Sunday, 27 March 2011

Solomon Islands: PFF welcomes prompt Police action over car-burning

PFF, Rarotonga, COOK ISLANDS -- Solomon Islands police are treating the early morning torching last Thursday of a private vehicle owned by senior journalist Dorothy Wickham as suspicious; and are still ascertaining whether the vandals had personal or professional grievances with the ONE News Television manager.
Wickham had been up all night with relatives visiting her home on Wednesday 23 March and had just gone to bed in the dawn hours of Thursday 24 when she was alerted by loud crackling and smoke. Her security worker had also just gone to sleep from his night shift, as it was daybreak. They could only watch as the flames engulfed the vehicle, which was uninsured. Another vehicle owned by ONE News and items which could have been easily stolen were left untouched.
Wickham has spent some two decades in journalism and has provided extensive coverage to the regional and international community, breaking stories around the internal armed conflict of the late 90's and the post-conflict recovery and governance issues.
She is the Radio New Zealand International correspondent for the Solomon Islands as well as General Manager and a founding owner of the ONE News TV service which is a leading news provider there.
No threats had been received in the lead-up to the car-burning, and Police have taken statements and are carrying out their investigation.
Regional media watchdog the Pacific Freedom Forum welcome the serious and prompt attention given by the Police in this matter. "An act such as this; taking place in broad daylight, is an unusual and extreme way of signalling grievance against any person in this region and we welcome the serious
attention which Solomon Islands Police are giving this incident," says PFF chair Susuve Laumaea of Papua New Guinea.
"In an environment where the professional and personal lives of those in the media can often be closely linked to the communities they cover, it's important that journalists are able to work without concerns for their safety and the safety of colleagues and loved ones," says PFF co-chair Monica Miller of American Samoa.
"Importantly, the Solomon Islands Police are showing their colleagues in neighbouring Melanesia states that media workers are also human beings with the same constitutional rights to protection and state services available to all citizens."
Wickham was also the target of vehicle-tampering some ten years ago, when the brake lines in her car were cut. The discovery happened while she was driving along one of Honiara's many mountainous ridge roads.--ENDS

CONTACT: PFF interim Chair Susuve Laumaea | Sunday Chronicle Newspaper | Papua New Guinea Mobile: 675-684 5168 | Office: 675-321-7040 | Email: susuve.laumaea@interoil.com PFF interim co-Chair Monica Miller | KHJ Radio | American Samoa Mob 684 258-4197 | Office 684 633-7793 | Email: monica@khjradio.com The Pacific Freedom Forum are a regional and global online network of Pacific media colleagues, with the specific intent of raising awareness and advocacy of the right of Pacific people to enjoy freedom of expression and be served by a free and independent media. We believe in the critical and basic link between these freedoms, and the vision of democratic and participatory governance pledged by our leaders in their endorsement of the Pacific Plan and other commitments to good governance. In support of the above, our key focus is monitoring threats to media freedom and bringing issues of concern to the attention of the wider regional and international community.

Thursday, 24 March 2011

Editorial ethics breached in Vanuatu tragedy

PFF, Rarotonga, Cook Islands -- The front page publication of the image of a dead child photographed where he died is a clear breach of media ethics in Vanuatu and must remind Pacific newsrooms to balance news journalism with decency in reporting, says regional media freedom watchdog the Pacific Freedom Forum.
The call to uphold established media codes which govern news journalism comes after the front-page publication of a full colour photo of a dead child, by the Vanuatu Times newspaper in its Saturday 18 March issue (number 74). The Times article highlighted the fact that the child, referred to only by the name Kaloran, died in an unsecured timber yard premises, and that relatives were seeking a claim for compensation.
"The codes of ethics developed by the Media Assosiasen Blong Vanuatu commit to special considerations for coverage of children, and for decency and sensitivity to govern decisions to publish images of the dead. We urge all practitioners in Vanuatu to uphold the ethics they have developed, and for the Times to make its apology to Kaloran's family and readers clear and immediate," says PFF chair Susuve Laumaea of Papua New Guinea.
"The Vanuatu Times is led by senior members of the Vanuatu media and includes regional media leadership in the form of PINA President Moses Stevens on its editorial team. We welcome confirmation from the President that publication of the image was a breach of ethics." says Laumaea.
"There is a line between sensitive reporting to the issue of preventable deaths, and gratuitous coverage which goes beyond the bounds of decency in any society," says PFF co-chair Monica Miller of American Samoa, "It takes a standard of maturity and courage by newsrooms to admit when the
lines have been blurred, and we encourage MAV to ensure its code of ethics is widely accessible in Vanuatu newsrooms to help editors and journalists stand by the excellent codes they've initiated."--ENDS

