Samoa Observer

The chair, the lie, and the silence of a nation founded on God

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The chair, the lie, and the silence of a nation founded on God

By The Editorial Board 29 October 2025, 9:58AM

There’s a strange feeling hanging in the air this week. A heaviness. Since Sunday, the country has been quietly absorbing the weight of something deeply unsettling: an act of deliberate deception by its own government.

The Prime Minister, Laaulialemalietoa Polataivao Fosi, through his administration, released an image from a diplomatic meeting with New Zealand’s Foreign Minister, Winston Peters. In the photo, the Prime Minister appears to be seated on a regular chair. What wasn’t disclosed is that in reality, he was in a wheelchair. The photo was AI-manipulated, altered to present something else entirely.

But the issue was never the chair. It was the lie.

This is Samoa, a country that prides itself on honesty, integrity and God. We say we’re founded on God. Yet here we are, watching the government package a lie and distribute it to the world without flinching. It’s not just embarrassing. It’s insulting to the people, to the public’s intelligence, and to the office itself.

What makes it even more baffling is that wheelchairs in Samoan political life are nothing new. Former Prime Minister Tofilau Eti Alesana spent his final days in Parliament seated in one. The Samoa Observer front page captured it, and the nation watched live on television as he participated from his wheelchair. No one flinched.

Toleafoa Faafisi, the former Speaker of the House, used a wheelchair too. On one occasion, he did not appear in court because the elevators at the courthouse weren’t working. Ale Vena Ale is currently a sitting Member of Parliament. He serves from a wheelchair following the amputation of a leg. Former Prime Minister Fiamē Naomi Mataʻafa was also photographed in a wheelchair during an international meeting.

So why now? Is it vanity? A fear of being perceived as weak? If so, it says far more about the insecurity of leadership than it does about disability.

What’s more troubling is the silence that followed. No apology. No explanation. Just silence. This, from a government that is often quick to roll out press releases, livestream announcements, and mobilise its communications machinery at a moment’s notice. Yet now, when the deception is undeniable and the evidence irrefutable, there is nothing. Not a word.

Even more puzzling is the silence from the media. Not a single online news outlet has reported on the government’s deception. The same platforms that loudly champion and reap the rewards of the Fourth Estate have suddenly gone mute. If press freedom matters, it should matter when it’s inconvenient, not just when it’s safe.

The AI didn’t lie. People did. And those who stay silent in the face of lies are just as responsible.

If Samoa is truly founded on God, then may He whisper into someone’s ear and let that whisper stir their conscience.

By The Editorial Board 29 October 2025, 9:58AM
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