nzherald.co.nz

David Robie: Fiji media fights on for free press

By David Robie
11:50 AM Friday Apr 16, 2010
Voreqe Bainimarama staged the country’s fourth coup in December 2006. File Photo / Greg Bowker

Voreqe Bainimarama staged the country’s fourth coup in December 2006. File Photo / Greg Bowker

Editors, broadcasters and publishers are struggling to defend the last vestige of a free press in Fiji in the face of a draconian media decree aimed at gagging two of the country's three daily newspapers.

Other critics of the military-backed regime also face a tough future.

The draft Media Industry Development Decree 2010 features harsh penalties for journalists and news organisations which breach vaguely worded content regulations.

The decree warns media not to publish or broadcast material that is "against the public interest or order, is against national interest, offends good taste or decency, or creates communal discord".

It also caps foreign ownership in media organisations at 10 per cent.

Breaches under the decree can lead to a F$500,000 fine against news groups, or a fine of up to F$100,000 for individual journalists and/or being jailed for up to five years.

The government "consulted" news media and non-government organisations last week and Attorney-General Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum said some "useful suggestions" were being considered. A further consultation is planned before the decree becomes law.

"We are coping by focusing on our principles (since getting balance is out at the moment) of getting important information to the public - such as health, education, the economy and industries," said Fiji Broadcasting Corporation news director Stanley Simpson.

"It is important also, despite not getting the other side/point of view, of letting people know what this government is doing, or aims to do, because - like it or not - they are in charge of the country's future right now."

Many critics see "vindictive sections" in the decree aimed at crippling the Fiji Times, the country's oldest, largest and most influential newspaper and 100 per cent owned by a Rupert Murdoch subsidiary, News Limited.

The regime wants to force the newspaper, founded at Levuka in 1869, to "change its mindset" - seen by the government as "anti-Fiji".

About 170 people are employed by the newspaper and their livelihoods are at stake.

Two Australian publishers of the Fiji Times have been deported on trumped up grounds since military commander Voreqe Bainimarama staged the country's fourth coup in December 2006. The High Court also imposed a hefty F$100,000 fine against the Fiji Times in early 2009 for publishing an online letter criticising the judges for upholding the legality of the 2006 coup.

While international responses have focused on the serious impact for the Fiji Times group, the terms of the decree will also hit the country's two other dailies - the struggling Fiji Daily Post, which has 51 per cent Australian ownership and is also a critic of the regime, and the Fiji Sun, which has taken a distinctly "pro-Fiji" (i.e. the regime) stance but also has some expatriate directors.

The draft decree follows a year of "sulu censors" keeping tabs on newsrooms after the 1997 Constitution was abrogated by the regime at Easter in 2009, the judiciary sacked and emergency regulations imposed.

Responses to the proposed law have been mixed within Fiji, but international press freedom groups and other media have strongly condemned it. Paris-based Reporters Without Borders criticised the regime for tightening its grip on media, noting that Fiji had fallen 73 places in its annual freedom rankings. Fiji is now placed 152nd out of 175 countries.

The International Press Institute said the Fiji media had struggled with "censorship and draconian media regulations". Freedom House is about to release a new annual global media report in which Fiji takes a sharp tumble.

Most Fiji journalists are reluctant to speak out publicly with their jobs potentially on the line. But some have contributed postings to some of the 72 post-coup blogs about Fiji or shared insights with their Pacific colleagues on cyberspace networks.

Other Pacific journalists see the draft law as a dangerous precedent for the region, one that could be emulated by unscrupulous politicians in other countries as a strategy to control the media.

Dr David Robie is director of the AUT University Pacific Media Centre and a former head of journalism at the University of the South Pacific in Fiji. His media blog is Café Pacific: www.cafepacific.blogspot.com

Pacific Media Centre - www.pmc.aut.ac.nz

By David Robie
Dave (Glen Eden) | 01:27PM Friday, 16 Apr 2010
Seems to me there cannot possibly be a democracy without total free press.

Lovely Fiji is in the grip of, seemingly, an idiot. The People of Fiji deserve much better, no doubt in the course of time someone will display the ultimate courage to fix it. With the refusal to allow democratic elections the regime is clearly up to no good, no good will come of it.
Amigo Black (New Zealand) | 08:34AM Monday, 19 Apr 2010
Good article David. But as you must know firsthand that the media had a very big hand in the 1987 and 2000 coups by inciting discord towards democractically elected governments.

The media, especially the Fiji Times had for a long time considered itself above the law. While media freedom is a good thing, unfortunately journalists in Fiji have taken this freedom to report biased news and half-truths in support of one political party or another.

If this decree seems draconian then the media in Fiji have only themselves to blame for it. Also have you noticed how well Fiji is getting on with life since the military started monitoring the media? There are more heart-warming, real life stories that actually show people of all races working together as opposed to continuous negative 'news items' that were published daily before the censorship came in.

If journalists like you value media freedom than you also have to take seriously the responsiblities that come with such freedom. Unfortunately in Fiji's case, journalists are too politicised to be neutral, and that is when media freedom is abused. Also Fiji is not a western country so we cannot/should not apply western values.
Tony Ryan (Queensland) | 03:50PM Tuesday, 29 Jun 2010
Sorry Dave, that's wrong. Democracy is government by the people for the people. Rupert Murdoch supports government by the media; by which he means His media.

For example, in Australia, which Murdoch rules as his own personal fiefdom, all goverment policies are Murdoch's policies. Although independent surveys in 2007 showed 76% of Aussies oppose Israel's behaviour, the Oz government opposes equal rights for Palestinians, in their own country.

Next week's surveys are expected to see opposition to Israel up to 80% or even higher, yet we now have a PM who is part of Israel's PR network. The AILF.

In Fiji, we have an identical situation, in which all media reports reflect the interests of Murdochs friends and allies the global bankers and corporations; interest which never ever parallel those of ordinary workers and families.

Bainimarama's demand to reduce foreign ownership of the media to a reasonable 10% is the most pro-democracy thing he could possibly do.

I am so impressed, I have dumped all my plans and will soon be heading to Fiji to offer my services as a journalist; if they will have me.
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