Sunday, 5 November 2017

Editor autopsy needs independent review - PFF


Fought the good fight: - next to a red anti-violence ribbon, a colour print-out memorialises Evara with a verse from the Bible: "I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. 2nd Timothy 4:7" Photo / PNG Echo

20171106 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

An autopsy finding no signs of trauma in the death of a Papua New Guinea editor should be independently reviewed, says PFF, the Pacific Freedom Forum.

“We welcome the autopsy taking place, but challenge a preliminary finding that cause of death was undetermined”, says PFF Chair Monica Miller.

A copy of the report from Chief Pathologist Seth Fose claimed to find no trauma, injuries or other issues.
Miller says that there “are just too many witnesses to our colleague Rosalyn Albaniel Evara suffering severe domestic violence.

“Photos taken after her death, and shown at her funeral, showed extensive bruising.”

PFF joins calls from within the PNG media and wider community for an independent review of the preliminary findings.

“We are advised from PNG that the chief pathologist, another attending doctor at the autopsy, and her alleged attacker, all come from Gulf Province.

“Given how close ties of kinship are across PNG, this is a significant conflict of interest that could and should have avoided.”

Miller says PFF is speaking out against the preliminary finding because of risks that staying silent will send the wrong message.

“At PFF, we usually restrict ourselves to issues around freedom of expression, not medical controversy.

“But we must all, as colleagues, stay vigilant about anyone in circumstances surrounding the death of a working journalist.”

To be effective, an independent review should undergo mediation, with support from the family, or risk suspicion of conflicts of interest.


A death in the clan - family, friends and colleagues were at the funeral for Rosalyn Albaniel Evara. Photo / Lydia Veali via Facebook


Shut down

Miller says she is also disturbed by reports that the Post Courier has shut down the email account for Evara already.

“What is in the email account that so urgently needs deactivating?”

Again PFF joins calls from Papua New Guinea, for police to urgently seek forensic access to the account of Evara.

“For the newspaper to deactivate what may include incriminating evidence amounts to an obstruction of justice.”

“Any attempt to delete the contents of that account should be regarded with deep suspicion."

News of the “undetermined” preliminary finding broke as PFF was preparing an earlier statement in response to claims from the Post Courier.

"Stop shifting blame", says Miller.

The paper had claimed that the only evidence of domestic violence was when under former management.

Asks Miller, “How can management possibly prove when domestic violence started and stopped less than a week after the death of an employee?”


Attack: in an editorial, the Post Courier claimed the family had "high-jacked" their own funeral.
Photo / LoopPNG


“High-jacked”

The Pacific Freedom Forum also rejects a further claim, against the former editor, Alexander Rheeney, now a co-chair of PFF.

“We are satisfied at an explanation from our co-chair that the only incident of domestic violence brought to his attention during his time as editor involved another staff member, and was not fatal.”

“We note, with sadness but understanding, that the staff member chose not to pursue prosecution of her partner - further contributing to a culture of silence surrounding domestic violence.”

Worse, Miller says, is that instead of supporting the family, the Post Courier chose to attack them in an editorial for “high-jacking” the funeral ceremony.

The editorial attacked former employees for criticising an alleged lack of action against domestic violence on its own staff.

Describing the criticisms as a “tirade of accusations” the Post-Courier identified a former managing director and a reporter, who both “sarcastically berated and belittled Post-Courier as a leading advocator against GBV and allegedly doing nothing to stop the treatment of a passed colleague from being one such victim.”

GBV is an abbreviation for gender-based violence.

In what it claimed was the “proper perspective”, the Post Courier said she “was a completely private person, never one to talk about her personal experiences, life, marriage or what goes beyond the limits of the workplace.”

Responding, PFF Co-Chair Bernadette Carreon, speaking from Palau, says that respect for employee privacy should never interfere with due care for employee safety.

“We are deeply disappointed that management at the Post Courier appear to be using the same sort of tactics that News Corp outlets have long been criticised for”, says Carreon.

“All over the world when it comes to ethics - distract, deny, and delay.”

News Corp cannot be allowed to repeatedly avoid responsibility for their actions, she says.

PFF understands that the autopsy was attended by a family member, and a colleague, who photographed the proceedings.

PFF is also calling on the Post Courier to review its safety procedures for women employees, and use a two-step alert system at work and in the company compound - connected with police and colleagues.

In doing so, PFF says the Post Courier review should acknowledge factors that keep otherwise educated and empowered women in abusive relationships - cultural pressures, lack of economic support especially for parents, and stereotypes of being a single career mother.


