topleft
topright

Welcome to MHM

Media Helping Media (MHM) is for all involved in strengthening journalism in areas where media freedom is under threat. Read more iconRead more...

Currently logged in

No registered users online

Login to MHM

Log in to add comments, forum posts, links, events and articles. Registration is free.

Reporters welcome

Writers welcome
Contact us to write for MHM

Search this site

Reproducing content

Creative Commons License
Creative Commons License.

Pacific media on a short leash PDF Print E-mail
News and features - Asia-Pacific
By Alex Kirby   
Wednesday, 24 September 2008

 

Alex KirbyNever having been to the South Pacific, I’d imagined it a sleepy, peaceful region without a care in the world (aside perhaps from rising sea levels). If only... It’s certainly a place where many journalists have learnt the hard way to tread carefully, and where a night-time knock on the door can still send a real shiver down the spine.

I was put right about local realities when a meeting of Pacific journalists I was attending, the Pacific Media and Human Rights Summit, held in April, ended by declaring its "grave concern about incidents of violence and intimidation directed at Pacific media workers in the course of their job".

The meeting was held in Apia, the capital of Samoa, and was part of a project organised jointly by the New Zealand Human Rights Commission and the Pacific Co-operation Foundation .

"Report something someone powerful doesn’t like, and you may find a fist in your face", one delegate told the meeting.

"If you refuse to disclose your sources, you are liable to find yourself behind bars within 24 hours. And don’t even bother to think about due process."

"If you refuse to disclose your sources, you are liable to find yourself behind bars within 24 hours. And don’t even bother to think about due process."

First-hand accounts from other Pacific nations showed that similar repression is relatively widespread, prompting the summit communique to condemn political interference in editorial decision-making.

Beyond that, it called for better resources for journalists, and for governments to abandon the constraints some impose on reporters who try to reach and question officials.

This sort of repression-by-obstruction amounts sometimes to a blank refusal by government delegates to tell journalists back home what is happening at international conferences they are attending.

The summit’s proposals included freedom of information legislation, and better training for journalists, provided in partnership with Pacific media associations. It urged an independent news and current affairs service as an essential tool for democracy. I wonder who’s listening?

 


Related Items

 




If you valued this article, please consider sharing it with others.
Digg!Reddit!Del.icio.us!Facebook!Slashdot!Netscape!Technorati!StumbleUpon!Spurl!Newsvine!Yahoo!Netvouz!Ma.gnolia!Free social bookmarking plugins and extensions for Joomla! websites! title=
Trackback(0)
Comments (0)add
You must be logged in to a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
 
< Prev   Next >

Your banner can appear here free of charge

Advertisement
Joomla Template by Joomlashack                ~
Joomla Templates by JoomlaShack Joomla Templates