*She has claimed that the nude video was a consensual act between her and her 'husband'. But Malimali has closed her Ficac File on the ground that Tabuya has been divorced from her husband since 2016, so was not required to disclose her ex-husband's wealth in the statutory declarations. The former acting Deputy Commissioner Francis Puleiwai was preparing to charge Tabuya over her 2023 declaration.
*On receiving the nude video, and after over 50,000 had viewed it on Viber, we had sent it to Sitiveni Rabuka and Manoa Kamikamica, her co-chair of the Anti-Porn Task Force.
*We had called on PAP hierarchy to investigate Lynda Tabuya.
*Now, they have returned a verdict: 'We give her second chance.'
In March 2024, she was stripped of PAP's Deputy Leadership over the sex and drug scandal in Room 233 in Windsor Hotel, Melbourne, Australia
The Doctrine of Public Interest:
Over the decades, British newspaper editors have forced the resignations of British MPs and Peers in the House of Lords, citing their decision to expose these sex perverts in the public interest.
The deputy speaker of the House of Lords, the upper chamber of the U.K. parliament, resigned Tuesday after a newspaper published a video that appears to show the Labour peer, John Sewel, taking drugs with sex workers.
In a letter to Parliament, Lord Sewel apologised for the “pain and embarrassment” caused by the release of footage — obtained by the tabloid The Sun on Sunday — which apparently shows him snorting white powder from a woman’s breasts.
The Sun also published a picture Monday of Sewel wearing an orange bra and leather jacket, smoking a cigarette.
Sewel, a 69-year-old former university lecturer from Scotland, had resisted calls to step down, including from Prime Minister David Cameron. The announcement of his resignation was welcomed by fellow peers including the former leader of the upper house, Lord Hill, who is now a European commissioner.
Hill told BBC Radio 4 that those responsible for setting standards in the House of Lords must uphold them and that the deputy speaker’s position had become untenable.
“I am glad that he has had a change of heart,” said Hill. “I think he has done the right thing and I am relieved that has happened.”
Asked why he believed it had taken Sewel nearly three days to decide to quit, Hill replied: “Better late than never.”
In his resignation letter, Sewel said the question of whether he had breached the code of conduct for peers was “essentially technical,” but there were “bigger questions” of whether his behavior was compatible with membership of the House and whether it would undermine public confidence in the institution if he remained.
“I believe the answer to both these questions means that I can best serve the House by leaving it,” he said.
Footage has also emerged of him making disparaging remarks about a number of senior politicians, including the prime minister.
In a letter to Parliament, Lord Sewel apologised for the “pain and embarrassment” caused by the release of footage — obtained by the tabloid The Sun on Sunday — which apparently shows him snorting white powder from a woman’s breasts.
The Sun also published a picture Monday of Sewel wearing an orange bra and leather jacket, smoking a cigarette.
Sewel, a 69-year-old former university lecturer from Scotland, had resisted calls to step down, including from Prime Minister David Cameron. The announcement of his resignation was welcomed by fellow peers including the former leader of the upper house, Lord Hill, who is now a European commissioner.
Hill told BBC Radio 4 that those responsible for setting standards in the House of Lords must uphold them and that the deputy speaker’s position had become untenable.
“I am glad that he has had a change of heart,” said Hill. “I think he has done the right thing and I am relieved that has happened.”
Asked why he believed it had taken Sewel nearly three days to decide to quit, Hill replied: “Better late than never.”
In his resignation letter, Sewel said the question of whether he had breached the code of conduct for peers was “essentially technical,” but there were “bigger questions” of whether his behavior was compatible with membership of the House and whether it would undermine public confidence in the institution if he remained.
“I believe the answer to both these questions means that I can best serve the House by leaving it,” he said.
Footage has also emerged of him making disparaging remarks about a number of senior politicians, including the prime minister.