Keeping the faith: the death of Rosalyn Albaniel Evara prompted worldwide scrutiny, including from The Guardian newspaper. Screenshot / Guardian


LINKS

Parkop rejects autopsy report 
http://www.thenational.com.pg/parkop-rejects-autopsy-report/

Death of PNG journalist sparks national debate about domestic violence
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/oct/25/death-of-papua-new-guinea-journalist-sparks-national-debate-about-domestic-violence

PNG journalist Rosalyn Albaniel Evara's death sparks outrage, investigation
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-10-26/png-journalist-death-sparks-domestic-violence-conversation/9089030

The (not so) mysterious death of Rosalyn Albaniel Evara
http://www.pngecho.com/2017/10/24/the-not-so-mysterious-death-of-rosalyn-albaniel-evara/

Prominent PNG journalist dies; sparks Pacific domestic violence debate
http://www.ifj.org/nc/en/news-single-view/backpid/1/article/prominent-png-journalist-dies-sparks-pacific-domestic-violence-debate/

Funeral of Post-Courier journalist overshadowed by abuse allegations
http://www.pmc.aut.ac.nz/pacific-media-watch/png-funeral-post-courier-journalist-overshadowed-abuse-allegations-10016

Post Courier editorial: The fight against gender-based violence 
http://postcourier.com.pg/fight-gender-based-violence/

CONTACTS

Monica Miller
PFF Chair
News Director
South Seas Broadcasting
monica@southseasbroadcasting.com
+6842584197
American Samoa

Alexander Rheeney
PFF Co-Chair
President Media Council PNG
alexander.rheeney@outlook.com
+67578045266
Papua New Guinea

Bernadette H. Carreon
PFF Co-Chair
Pacific Island Times /Pacific Note
carreon.bernadette@gmail.com
+ 6807794304
Palau

Netani Rika
PFF Coordinator
Communications Director
Pacific Council of Churches
netrika66@gmail.com
Fiji

ABOUT PFF

The Pacific Freedom Forum is 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 Framework for Pacific Regionalism 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, 3 May 2017

PFF statement on WPFD 2017

 

Image result for #mediaaccess2papua
Hand written - Pacific press standing by colleagues in West Papua.

 

3rd May 2017 *
Rarotonga, Cook Islands
#wpfd2017 #pressfreedom


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Enemies of the press - foreign and domestic - are behind the failure of Indonesia to live up to press freedom promises for West Papua, says PFF, the Pacific Freedom Forum.

"Indonesia can now be confirmed as a failed state when it comes to freedom of expression," says PFF Chair Monica Miller.

"President Joko Widodo promised open access for foreign press to West Papua two years ago, but today sees another World Press Freedom Day without progress."

PFF joins RSF, Reporters Sans Frontieres, in condemning Indonesia's "double-dealing" hyprocrisy. The RSF report joins those from Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Freedom House and others noting declines in press freedom in Indonesia, regionally, and worldwide.

"Government of Indonesia obviously feels safer dealing with a press fail in Jakarta than risk fully exposing security forces' endless brutality in West Papua."

PFF is calling for efforts to "redouble" support for press freedom in West Papua.

"Foreign press unable to get into West Papua should instead focus beyond national borders to include the many foreign investors in Indonesia."

Image result for #mediaaccess2papua
Fist for freedom – a Papua press campaigner, Victor Mambor, pictured in front of a free press poster.  Image / Twitter

 

In recent days, weeks and months, PFF notes Indonesia;

> arresting of hundreds of people in West Papua, and assaults on dozens, including journalists,

> entering its five yearly Universal Periodic Review at the United Nations Human Rights Council, due by 12th May,

> BPS, the central statistics agency, reporting that West Papua is still at the bottom of HDI rankings on the national Human Development Index - despite domestic and foreign owned companies reaping billions from the two eastern provinces each year,

> blocking of at least eight legitimate news sites, and,

> continuing to fail at arresting, charging and prosecuting security forces who arbitrarily detained and assaulted thousands of West Papua protestors exercising their right to freedom of expression.

Since WPFD last year, there has been strong support from Pacific Island states for a United Nations rapporteur on Freedom of Expression to look into abuses in West Papua.

Reflecting on the official WPFD theme of 'critical minds for critical times', Miller commented that "Indonesia is just one example of a critical time for press freedoms, and critical minds must think global and act local."

Bright point

Outside of West Papua, PFF Co-Chair Alexander Rheeney says that a bright point was the announcement on World Press Freedom Day of a media ombudsman in the Solomon Islands.

"We are excited that the Solomon Islands has taken up a concept PFF raised in 2013 and has started to put that idea into action.

"There will of course be challenges for any media ombudsman but our hope is that news media report on steps to ensure such an appointment is made independently."

In that respect, PFF also welcomes the selection of an independent board for a media council in Samoa.

"Board members have yet to meet their first ethics test, but the first step taken by Samoa proves government is, so far, keeping it's hands off."

Suspension, shut down threats

Showing ups and downs across the region, Tonga improved in global rankings but has ended the press freedom year with a reported suspension from the public broadcaster, amidst threats to shut it down completely.

“The government of Tonga needs to keep reminding itself that criticism is not a controversy, and that not all criticism needs to be constructive to qualify as free speech."

Short wave bye

Undoubted low point for regional press freedom was the scrapping of shortwave services from Radio Australia.

“Australian Broadcasting Corporation appeared to have forgotten its own promise to improve engagement with the Pacific region," says Rheeney.

PFF has gained more than 1,000 signatures in support of restoring short wave, including from leading politicians, officials and private sector managers.

