The Fiji military has found itself at the centre of a national firestorm following the death of a wellknown drug peddler Jone Vakarisi in military custody last Thursday.
Conflicting reports have emerged over the weekend regarding the death of Vakarisi, who was reportedly linked to major criminal networks.
News of his death broke while top military and police brass were gathered on Bau Island, paying their final respects to the late President Ratu Epeli Nailatikau.
The Republic of Fiji Military Forces (RFMF), in a statement on Saturday, said Vakarisi's death was due to "a sudden and severe emergency" during questioning at the Queen Elizabeth Barracks in Nabua, approximately 10 minutes' drive from Suva City.
RFMF commander Ro Jone Kalouniwai said Vakarisi, in his late 30s, had "voluntarily presented" himself alongside three others to the RFMF headquarters "to assist with investigations".
Kalouniwai attributed Vakarisi's death to "a pre-existing condition". However, Vakarisi's family has disputed the military's account, telling local media that he was "not a sickly person at all".
Queenie Osbourne, the mother of Vakarisi's children, told The Fiji Times, that Vakarisi and others were taken from their home to the army barracks on Thursday night without any formal explanations.
A leaked death certificate, which first appeared on Fijian social media on Saturday, has now been verified by Fiji Police commissioner Rusiate Tudravu to be an official police document.
According to the document, the causes of Vakarisi's death are listed as asphyxia, aspiration of gastric contents, severe traumatic head injuries, and blunt force trauma to both the head and chest.
"No one informed us of his death from the night he died. We found out when he was in the morgue," Osbourne was quoted as saying by The Fiji Times.
Vakarisi's family is calling for justice.
Tudravu said heads of the RFMF and Fiji Folice Force "are both in consensus of letting the law take its course, through the conduct of the investigation which is currently underway".
According to the RFMF statement, at least one military officer has already been placed in military custody for internal disciplinary investigations.
Fiji's human rights office said it was "concerned" about the death in military custody and has called for "a prompt [and] independent investigation".
Aman Ravindra-Singh, a Fijian human rights lawyer who is in exile in Australia, said that based on other similar deaths in custody matters that he has looked at in the past, the injuries listed in Vakarisi's death certificate "are consistent with torture, where a person is brutally beaten repeatedly to the head and chest resulting in death".
'A matter of grave concern' - minister
Fiji's Defence Minister Pio Tikoduadua has described Vakarisi's death as "a serious matter".
Tikoduadua said it would be inappropriate for him to comment on the circumstances of the case while police inquiries are ongoing.
"The proper process must be allowed to take its course, and all relevant facts must be established independently and professionally. Any loss of life in such circumstances is a matter of grave concern," he said in a statement.
"I expect the full cooperation of all relevant authorities with the police investigation. Accountability, adherence to the rule of law, and respect for due process must remain paramount.
He also urged the public to allow the investigation to proceed without speculation or the spread of misinformation.

Global Sumud Flotilla: The Siege Will Break - Final Leg To Gaza Following Israeli State Piracy, Abductions And Torture In International Waters
Kiingitanga: Māori Queen Meets HRH Prince William At Windsor Castle
Colin Greer & Reynard Loki, IMI: Criminalizing Childhood - When The Justice System Fails America’s Youth
Global Sumud Flotilla: Saif Abukeshek & Thiago Ávila Released - Victory For International Mobilization; A Reminder Of Who Remains Behind
Aotearoa Delegation of the Global Sumud Flotilla: The Global Sumud Flotilla Remains Undeterred As Over 30 Boats Depart For Türkiye
UN Special Procedures - Human Rights: Israel Must Immediately Release Gaza-Bound Flotilla Activists, Say UN Experts