CONTACT: PFF interim Chair Susuve Laumaea | Sunday Chronicle Newspaper | Papua New Guinea Mobile: 675-684 5168 | Office: 675-321-7040 | Email: susuve.laumaea@interoil.com PFF interim co-Chair Monica Miller | KHJ Radio | American Samoa Mob 684 258-4197 | Office 684 633-7793 | Email: monica@khjradio.com The Pacific Freedom Forum are a regional and global online network of Pacific media colleagues, with the specific intent of raising awareness and advocacy of the right of Pacific people to enjoy freedom of expression and be served by a free and independent media. We believe in the critical and basic link between these freedoms, and the vision of democratic and participatory governance pledged by our leaders in their endorsement of the Pacific Plan and other commitments to good governance. In support of the above, our key focus is monitoring threats to media freedom and bringing issues of concern to the attention of the wider regional and international community.

Wednesday, 9 March 2011

PFF condemns climate of impunity in Papua


20110303092319793.jpg
Investigative reporter Banjir Ambarita exposed police
officers in a week long pack rape of a 15 year old girl. He
was stabbed and is in intensive care.
PFF, Rarotonga, COOK ISLANDS -- Pacific Freedom Forum members condemn the blatant stabbing of an investigative journalist in west Papua and are joining ongoing calls for Indonesian authorities to investigate a series of attacks against news media.
"A climate of impunity against journalism will not become a reality across a region watchful as it is widespread," warns PFF chair Susuve Laumaea.
Banjir, a freelance reporter and contributor to the Jakarta Globe, was attacked in Jayapura Thursday 3 March 1am local time by two men riding his motorcycle home shortly after midnight last week. He was stabbed twice in the chest near his shoulder, and once in the stomach, before attackers sped off. 
The attack comes on top of five other attacks on news media in Papua this year alone, notes Laumaea.
One of Banjir's recent stories had been about a woman detainee forced to give oral sex to three officers, following on from an earlier exposing days of pack rape of an underage girl by other officers, who locked the 15 year old in a room for a week.
Laumaea said the stabbing and sexual assaults reinforced an impression police, security forces and other linked interests were "out of control."
"An inability to enforce rule of law within its own judiciary strengthens questions surrounding the credibility and capacity of Indonesia to properly administer a culturally distinct area and its indigenous people," said the PFF chair from Port Moresby.
Laumaea expressed "cautious optimism" for due process with news of a "rare" resignation by the local police chief.
However it is too little, too late, he said.
"Accountability for Papua people victim to an extensively documented history of human rights abuses is overdue, and PFF backs criticism from bodies like Amnesty International against a climate of impunity," said Laumaea.
From American Samoa, co-chair Monica Miller praised the efforts of colleagues in Jayapura who raised US$1,747 towards hospital costs. 
"This represents 15.5 million Rupiah, roughly 12 months salary, a huge amount to fundraise in what must be enormously difficult circumstances, uniting journalists and other newsroom workers in Papua against injustice."
A fundraising coordinator has estimated surgery costs alone may be as high as 40m Rupiah.
Miller also praised news media in Papua for their courage.
"Unlike cousins and colleagues to their east, newsroom workers in Papua face daily threats against the freedoms we take for granted - freedom of the press really is a life or death issue in parts of Melanesia."-- ENDS

LINKS

Police Chief Resigns in Wake of Oral Sex Scandal


Scoop.co.nz (press release) - 6 days ago
The Jakarta Globe March 2, 2011 by Banjir Ambarita Jayapura Police Chief Adj. Sr. Comr. Imam Setiawan resigned on Tuesday in the wake of criticism over a 

Papua-based Journalist Stabbed


VIVAnews.com - Nezar Patria - 5 days ago
VIVAnews - A Papua-based journalist, Banjir Ambarita, was stabbed in his chest and stomach by an unidentified person on Thursday, March 3, at around 1 am 

Indonesian journalist who covered police sex scandal hospitalized ...