“It is to be hoped that public hearings into restoring shortwave broadcasting are met with support in parliament.”

“If not, Australia again needs reminding by the international community to remember its own backyard.”

Contempt

Another Australian low point was blocking of Papua New Guinea media from asking questions at prime ministerial press conferences.

“This shows contempt for the role of a free press.”

Troubling law changes in Australia and New Zealand open up domestic surveillance laws to include journalists, says Rheeney, as well as punitive measures against whistleblowers.

“As regional leaders, both countries are taking increasingly hostile actions against news media and the rights of citizens to access information.”

Next 12 months

For years, Rheeney says that PFF members have warned about a crisis in journalism, and now global press freedom surveys have finally begun to admit that's not just a third world problem.

Over the next 12 months, PFF remains focused on the region's leading issue, freedom of expression within West Papua.

Other initiatives include continued consultation on media freedom, and ethics, across the Pacific Islands region.

NOTE :

PFF publishes it's statements from the dateline of original registration, in the Cook Islands, one of the last places in the world to celebrate World Press Freedom Day, followed by Niue, and, the very last, American Samoa.



NEXT
:

Sign PFF petition to restore ABC shortwave - 5th May 2017 deadline
https://www.change.org/p/abc-chair-hon-james-spigelman-save-lifesaving-shortwave-radio-to-the-pacific


WPFD HEADLINES
:

Indonesia is double dealing on media freedom - RSF
http://asiapacificreport.nz/2017/05/03/indonesia-is-double-dealing-on-media-freedom-says-rsf/

No talk of Papua at press freedom day
http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2017/05/03/no-talk-of-papua-at-press-freedom-day.html

Violence against Indonesian journalists remains worrying
http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2017/05/03/violence-against-indonesian-journalists-remains-worrying-aji.html

Jakarta urged to ensure against journo attacks
http://www.radionz.co.nz/international/pacific-news/329850/jakarta-urged-to-ensure-against-journo-attacks

Indonesia under pressure during universal periodic review and world press freedom day
https://www.freewestpapua.org/2017/05/03/indonesia-under-pressure-during-universal-periodic-review-and-world-press-freedom-day-over-record-in-west-papua/

Media Freedom critical for Human Rights struggle in West Papua - PANG
http://www.pina.com.fj/?p=pacnews&m=read&o=314963637590931712737082a01f66

Human Development Indicators for Papua https://en.tempo.co/read/news/2017/04/18/056867174/BPS-Human-Development-Gap-Still-Exists

In 'post truth' era, leaders must defend objective, independent media, UN says on Press Freedom Day
http://www.pina.com.fj/?p=pacnews&m=read&o=756553951590a4c50dda925289c1b0


CONTACTS

Monica Miller
PFF Chair
News Director
South Seas Broadcasting
American Samoa
monica@southseasbroadcasting.com
+6842584197

Alexander Rheeney
PFF Co-Chair
President Media Council PNG
Papua New Guinea
alexander.rheeney@outlook.com
+67578045266

Bernadette H. Carreon
PFF Co-Chair
Palau Correspondent
Guam Business
carreon.bernadette@gmail.com
+680779430

Netani Rika
PFF Coordinator
Communications Director
Pacific Council of Churches
Fiji
netrika66@gmail.com

 

ABOUT PFF

The Pacific Freedom Forum is 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 Framework for Pacific Regionalism 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, 27 April 2017

Let media council do its work - PFF to Samoa Police

 

PFF samoa observer warrant 02
Harassment - a copy of the warrant served on the daily newspaper. Image /
Samoa Observer
 

“.. after accepting public support, she and her family must also accept there will be public questions, and even criticism - one goes with the other .. ”

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Samoa police must stop abusing their powers and let the national media council address free speech concerns, says regional media watchdog the Pacific Freedom Forum, PFF.

“Citizens of Samoa are guaranteed the right to debate issues of public concern", says PFF Chair Monica Miller, in response to police actions on a case involving stigmata claims.

“Police should do nothing to deprive them of those constitutional rights, especially when recent actions against Samoa’s largest media outlet are raising questions over where their legal advice is coming from."

PFF berre isopo 02
Threats - a screengrab of the police
officer’s Facebook profile, included
with an official complaint under
investigation by the Police Standards
Unit. Image / via O Le Palemia

 

Abuse, bullying and threats

Since last year, Police have allowed an officer to continue abusing, bullying and threatening people online.

In recent weeks, police started an investigation into the identity of a blogger who exposed the officer, arrested one woman on the basis of Facebook comments, and, taken action against a letter to a newspaper.

PFF is especially alarmed at police serving a warrant against daily newspaper Samoa Observer over a harassment complaint.

PFF berre isopo


 

 

 



‘I wish I have a gun’ the officer has removed
a photo of herself in uniform from her Facebook
profile, but left up a public comment from 2013,
expressing the desire to get hold of a firearm. 
Image / Facebook

 

Public interest

“Harassment laws were never intended for use against news media but were originally designed to protect people from abusive phone calls, often women suffering stalking from men."

Miller says this is obviously not the case with a young woman at the centre of the case against the newspaper.

