Factual. Independent. Impartial.
Support AAP with a free or paid subscription
Courts
Sam McKeith

DV claims against ex-Fiji PM's son serious, lawyer says

Ratu Meli Bainimarama, son of Fiji 's ex-prime minister, faces 18 domestic violence charges. (Dan Himbrechts/AAP PHOTOS)

"Extremely serious" domestic violence charges against the son of an ex-Fiji prime minister include allegations of choking and biting, a court has been told. 

Ratu Meli Bainimarama, 36, son of former Fiji PM Frank Bainimarama, faces 18 charges including assault, stalking, destroying property, choking without consent, and recording and distributing an image without consent over alleged incidents in 2022.

In his opening address at Parramatta Local Court on Friday, police prosecutor Darren Pearce outlined a string of alleged assaults on the female complainant, who cannot be named for legal reasons, between February and May in Sydney.

The first incident, Mr Pearce said, took place in a car on the way to the airport where Bainimarama hit the woman across the face and pulled her hair, then after missing his flight called her a "whore" and a "f***ing slut".

Also in February, Bainimarama threatened to snap the complainant's phone, choked her, and "pinned" her to a bed and bit her at a Bligh Park residence, Mr Pearce said.

In March, at the same address, it was alleged Bainimarama bit the woman on the face and shoulder after getting on top of her during an argument in a bedroom. 

"(There's) an allegation that he again choked her on that occasion," Mr Pearce said.

The same month, the police prosecutor contended Bainimarama, also at the Bligh Park home, grabbed the woman and pushed her twice into a wall.

In April, after attending a concert in Parramatta with the woman then passing out in a hotel room, Bainimarama sent her an intimate video message with "the intention to distribute" it, Mr Pearce said.

Other allegations were that Bainimarama hit the complainant across the ear at a house in Redfern causing her to bleed, and punched and choked her at a relative's house in Roselands after she refused to drink kava, the court heard.

It was told soon after the alleged spate of assaults the pair ended their relationship.

Earlier, Bainimarama's barrister AJ Karim said it was "objectively" one of the more serious sets of domestic violence allegations he had seen.

"The allegations are extremely serious," Mr Karim told the court.

He said there were "certain complexities" in the case including the complainant's "extensive criminal history" of dishonesty that involved fraud and counterfeiting.

Before the woman gave evidence in closed court on Friday, the court was told there would also be evidence from a flatmate, a doctor and police witnesses. 

Magistrate Gareth Christofi adjourned the case to April 3, 2024 with Bainimarama remaining on bail.

1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732)

Lifeline 13 11 14

Sign up to read this article for free
Choose between a free or paid subscription to AAP News
Start reading
Already a member? Sign in here
Top stories on AAP right now