Sunday, 30 October 2011

NZ press ban sets dangerous precedent - PFF




    Speaker Lockwood Smith

. . .

A ten day parliamentary ban on reporters from the largest daily newspaper in New Zealand sets a dangerous precedent for the rest of the region, warns the Pacific Freedom Forum.

"Banning all or part of the news media is a risky option for any parliamentary Speaker to take," says Pacific Freedom Forum chair Titi Gabi.

"As a regional leader, New Zealand decision makers need to be aware there are wider implications, including whether they are setting a precedent for partner countries."


Dr Smith imposed the ban on 7th October after a beneficiary leapt off the upstairs public  gallery, protesting against government policies. A long-time Herald press gallery reporter, Audrey Young, snapped the moment with her phone camera and it was published online later that afternoon. 


PFF has reviewed commentary from news media and other institutions since Dr Smith announced the ban earlier this month. PFF joins the New Zealand Press Gallery, the Commonwealth Press Union, and other news media in expressing concern. 

"As part of the Fourth Estate, journalists attend Parliament for the same reason as honourable members", says Gabi.

"We are there to hold the government of the day to account", says Gabi.

New rules placing more restrictions on coverage will further hinder journalism from doing its job properly, says the PFF chair, speaking from Port Moresby.

"In the fortnight or so since the ban, this is being seen as especially worrisome, coming as it did six weeks before a general election."

PFF agrees with the Commonwealth Press Union and its Media Freedom Committee that the ban should result in a review of rules that must be followed by the press gallery.

"There may have been good reason to limit House coverage in the past," says Gabi.


"Journalists used to act as gatekeepers to most public awareness. But the question must be asked whether this still stands good today, in an era of almost unlimited access to public information, via internet and social networks," she says.

PFF applauds Dr Lockwood Smith for what is widely recognised as a robust and independent approach to the role of Speaker, even when dealing with MPs from his own party.

Dr Smith last year attacked government MPs for "reckless misuse of official data" - criticism that went unreported, with the New Zealand parliamentary press gallery instead focused on a visit to parliament, the same day, by beauty pageant contestants.

PFF co-chair Monica Miller also welcomed a decision by the Speaker to pull back from a total ban, but says relatively muted reaction to the ban in New Zealand shows up a lack of news media governance.

"Sad to say, there is not a strong voice for journalism in New Zealand."

The only union to represent journalism, the EPMU, the Electrical, Printing and Manufacturers Union, features just three press releases on its journalism site this year, with only six last year.

MEAA, the Australian media, entertainment and arts organisation, does have representation in New Zealand. But a PFF volunteer was advised during a brief, informal visit to the Auckland office this week that they are focused on actor equity issues, rather than news media or journalism.

There has not been a professional association for journalists in New Zealand since 1987.

Miller notes that an EPMU journalism review promised for 2008 has yet to appear.

"It is an irony that the only news media organisation to respond publicly to the journalism review is the New Zealand Herald chapel, strongly suggesting a political economy where there is a chilling effect on news media."

Some 30 other news media who responded to the journalism review did not want to be identified.


LINKS 


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CONTACT: PFF Chair Titi Gabi | Freelance Journalist | Papua New Guinea Mail: PO Box 7776, Boroko, NCD, Papua New Guinea | Mob: (675) 7314 3929 | Email: titi.gabipng@gmail.com PFF 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.


. . .

Tuesday, 4 October 2011

PFF calls on Temaru to reconsider media shutdown

Rarotonga, COOK ISLANDS -- Closing down state media outlets is  a short-sighted reaction to cost cutting pressures in French Polynesia, says regional media monitoring network the Pacific Freedom Forum.
State-owned news service Agence Tahiti Presse will close at the end of the year and broadcaster Tahiti Nui Television may later face the same fate. According to news reports from the capital, Pape'ete, the decisions to axe the news agency has come from cost-cutting pressures from Paris as the global economc crisis affects budgets in France's territories. 
"News media are an essential part of keeping the public informed and should be a last resort, not the first, for cost cutting," says PFF chair, Titi Gabi.
"Other island states are coming to realise their mistake in putting local media in the firing line."
French Polynesia is currently ruled by the pro-independence party of long-time campaigner Oscar Temaru.
Gabi says it would be "sadly ironic" for moves towards independence to begin with the closing down of local news media, "a time when independent scrutiny is needed most."
"Does the Temaru administration really want the main source of information to be coming from RFO radio and television, both services mainly staffed and run from Paris?" asks Gabi, from Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea.
PNG has recently seen an upswing in funding for state media, essential for informing a disparate and widely dispersed population, says PFF. Funding was increased after a 2006 review of Australian aid to the region found that populations were under more threat from natural and other disasters because of failing state media.
From American Samoa, PFF co-chair Monica Miller notes that French Polynesia faces financial pressures similar to other island nations.
"During the 80's and 90's, many islands were encouraged by aid donors like New Zealand and Australia to privatise government services and leave the market to fill the gap," says Miller.
"As some have found, a lack of strong state media to independently inform citizens about current events, especially disasters, has cost lives and much money."
PFF is calling on the Temaru administration to reassess the role of state media in cost cutting plans. "The founders of France long ago recognised the role of a strong news media when they outlined a constitution which calls not only for an independent media, but also media plurality - a variety of sources of information and views for citizens to consider," she says.
"It's essential for the efficient and effective development of French Polynesia for local media to be supported towards professional and independent journalism, rather than using budget pressures as the excuse to close the doors on a news outlet serving Tahiti and the region."
Such support might include the establishment of a professional journalism society for locals and long-time residents, and an independent media monitor to ensure news media remain accountable to their community, suggests PFF.
"In an information age, we all need  more relevant and credible sources of information, not less. Our thoughts are with our news colleagues and their families in Tahiti as they face the prospect of being jobless for Christmas." says Miller.--ENDS

LINKS
AusAID Pacific AID findings on media
http://www.aph.gov.au/house/committee/jfadt/pacificaid/report/chapter5.htm

French constitution
http://www.servat.unibe.ch/icl/fr00000_.html


CONTACT: PFF Chair Titi Gabi | Freelance Journalist | Papua New Guinea Mail: PO Box 7776, Boroko, NCD, Papua New Guinea | Mob: (675) 7314 3929 | Email: titi.gabipng@gmail.com PFF 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.