“There is huge public interest in her claims of suffering stigmata," she says.

“But after accepting public support, she and her family must also accept there will be public questions, and even criticism - one goes with the other."

Last option

Miller questions why police agreed to take the complaint, and did not refer the complainant to the country's newly established media council.

“Going to the police should be the last option, not the first option."

She is especially critical of court officials for agreeing to the warrant.

“Court approval for search warrants is intended to act as a protection against police abuse of their powers", says Miller, "not act as a rubber stamp for whatever the police bring them."

“In this case, court officials have failed in their duty to respect the law."

PFF samoa observer warrant
Top story – public interest in the
stigmata story is huge, ‘most read’ on
the Samoa Observer site at more than
30,000 hits. Image / Samoa Observer 

 

Millions in aid

PFF says the Samoa police cases again raise wider questions about policing in the region.

“Millions of dollars of tax payers money have been spent by Australia and New Zealand to improve policing in the region.

“Yet we are seeing more and more cases of police abusing their powers against news media, including in Australia and New Zealand."

PFF has previously criticised police actions in Samoa, including officers smashing the phone of a member of the public using it to film police, and doing nothing when members of the press are threatened and assaulted in front of them.

Media council

From Papua New Guinea, PFF Co-chair Alex Rheeney says Samoa, as a member of the United Nations, must ensure it fully observes article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which guarantees people's freedom of thought, conscience and speech.

“Our Samoa media colleagues leading the new media council are well-respected regionally,” he says.

“They are more than capable of assisting Police through a dialogue aimed at building awareness by law enforcers of the role of the news media as the Fourth Estate, acting as a check and balance on the powers of parliament, government and the justice system."

HEADLINES

Police execute search warrant of Samoa Observer
http://samoaobserver.ws/en/23_04_2017/local/19230/Police-execute-search-warrant-of-Samoa-Observer.htm

Female Officer investigated for abusive language on social media
http://www.talamua.com/female-officer-investigated-for-abusive-language-on-social-media/

Police still in the hunt for ‘O.L.P.’ blogger
http://samoaobserver.ws/en/24_04_2017/local/19282/Police-still-in-the-hunt-for-%E2%80%98OLP%E2%80%99-blogger.htm

Crimes Act 2013 2013
http://www.paclii.org/cgi-bin/sinodisp/ws/legis/consol_act_2016/ca201382/ca201382.html?stem=&synonyms=&query=%20Crimes%20Act%202013

Police Woman Being Investigated
http://olepalemia.weebly.com/blog/police-woman-being-investigated

The Letter of Complaint to Police
http://olepalemia.weebly.com/blog/the-letter-of-complaint-to-police

Incompetent and Corrupt Officers Destroy Integrity of the Police Force
http://olepalemia.weebly.com/blog/incompetent-and-corrupt-officers-destroy-integrity-of-the-police-force

CONTACTS

Monica Miller
PFF Chair
News Director
South Seas Broadcasting
American Samoa
monica@southseasbroadcasting.com
+6842584197

Alexander Rheeney
PFF Co-Chair
President Media Council PNG
Papua New Guinea
alexander.rheeney@outlook.com
+67578045266

Bernadette H. Carreon
PFF Co-Chair
Palau Correspondent
Guam Business
carreon.bernadette@gmail.com
+680779430

Netani Rika
PFF Coordinator
Communications Director
Pacific Council of Churches
Fiji
netrika66@gmail.com

ABOUT PFF

The Pacific Freedom Forum is 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 Framework for Pacific Regionalism 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, 11 April 2017

Indonesia bans yet another journalist

#alert | #westpapua #wpfd2017

News alert : France24 journalist Jack Hewson
is the latest to be banned from visiting West
Papua, despite Indonesia hosting World
Press Freedom Day in less than a month.
Photo / Twitter

Alert status : greenlight for statement

Links : Limited

Foreign Reporting in Papua
https://en.tempo.co/read/news/2017/04/07/314863531/Foreign-Reporting-in-Papua

Blacklisting of freelance journalist on Papua mission ‘paranoid’
http://asiapacificreport.nz/2017/04/11/blacklisting-of-freelance-journalist-covering-papua-paranoid-says-tempo/

Editor note : The Tempo piece gives Al Jazeera as Hewson’s employer, but Twitter and LinkedIn profiles both lead with France24.

. . .

Stop failing Pacific press test–PFF

“Standing on sacred ground is no place to deny freedoms that many died defending ”


Angry headline on the press ban in Papua New Guinea. Screenshot / https://poboxblog.wordpress.com

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE :

Australia and Papua New Guinea must review media relations after two separate but equally "shocking" bans on PNG press, says PFF, the Pacific Freedom Forum.

In the first ban, PNG news media were told by Australian embassy officials to leave a press conference held at a war cemetery.

“Standing on sacred ground is no place to deny freedoms that many died defending”, says PFF Chair Monica Miller.

Arrogant

In a second ban after the cemetery visit, local news media were told by an official from the office of the PNG prime minister that they could not ask questions at a “joint” press between Peter O'Neil and Malcolm Turnbull.