The Canadian Press - 5 days ago
Banjir Ambarita, a reporter for the English-language daily The Jakarta Globe and the news portal Vivanews, was ambushed by two men on a motorcycle early 
International rights group Amnesty International has strongly urged the ... stabbing of journalist Banjir Ambarita, which took place in Jayapura on March 3. ...
Jakarta Post - 3 related articles - Shared by 5+

Papua journalists raise money for injured reporter

9 hours ago - ... million (US$1767) to care for fellow journalist Banjir Ambarita, who was hospitalized after he . ... Papua journalists raise money for injured reporter ...
www.thejakartapost.com/.../papua-journalists-raise-money-injured-reporter

Tuesday, 8 March 2011

PFF welcomes no-gag ruling on PNG mine photos

 Rarotonga, Cook Islands -- A judge's instruction backing fair use of photos snapped by landowners at a controversial mining project in Madang, Papua New Guinea, is being welcomed by the Pacific Freedom Forum.
"The judiciary in Papua New Guinea deserve praise for refusing to gag use of photos," says PFF chair Susuve Laumaea, of Papua New Guinea.
PFF has reviewed background into the case brought by MCC, the Metallurgical Corporation of China, who co-own Ramu Nickel Mine with an Australian company, Highlands Pacific.
A US$1.5 billion project seeking to discharge five million tons of waste into coastal waters, MCC has generated years of controversy and allegations of seeking to avoid due process.
Asked by mining project lawyers to ban publication of photos, PNG national court judge Justice David Cannings told the court on March 5 he would not rule on how photos should be used-- only that the photos should not suffer "misuse".
"His only warning about photos taken at Ramu Nickel Mine - against misuse - is entirely correct. The photos are not a state secret. Similar photos have graced the pages of two daily tabloids, a weekly and the screens of two TV networks in the past", he says.
Justice Cannings ruled against a ban soon after visiting the mining site with members of the court. Reports sighted by PFF state the judge also instructed that evidence from the court visit to the mine be entered into the record, as this does not always happen in other cases.
"The ruling sends a clear message to mining and other resource interests of the independence of the judiciary in refusing to support a "gag" on free expression, and should be taken note of by Pacific neighbours as investor interest in resource mining grows," says PFF co-chair Monica Miller of American Samoa.
The photography ruling sought by MCC is all part of a larger legal wrangle involving the landowners, over their concerns on environment impacts of the project. The next hearing is scheduled for 23 March 2011.--ENDS

LINKS:

PNG Mine Watch : http://ramumine.wordpress.com/2011/03/03/ramu-mine-mcc-tries-to-stop-photos-being-published/

Islands Business coverage: http://www.islandsbusiness.com/islands_business/index_dynamic/containerNameToReplace=MiddleMiddle/focusModuleID=19136/overideSkinName=issueArticle-full.tpl




CONTACT: PFF interim Chair Susuve Laumaea | Sunday Chronicle Newspaper | Papua New Guinea Mobile: 675-684 5168 | Office: 675-321-7040 | Email: susuve.laumaea@interoil.com PFF interim co-Chair Monica Miller | KHJ Radio | American Samoa Mob 684 258-4197 | Office 684 633-7793 | Email: monica@khjradio.com The Pacific Freedom Forum are a regional and global online network of Pacific media colleagues, with the specific intent of raising awareness and advocacy of the right of Pacific people to enjoy freedom of expression and be served by a free and independent media. We believe in the critical and basic link between these freedoms, and the vision of democratic and participatory governance pledged by our leaders in their endorsement of the Pacific Plan and other commitments to good governance. In support of the above, our key focus is monitoring threats to media freedom and bringing issues of concern to the attention of the wider regional and international community.
_______________________________

THE PACIFIC FREEDOM FORUM 

The Pacific Freedom Forum are a regional and global online network of Pacific media colleagues, with the specific intent of raising awareness and advocacy of the right of Pacific people to enjoy freedom of expression and be served by a free and independent media. 

We believe in the critical and basic link between these freedoms, and the vision of democratic and participatory governance pledged by our leaders in their endorsement of the Pacific Plan and other commitments to good governance. In support of the above, our key focus is monitoring threats to media freedom and bringing issues of concern to the attention of the wider regional and international community.

_______________________________

Saturday, 5 March 2011

Palau newspaper closedown highlights media freedom concerns

_______________________________


Rarotonga, Cook Islands -- Saturday 5th March 2011




The fragility of media freedom and news industries in some Pacific states has been highlighted in Palau, says regional monitoring network the Pacific Freedom Forum, PFF.


