3. Orders to
attend
4.
Warrants
5. (1) Travelling
Expenses
(2) Subsistence
Expenses
6. Other powers
Schedule-Form 1-Summons
Form 2-Warrant where a witness has not obeyed the Summons
--------------------------------
Rules*
11 September
1984
* See
Legal Notice 84 of 1984
Short title
1. These Rules may be
cited as the Parliamentary Powers and Privileges (Evidence) Rules,
1984.
Interpretation
2. A reference in these
rules to a form by number shall be read as a reference to the form so numbered
in the Schedule.
Orders to attend
3. An order to attend to
give evidence or to produce documents before either House of Parliament or a
committee thereof shall be in
accordance with Form 1.
Warrants
4. A warrant to apprehend
a witness and bring him before either House of Parliament or a committee thereof
shall be in accordance
with Form 2.
Expenses
5. The sum for expenses
which shall be paid or tendered in accordance with subsection (2) of section 11
of the Act to a person summoned
in accordance with that sectioq shall be as
follows-
(1)
Travelling
Expenses:
When official transport
is not provided the amount of the fares by public service bus but, in respect of
expert witnesses, professional
men, merchants, bankers, persons in business on
their own account, company directors and managers, and in respect of other
persons
where public service buses are not available, the actual or reasonable
cost of transport incurred.
(2)
Subsistence
Expenses:
(a) If, necessarily absent overnight from place of residence the actual cost of board and lodging reasonably incurred.
(b) If not necessarily absent overnight but the attendance exceeds four hours or includes a luncheon adjournment, $1.50 in respect of each meal.
Other powers
6. Either House of
Parliament or a committee may-
(a) order any witness present to give evidence notwithstanding that a payment to which he may be entitled has not been paid or tendered to him.
(b) disallow any payment of expenses, for good cause which shall be noted on the record;
(c) allow an additional payment not exceeding a total increase of $10.00 in respect of any one person for any one day where it is satisfied that such person has suffered other expenses or additional pecuniary loss in excess of the expenses granted under Rule 5.
SCHEDULE
SUMMONS
Form
1
(Section 11)
THE PARLIAMENTARY POWERS
AND PRIVILEGES ACT IN THE MATTER OF [description of
matter]
by The House of
Representatives* The Senate*
a
Committee of*
To: Name:
................................................... Address:
................................................
Issued
by the direction of the Speaker* President* Chairman of the
Committee*
You are hereby summoned
to attend [place...............................................] on
the............ day of.............. .19
....at............o'clock in the
fore*/after/ noon and so from day to day thereafter until the said enquiry is
completed, unless
otherwise released, to give evidence before the
said
House of Representatives*
Senate*
Committee*
*AND
you are hereby required to bring with you and produce at the place aforesaid and
on the day notified to you-[set out documents
or things to be
produced]
Signed this
................. day of ..................
19
Served by me,
[name]
this .................... day
of
....................19
Clerk.
(Signed)
Officer
Of
Parliament*
Police Officer*
......................
*Delete as
required.
Form
2
(Section 12)
THE PARLIAMENTARY POWERS
AND PRIVILEGES ACT WARRANT WHERE A WITNESS HAS NOT OBEYED A SUMMONS IN THE
MATTER OF [insert description of
matter]
by The House of
Representatives* The Senate*
a
Committee of*
To all Police
Officers in Fiji.
Issued by the
direction of the Speaker* .
President*
............................of
........................................................................ not
having appeared in obedience
to a summons requiring his attendance on the
............ day of...................... at ............... .
........................................
to give evidence before the House of
Representatives*
the
Senate*
a Committee
of*
These are to command you to
apprehend and bring the said............................... before the House of
Representatives */the
Senate*/the Committee of* ...................... on
the............ day of.................. 19 ...... at ..................o'clock
in the fore*/after* noon at [place to which witness is to be
brought].
*The person named in
this warrant may be released after arrest on his entering into a recognizance
before a court for his appearance
before the House of Representatives */the
Senate*/the Committee* in the sums of $........................... subject to
the condition
that he shall attend personally at the time and place herein
mentioned.
(Signed)
Clerk.
*Delete
as required.
Controlled by Office of the Prime Minister
--------------------------------------------------------
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