“Australia has long faced criticism from the region for arrogant, neocolonial attitudes,” notes Miller.

“Issuing bans is no way to disprove those criticisms.”


Media anger - an ABC employee publicly criticises the prime ministerial press ban. Screenshot / Facebook

Blame and shame

PFF condemns the bans, and expresses disgust at the actions of both governments.

“The government of Papua New Guinea must share the blame - and the shame - with Australia for agreeing to ban PNG press from press conferences that should have been open to news media from both countries.”

In background briefings given to PFF, Port Moresby sources state that PNG press were told to leave by Australian officials after taking photos of a visit by Alexander Turnbull to Bomana cemetery, a major war graveyard, with thousands of dead from World War II.

PNG journalists who questioned the order were told that a press conference with Turnbull at the Bomana site was “only” for Australian press, because only Australian issues would be discussed.

After the Bomana visit, Turnbull held a second press conference with host prime minister Peter O'Neill, at Airways Hotel.

Astonished

PNG media were then instructed they were not allowed to ask questions at the second, "joint" press conference.

“PFF is astonished at having to remind Australia, as a former chair of the UN Security Council, that a joint prime ministerial press conference involves not just the leaders but also the press of both countries.

“Having to even say that beggars belief. A press ban amounts to a diplomatic insult, in any democracy.”


Racism in her face - veteran PNG journalist Gorethy Kenneth gets told to leave press conference. Screenshot / Daily Telegraph

Contempt

PFF regards the bans as representing two failures in basic freedoms.

“Two failures. One day. Two governments,” says Miller.

“Both bans show contempt for a free press, guaranteed under constitutional protections, and article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.”

Miller praises a journalist who defied the ban, saying Gorethy Kenneth from the PNG Post Courier should get answers to her questions.

Submission

“We also feel for Australian media colleagues who have been embarrassed by this diplomatic blunder.”

News of the press ban comes the same month as a PFF submission to an Australian senate committee remains held back from the public.

“Our submission is to a public inquiry, yet we have been told to stop sharing our submission with anyone else, until given approval by the committee.”

It is not clear how many other submissions, if any, are also being held back.

PFF offers the reminder that parliamentary procedure does not apply to press practice, which demands immediate release.


Australian newspaper describes media ban as a "debacle".
Screenshot / Daily Telegraph

Policy laundering

“Australia claims to be a regional leader yet stumbles over even the basics of human rights, such as freedoms of speech”, says Miller.

PFF regards the three press freedom failures as reinforcing long-standing questions about relations between Australia and the rest of the Pacific.

“Heavy handed tactics with the press may work in Australia, but we do not need that kind of policy laundered to the rest of the Pacific.”

Ranking media

PFF states that the press bans goes beyond diplomacy, and applies to all seven million citizens of Papua New Guinea, all twenty two million in Australia, and an "appalled" regional audience.

“How are citizens of Papua New Guinea supposed to stay informed if their prime minister fails to ensure their own news media gets in?

“How are Australian tax-payers supposed to learn if their aid dollars are being spent properly, if they don't hear local questions, from local media, challenging both leaders with local knowledge?”

PFF states that the bans reinforce the need for governments to rank media as a first priority, not last.

“Our message is simple - stop failing the Pacific press test, stop failing democracy.”

HEADLINES

PM’s Kokoda trip just a hasty PR exercise http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/rendezview/miranda-devine-pms-kokoda-trip-just-a-hasty-pr-exercise/news-story/3cfa22ee50677d1ec26cd72e837f3699

Turnbull in PNG: media snubs, refugee jitters & money problems http://asopa.typepad.com/asopa_people/2017/04/turnbull-in-png-media-snubs-refugee-jitters-money-problems.html

Opinion - Turnbull, the neocolonialist, bans #PNG media from conference in their own country
https://poboxblog.wordpress.com/2017/04/10/turnbull-the-neocolonialist-bans-papua-new-guinea-media-from-press-conference/

CONTACTS

Monica Miller
PFF Chair
News Director
South Seas Broadcasting
American Samoa
monica@southseasbroadcasting.com
+6842584197

Alexander Rheeney
PFF Co-Chair
President Media Council PNG
Papua New Guinea
alexander.rheeney@outlook.com 
+67578045266

Bernadette H. Carreon
PFF Co-Chair
Palau Correspondent
Guam Business
carreon.bernadette@gmail.com 
+680779430

Netani Rika
PFF Coordinator
Communications Director
Pacific Council of Churches
Fiji
netrika66@gmail.com

ABOUT PFF

The Pacific Freedom Forum is 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 Framework for Pacific Regionalism 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.

. . .

Friday, 24 March 2017

Action needed now against Indonesia press ban "farce" - PFF

 

PACIFIC FREEDOM FORUM·
SATURDAY, 25 MARCH 2017

“ Are world press supposed to attend World Press Freedom Day, sip fruity drinks in Jakarta, and pretend our colleagues in West Papua are not being seriously mistreated? ”

Tragedy to farce - an Indonesian immigration official shows how to fill out official forms for APOA, Foreign Reporter Applications. Photo / Antara / Irsan Mulyadi

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE :

World Press Freedom Day co-host Indonesia must issue a written directive to fulfil promises for free press access to West Papua, says PFF, the Pacific Freedom Forum.