The forum says concerns arising from two high level court cases in Palau need a closer look, after a February 2011 Supreme Court ruling finding an "alien" registration fee scheme led by President Johnson Toribiong's government was unconstitutional. 


The class action suit leading to the Supreme Court decision was filed in late 2010 by Palau Horizon senior journalist Bernadette Carreon and others. Carreon is from the Philippines and had worked at the Horizon for a decade. She was 'terminated' not long after the suit was filed. However her other news colleagues followed suit when the whole newspaper printed its last edition on 20 November 2010.


"Media freedom concerns centre on job loss for the journalist - and loss of her newspaper", says PFF chair Susuve Laumaea of Papua New Guinea. 


"Independent sources of information for people of Palau can only be provided by a free and pluralistic media industry. To lose a key operator such as the Palau Horizon, and a journalist of Carreon's calibre, leaves a void where a quality news provider used to be."


Online reports reviewed by PFF state that her former employer, long time newspaper Palau Horizon closed after 12 years, printing a last edition on 20 November 2010. Publisher Abed E. Younis cited a "negative business atmosphere" and the slow economy. He continues to run his publishing business.


In another case reported by the Palau Horizon before it closed, the Attorney General stepped in to halt prosecution proceedings into alleged money laundering involving US 22 billion.


"A journalist involved in a successful claim at the Supreme Court level underscores the need for vigilance under press freedom laws of the Palau constitution," says Miller.


"Specifically, section 2 of Article 4 under fundamental rights states that government shall take no action to deny or impair the freedom of expression or press."


Both cases need re-examining for impact on freedom of the press in Palau, says the PFF.


"In some instances it's physical or psychological trauma against an individual journalists. In others, it is big business or political boycotts and interference against publishers which spills over into newsrooms."


"We salute Carreon's courage in standing against injustice, and sympathise with her and colleagues of the Palau Horizon at this time," says Miller.


-- ENDS


LINKS


Supreme court case : 
http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/pacbeat/stories/201009/s3017237.htm%3Eruling
http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/pacbeat/stories/201009/s3017237.htm


Money laundering case : http://www.islandsbusiness.com/news/index_dynamic/containerNameToReplace=MiddleMiddle/focusModuleID=130/focusContentID=17236/tableName=mediaRelease/overideSkinName=newsArticle-full.tpl


Palau Constitution : http://www.paclii.org/pw/legis/consol_act/cotrop359/





PFF CONTACTS: 

PFF interim Chair Susuve Laumaea
| Sunday Chronicle Newspaper
| Papua New Guinea Mobile: 675-684 5168
| Office: 675-321-7040
| Email: susuve.laumaea@interoil.com

PFF interim co-Chair Monica Miller
| KHJ Radio
| American Samoa 
| Mob 684 258-4197
| Office 684 633-7793
| Email: monica@khjradio.com


THE PACIFIC FREEDOM FORUM 

The Pacific Freedom Forum are a regional and global online network of Pacific media colleagues, with the specific intent of raising awareness and advocacy of the right of Pacific people to enjoy freedom of expression and be served by a free and independent media. 

We believe in the critical and basic link between these freedoms, and the vision of democratic and participatory governance pledged by our leaders in their endorsement of the Pacific Plan and other commitments to good governance. In support of the above, our key focus is monitoring threats to media freedom and bringing issues of concern to the attention of the wider regional and international community.



_______________________________

Pacific govts must distance themselves from Vanuatu media bashing: PFF

_______________________________


Rarotonga, Cook Islands -- Saturday 5 March 2011

The Pacific Freedom Forum calls on Pacific leaders and the Vanuatu government to distance themselves in the strongest possible terms from the serious assault of Vanuatu Daily Post Publisher, Marc Neil-Jones, and threats against Daily Post editor Royson Willie on Friday 4th March 2011. The attack was initiated by a group of men led into the Daily Post offices by Vanuatu cabinet minister Harry Iauko, and was reported on by the Daily Post in its Saturday 5th March issue.

Neil Jones was left shaken and with visible injuries after he was struck to the head from behind, kicked, and strangled by his assailants during the assault. The Minister who witnessed the attack which took place in Neil Jones' office, had screamed abuse and threats over the Daily Post exposure linking him to maladministration in Port Vila. The men also confronted and threatened Daily Post Editor Royson Willie.

The Daily Post documented the attack in its Saturday newspaper and has filed a statement with the Police. It is the second bashing of the newspaper publisher in recent years.

