On 1 October 2005, Commodore Bainimarama warned the
Methodist Church, to which some two-thirds of
indigenous Fijians belong, that their support for the Unity Bill would jeopardize their right to supply
chaplains to Fijian soldiers performing
United Nations peacekeeping duties in the
Middle East.
"We will not be soft when it comes to the bill," he warned.
"I will not allow the pastors who support the bill to relay a different message to my troops, especially when the military is not for the bill." He said that clergy seeking to travel with the troops would be required to state their attitude to the legislation, and that supporters of it need not apply. If the Methodist Church as a whole continued to endorse the bill, Bainimarama said he would ban all Methodist ministers from overseas chaplaincy roles and recruit
Assemblies of God or
All Nation Church ministers instead. Assemblies of God General Secretary
Reverend Apete Tanoa responded by saying that while his denomination would appreciate being offered chaplaincy assignments with the Military, it would not want to get involved in a dispute between the Military and the Methodist Church. On 2 October, Reverend
Ame Tugawe, the General Secretary of the Methodist Church, said he was
"in total shock" at the Commander's attack on the church.
"He is not only speaking about the people in the church but also about the God which we all serve," Tugawe said.
"I have spoken with the military chaplain and told him to inform the military not to make such comments against the church." He said the threat was unprecedented and he could not have imagined it. Tugawe reiterated the church's support for the Unity Bill: ''"We support reconciliation and the comments (Bainimarama's) would not do it,"
he said. "I advise the commander not to vent his anger in such public comments."'' He said, however, that it was a matter of personal conscience whether a minister supported or opposed the legislation, and that the question should not be a factor in the appointment of military chaplains.
Captain Neumi Leweni, the Army's Media Liaison Officer, said on 4 October that the Military had principles to uphold, and therefore there would be no compromise on the Unity Bill. Contrary to Reverend Tugawe's assertions, the threatened ban on chaplains out of favour with the Military was not unprecedented, Leweni said. The Military was not speaking against the Methodist Church, he insisted, but was stating its own position. ==Lasaro arrested in 2009==