“Latest deportation of two French journalists is an embarrassing reminder of how little Indonesia respects press freedoms,” says PFF Chair Monica Miller.

“Especially embarrassing because the two journalists were producing a documentary for Garuda, the national airline of Indonesia.”

Put it in writing

PFF is calling on #WPFD2017 co-host UNESCO to push for urgent action on the long promised but never delivered written directive from Indonesian President Joko Widodo.

Without any directive, the credibility of both UNESCO and Indonesia must come under serious question, says PFF.

“Indonesia cannot seek to enjoy favourable attention as hosts to world press while continuing a de facto ban on the same people,” says Miller.

Pretend

“Nor can UNESCO stand aside and let this issue slide silently by.”

PFF notes the lack of any specific sessions in the existing WPFD programme to address the issue of West Papua.

“Are world press supposed to attend World Press Freedom Day,” she asks, “sip fruity drinks in Jakarta, and pretend our colleagues in West Papua are not being seriously mistreated?

Two French journalists Franck Escudié and Basille Longchamp are put on display at an Indonesia police press conference in Tembagapura, Papua. Photo / AFP / Irsul Aditra

Farce

"Press freedoms in Indonesia have gone from a tragedy to a farce."

PFF supports the call from Human Rights Watch for Joko Widowi to issue a long-delayed written directive lifting restrictions on foreign media access to Papua, and appropriately punish government officials who refuse to comply.

“Criticism is not enough, action is needed. Nor is it enough to state that the latest deportation raises questions,” says Miller.

Half a century

“News media, press freedom advocates and human rights activists have been raising questions for half a century.”

Enough, is enough, says Miller.

"Indonesia has been warned already.

Mockery

“Unless UNESCO and Indonesia take action to immediately address this issue, PFF will have no alternative than to declare this event a mockery of world press freedom, unworthy of attendance.”

Instead of ignoring West Papua, Indonesia should mark World Press Freedom Day 2017 by allowing credibly independent observers from overseas to arrange free, unhindered and unmonitored news media access to the provinces.

“Stop watching the watchdogs,” Miller tells Indonesian security forces, long documented harassing, arresting, and persecuting West Papua press.

West Papua has suffered censorship in the form of travel bans on foreign press for more than five decades. Image / Free West Papua campaign

Deported

Jean Frank Pierre, 45, and Basille Marie Longhamp, 42, were charged and deported with violating Article 75 (1) of the 2011 Immigration Law.

This is despite Indonesia having extensive press freedom protection laws, which are mostly sidelined in Papua under various other laws, such as security for local media, and immigration for foreign press.

Indonesia is also a member of the United Nations, with article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights guaranteeing that “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”

HEADLINES

Indonesia Steamrolls Media Freedom in Papua, Again https://www.hrw.org/…/indonesia-steamrolls-media-freedom-pa…

Two French journalists deported from Papua over alleged immigration violations http://www.thejakartapost.com/…/two-french-journalists-depo…

Indonesia deports 2 French journalists from Papua province http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm…

Two French Journalists Banned From Papua Over Visa Violations http://www.pireport.org/…/two-french-journalists-banned-pap…

French journo pair deported from West Papua http://www.radionz.co.nz/…/french-journo-pair-deported-from…

Two French journalists deported from Papua over alleged visa violations http://asiapacificreport.nz/…/two-french-journalists-depor…/

CONTACTS

Monica Miller
PFF Chair
News Director
South Seas Broadcasting
American Samoa
monica@southseasbroadcasting.com
+6842584197

Alexander Rheeney
PFF Co-Chair
President Media Council PNG
Papua New Guinea
alexander.rheeney@outlook.com
+67578045266

Bernadette H. Carreon
PFF Co-Chair Palau
Correspondent Guam Business
carreon.bernadette@gmail.com
+680779430

Netani Rika
PFF Coordinator
Communications Director Pacific Council of Churches
Fiji
netrika66@gmail.com

ABOUT PFF

The Pacific Freedom Forum is 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, 21 March 2017

Open dialogue clears air over protocol - PFF

 

PACIFIC FREEDOM FORUM·WEDNESDAY, 22 MARCH 2017

 

“Our first responsibility is to listen to views from the public, not take orders from career officials or political appointees.”

Whose department? Senior PNG officials have been 'reminded' that the news media are not their department. Image / Post Courier website

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE :

Governments should see news media as a partner – not one of their departments, reminds PFF, the Pacific Freedom Forum.

“Departmental heads have to remember an old saying in government when it comes to news media,” says PFF Chair Monica Miller -

“- that’s not my department.”

Warning vs. warning

PFF is responding to news from Papua New Guinea, quoting Health Secretary Pascoe Kase, describing him as having “warned” all media not to talk to “any” person unless he authorises them.