"The Pacific Freedom Forum calls on the Vanuatu Government, other Pacific government leaders, and development partners, especially those based in Port Vila to denounce this vile attack and distance themselves from this shameful thuggery," says PFF chair Susuve Laumaea of Papua New Guinea.

"The role of the media as the fourth estate, the fourth arm of governance supporting a watchdog 'eyes of the public' function on the legislature, the judiciary, and the executive governing arms of a country, is under threat of being trampled into fear and silence across the region. At a turning point in Pacific history, we call on our leaders to uphold the rule of law, not take it into their own hands and turn to vigilante justice."

Laumaea says the assault on Jones, who lives with diabetes and is semi-retired from his publishing role with the Daily Post, "is more than a violent act of cowardice. It is a crime in breach of the Vanuatu Constitution and the Leadership Code of Vanuatu, and sends a chilling signal to other Pacific leaders and development partners that their silence is being taken as support for the the systematic abuse of human rights and in particular on the right to freedom of expression and information in Vanuatu," he says.

"The manner in which the Minister and his team went by government vehicle, in open view of the general public and Daily Post staff, and  of a government official who has brought shame onto himself, his office, and his country. We say the government should suspend Harry Iauko from all Ministerial and Parliamentary duties and responsibilities pending the final outcome of the police investigation, including any prosecutions arising. Any public servants involved should also be immediately suspended."

"The Pacific Freedom Forum stands with the Media Association of Vanuatu and our global freedom of expression partners in total outrage at this latest and extremely serious incident threatening media freedom and Government - media relations in Vanuatu," says PFF co-chair Monica Miller of American Samoa.

This is not the first time Marc Neil-Jones has been assaulted by Vanuatu government employees. In January, 2009, he was bashed by a group of prison guards angered by stories in the Vanuatu Daily Post implicating them in the death of a prison escapee and mismanagement of the Port Vila Jail. In 2001, Neil-Jones, who is a naturalised citizen of Vanuatu, successfully challenged his illegal deportation from Vanuatu after the then government was angered by his reportage on corruption and transparency.

The Pacific Freedom Forum also calls on the Vanuatu Police to act on the detailed statement from Mr Neil-Jones, to promptly and thoroughly investigate this outrage and bring all those responsible before the courts without delay.--ENDS

LINKS:


Iauko disgraces Vanuatu govt--Daily Post :
http://www.dailypost.vu/sites/default/files/Issue%203182.pdf
Pacific media condemn attack :
http://pacific.scoop.co.nz/2011/03/pacific-media-condemn-minister-and-his-thugs-for-attack-on-daily-post/
Vanuatu Leadership Code 1998 :
http://www.paclii.org//cgi-bin/disp.pl/vu/legis/num_act/lca1998131/lca1998131.html
Opinion piece, Vanuatu Daily Post : http://www.dailypost.vu/content/when-will-destruction-stop
Daily Post publisher attacked by Prison Guards : http://cafepacific.blogspot.com/2009/01/assault-on-vanuatu-publisher-shocks.html
Deportation of Neil Jones from Vanuatu, Ombuds report :
http://www.paclii.org//cgi-bin/disp.pl/vu/ombudsman/2001/5.html
PINA speaks out over assault on Vanuatu publisher 
http://www.pmc.aut.ac.nz/pacific-media-watch/2011-03-08/vanuatu-pina-
speaks-out-over-assault-publisher



CONTACTS: 

PFF interim Chair Susuve Laumaea
| Sunday Chronicle Newspaper
| Papua New Guinea Mobile: 675-684 5168
| Office: 675-321-7040
| Email: susuve.laumaea@interoil.com

PFF interim co-Chair Monica Miller
| KHJ Radio
| American Samoa
| Mob 684 258-4197
| Office 684 633-7793
| Email: monica@khjradio.com


_______________________________


THE PACIFIC FREEDOM FORUM 

The Pacific Freedom Forum are a regional and global online network of Pacific media colleagues, with the specific intent of raising awareness and advocacy of the right of Pacific people to enjoy freedom of expression and be served by a free and independent media.

We believe in the critical and basic link between these freedoms, and the vision of democratic and participatory governance pledged by our leaders in their endorsement of the Pacific Plan and other commitments to good governance. In support of the above, our key focus is monitoring threats to media freedom and bringing issues of concern to the attention of the wider regional and international community.

_______________________________