That warning was backed up by Finance Secretary Dr Ken Ngangan, who was reported as having “reminded” news media to “always” follow “protocol.”

But PFF is responding with a warning of its own.

Much worse off

“Papua New Guinea will be much worse off from corruption and mismanagement if news media wait for departmental heads all the time,” says Miller.

“Our first responsibility as news media is to listen to views from the public, not take orders from career officials or political appointees.”

Instead of seeing media as the enemy, Miller says governments should see news like a frontline against corruption, as called for by citizens and endorsed by island states at multiple international meetings, over decades.

Listen to the public

“May we also remind departmental heads they are there to listen to the public, which pay taxes funding their salaries.”

PFF welcomed other news last week of a meeting, hosted by Pacmas, the Pacific Media Assistance Scheme, and UNDP, the United Nations Development Fund, that was held in Fiji to improve relations between Parliament and media.

“Governments need to hold more of these meetings, and regional partners should look at widening the scope to include more news media”, says Miller.

Balanced, objective and impartial

In a country still heavily dependent on public broadcasting for information, Papua New Guinea has long had laws requiring that the government provide “balanced, objective and impartial broadcasting services” including that “adequate” access be given to public opinion - with questions of “accuracy” to be set by the NBCPNG.

Section 5d of the Constitution calls for “freedom of conscience, of expression, of information and of assembly and association.”

Papua New Guinea is also a member of the United Nations, with the article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights guaranteeing that “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”

Media and government relations

PFF is repeating calls for governments across the region to revisit a 1990 media relations conference, held in the Cook Islands, as a long overdue step towards better mutual understanding.

Hosted by the Cook Islands with the Pacific Islands Forum, the conference saw comprehensive objectives laid out for improving relations between news media and island governments.

However there was never any follow up, with both governments and news media failing to act on the recommendations.

LINK

Media warned to follow protocols (subscription) http://www.postcourier.com.pg/login/?ref=%2FStories%2Fmedia-warned-to-follow-protocols%2F

CONTACTS

Monica Miller PFF Chair News Director South Seas Broadcasting American Samoa monica@southseasbroadcasting.com +6842584197

Alexander Rheeney PFF Co-Chair President Media Council PNG Papua New Guinea alexander.rheeney@outlook.com +67578045266

Bernadette H. Carreon PFF Co-Chair Palau Correspondent Guam Business carreon.bernadette@gmail.com +680779430

Netani Rika PFF Coordinator Communications Director Pacific Council of Churches Fiji netrika66@gmail.com

ABOUT PFF

The Pacific Freedom Forum is 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, 16 March 2017

Fiji police should face suspension - PFF

. . .
“We’re calling on Fiji police to follow normal procedure in this case and suspend any officer under investigation.”
#fiji #media #assault #pacific #journalism #safety
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE :


Praneeta Prakash interviewed after being struck in the stomach with a stone. Photo / FBC via Pacific Media Watch
Police failing to take action against a prisoner that assaulted a Fiji journalist should face immediate suspension, says PFF, the Pacific Freedom Forum.
“Once again police are failing to uphold the law,” says PFF Chair Monica Miller.
“Refusing to answer a complaint from a journalist, hit in the stomach right in front of them, outside the country’s main courts, is a serious dereliction of duty.”
Struck
Filming a man sentenced on a corruption case, Fiji Broadcasting Corporation journalist Praneeta Prakash was struck in the stomach with a stone thrown by a remand prisoner.
The prisoner was under police escort at the time.
They refused to take action even as the prisoner swore and verbally abused Prakash.
Immediate
PFF welcomed quick condemnation from the Fiji Media Assocation over the attack, and the failure by police to take immediate action.
“All too often, media fail to raise any protest when a colleague is threatened or assaulted”, says Miller.
“Quick responses from FMA puts pressure on FBC to follow up and insist on official action against the prisoner, and the officers who failed to do their duty.”


FBC carried news of the attack this week, exposing police inaction. Image / FBC
Endorsing
PFF supports a statement from Fijian Media Association general secretary Stanley Simpson that reporters cover court cases to inform the public and ensure justice is served.
Simpson said that journalists “need to be left to do their work because in the end it benefits everyone.”
He referred to incidents where a Fiji TV reporter was manhandled, and a Fiji Sun reporter also got attacked attacked recently.

Police spokeswoman Ana Naisoro - "journalists have every right" to film in public. Screenshot / FBC
Public interest
“Now we see the terrible incident of a stone being thrown at a journalist”, said Simpson.
“In these public spaces, and especially in the public interest, the journalist has every right to be there to take footage.”
PFF welcomed a promise from Police spokesperson Ana Naisoro that a thorough investigation would be carried out.
Suspend
Naisoro said that they “have had some incidents where members of the public have attacked journalists again. We would request them to respect the rights of the journalist. They are simply doing their jobs, they’re not breaking any law.”
PFF says that Police leadership needs to send a strong message to its officers that they need to take action when they see crime - and punish those that don’t. Says Miller, “We’re calling on Fiji police to follow normal procedure in this case and suspend any officer under investigation.”
Fiji Human Rights and Anti-Discrimination Commission Director Ashwin Raj was quoted as saying that it was “deeply concerning” that journalists are exposed to such incidents, and calling for a safe environment where media are able to discharge their duties.


An officer turns towards the camera, just after the stone was thrown. Image / FBC
Regional perspective
Assaults against news media in Fiji join similar incidents in Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu and, most seriously, in West Papua.
From a regional perspective on journalism safety, Miller noted that Indonesia was this week hosting police chiefs from Melanesian states.
“In the lead up to World Press Freedom Day being hosted in Indonesia this May, there should be much greater effort among police chiefs to uphold safety for members of the press.”
HEADLINES
Journalist attacked - FBC https://youtu.be/2z1_zlTW6n8?t=162
Safety of Fiji media personnel comes under the spotlight http://www.pina.com.fj/?p=pacnews&m...
Condemnation of attack on Fiji journalist outside Suva courthouse http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-03-...
Attack on FBC reporter outside court stirs media protests http://asiapacificreport.nz/2017/03...
CONTACTS
Monica Miller PFF Chair News Director South Seas Broadcasting American Samoa monica@southseasbroadcasting.com +6842584197
Alexander Rheeney PFF Co-Chair President Media Council PNG Papua New Guinea alexander.rheeney@outlook.com +67578045266
Bernadette H. Carreon PFF Co-Chair Palau Correspondent Guam Business carreon.bernadette@gmail.com +680779430
Netani Rika PFF Coordinator Communications Director Pacific Council of Churches Fiji netrika66@gmail.com
ABOUT PFF
The Pacific Freedom Forum is 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, 14 March 2017

Independent review for public broadcaster – PFF

“ It is not the job of any news media to support the government of the day, but to represent the public - and they must be ethical when reporting criticism - PFF”




Biased? Tonga Prime Minister Akilisi Pohiva says the public broadcaster is overly critical and not supportive of his government. Photo / Radio New Zealand

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE :
Government in the Kingdom of Tonga should seek independent review before privatising or shutting down the national broadcaster, says PFF, the Pacific Freedom Forum.
“Threatening to shut down the Tonga Broadcasting Commission sends the wrong message”, says PFF Chair Monica Miller.
“As a former pro-democracy reform movement, the current government should remember it’s roots.”
Review bias
PFF is calling for Prime Minister Akilisi Pohiva to seek an independent review from regional and international media, into allegations that commission staff are biased against his administration.
“Mr Pohiva could very well be right to allege there are old royalists in the TBC who act unethically in their reporting,” says Miller.
“But shutting down or privatising the commission is no way to prove those allegations.”
Ethics and independence
An independent review could establish what codes of ethic and conduct are in place to prevent unethical reporting – and what mechanisms are in place to protect the tax-funded broadcasting commission, says Miller.
“It is not the job of any news media to support the government of the day, but to represent the public - and they must be ethical when reporting criticism.”
Fair or not, criticism is essential to a free flow of debate in any democracy, and is guaranteed under the constitution of Tonga, as well as the country’s membership of the United Nations.





From royalist to disloyal? Pictured here during a disaster communications workshop supported by Japan, the Tonga state broadcaster used to suffer censorship, but now reports on issues such as corruption claims. Photo / Facebook / TBC

Wrong message
“At a time when Australia has abandoned its responsibilities to the region by cutting shortwave, it sends the wrong message for Pacific leaders to be threatening their own information services.”
Miller says the Prime Minister Akilisi Pohiva was famous in opposition for asserting his right to freedom of expression despite legal threats, imprisonment and censorship.
Pohiva needs to rediscover that spirit of free speech, and a free press, guaranteed under the constitution, she says, and not let criticism affect proper governance.
Oldest constitution
Tonga has the oldest constitution in Oceania, and is one of the ten oldest constitutions in the world. Clause 7 of the Tonga constitution states:
“Freedom of the press - It shall be lawful for all people to speak write and print their opinions and no law shall ever be enacted to restrict this liberty. There shall be freedom of speech and of the press for ever but nothing in this clause shall be held to outweigh the law of slander or the laws for the protection of the King and the Royal Family.”
Under UN membership, Tonga has also pledged guarantees under Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states:
“Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”
LINKS :
E fa’u ha lao ke tamate’i ‘a e Letiō Tonga – Palēmia ‘Akilisi Pohiva http://nepituno.to/index.php/opinions/item/1947-e-fa-u-ha-lao-ke-tamate-i-a-e-letio-tonga-palemia-akilisi-pohiva
CONTACTS
Monica Miller PFF Chair News Director South Seas Broadcasting American Samoa monica@southseasbroadcasting.com +6842584197
Alexander Rheeney PFF Co-Chair President Media Council PNG Papua New Guinea alexander.rheeney@outlook.com +67578045266
Bernadette H. Carreon PFF Co-Chair Palau Correspondent Guam Business carreon.bernadette@gmail.com +680779430
Netani Rika PFF Coordinator Communications Director Pacific Council of Churches Fiji netrika66@gmail.com
ABOUT PFF
The Pacific Freedom Forum is 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.
. . .