Showing posts with label Fiji Sun editorial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fiji Sun editorial. Show all posts

Sunday, September 14, 2008

De-constructing The Impartiality of Fiji's Media.

In a follow up to an earlier SiFM post, the media industry in Fiji, returns under the microscope.

Fiji Sun's Editorial Opinions are getting further scrutinized and the company had grudgingly published an analysis of their reportage, or risk being outed for non-compliance of the Fiji Media Council's Code of Practice: Article 2 or The Right Of Reply.

The excerpt of the Analysis:

No evidence for charter claims


9/15/2008
This is a content analysis of the Fiji Sun Editorial (Sept 2) against the NCBBF that we ask to be published in compliance with the Fiji Media Council Code of Ethics and Practice. Article 2 of the Code headed OPPORTUNITY TO REPLY says:

Media have an obligation to give fair opportunity to reply to any individual or organisation on which the medium itself comments editorially.

This is not the first time that we have cited the provision of the Code of the Media Council of which the Sun is a member and you have ignored the Code and refused to publish.

There is a word for those who preach the rule of law but do not feel bound to follow their own rules.

Like lying publicly that you had not received Mahendra Chaudhry's letter after the Media Council had asked you to print them!

This communication is being copied to the Media Council to whom a complaint will be made if this reply that was sent to you last week is not published.

Paragraph 1


Fiji Sun alleges: “As the draft Peoples Charter “Consultation process gets into full swing, it is already clear that any claim of public acceptance will be hopeless, unreliable and without credibility”

Comment

The Fiji Sun does not provide any evidence to support its claim that the current NCBBF consultation process will be unreliable.

The NCBBF response form to be filled in by members of the public was professionally prepared to provide reliable data about people's opinion for or against the draft Peoples Charter.

The Fiji Sun's view logically follows from its stated public position calling for the rejection of the draft People's Charter. Fiji Sun reporters in the last 10 months have never covered the public consultation meetings of the NCBBF and thus its claim dismissing the result of the consultation process, when it has just started, is the wishful thinking of the foreign Editor and his local lackey, reflecting the desire of the owners of the Fiji Sun who support the SDL Party.

They want the public consultation process of the NCBBF to fail and be discredited.

The Fiji Sun is afraid that the majority of the people of Fiji may support the draft Peoples Charter so this Editorial wants to say before the result is known that it will be unreliable.

The Fiji Sun Vodaphone TXT Poll last week answer to the question whether people regard the Peoples Charter as the way forward for Fiji showed 75 per cent Yes and 25 per cent No.

The Fiji Sun does not even accept the result of its own Public Opinion Poll!.


Paragraph 2

Fiji Sun alleges: “First there was to be a referendum on the Charter. Then, as widespread opposition became apparent, there wasn't”.

Comment

In August, the NCBBF in response to a similar claim by the Sun, wrote to the Editor a letter [that was never published] explaining that the NCBBF had considered the option of a national referendum at a meeting in April 08 and decided to defer this option because it is like convening an election and would cost as much as having an Election.

The letter said the referendum option is still open and can be reconsidered. In response to a statement by Laisenia Qarase in the Fiji Times, the NCBBF advised him that he could raise the national referendum option for serious consideration at the Presidents Dialogue Forum later this year.




Paragraph 3

Fiji Sun alleges: “Then we were told there will be consultation among stakeholders, followed by equally wide consultation with the general public. It hadn't happened and isn't happening.

Consultation implies explanation and exchange of views and that is exactly what is not taking place in this process”

Comment

Again, this claim is totally false. It has no factual foundation.

The Sun has not named which promise to which stakeholders they are referring to.

If the Editors mean the political parties and other organisation leaders that had refused the invitation to them as stakeholders to be part of the NCBBF, then the claims is clearly false.

If the Fiji Sun means the public of Fiji, there have been already two phases of consultations by the NCBBF outreach teams that had taken place over the last 12 months involving dialogue in over 1000 villages and settlements all over Fiji.

The third more intensive phase has just begun. The Fiji Sun was invited many times to cover some of these consultations but the Paper never did and still has not done so. No wonder the Editors believe such consultations are not happening!.


Paragraph 4

Fiji Sun alleges: “The consultation” programme is an effort to sell the Charter and as such the “consultation” team are extolling the virtues of the document while glossing over - or simply omitting its highly controversial and potentially dangerous aspects”.

Comment

The Fiji Sun does not explain what are the controversial and potentially dangerous aspect of the Peoples Charter they are referring to. Calling the draft Peoples Charter “dangerous” is naïve scaremongering because this only compels people to obtain a copy of the draft Peoples Charter to read and find out if the Fiji Sun's view has any substance.

They will find it has no substance.

Thanks to the Fiji Sun for inadvertently encouraging people to read the draft People's Charter!

Paragraph 5

Fiji Sun alleges: “Now we discover that people who tick Yes or No in this charade of a public vote will be asked to give their names, addresses and telephone numbers.

Why? Well we are told this is for verification purposes but if people decline to divulge their addresses and telephone contacts, their “votes” will still be counted.”

Comment

There is nothing unusual about filling official survey response forms that ask for respondent's contact addresses, including telephones numbers.

This is a voluntary consultation form and respondents are merely requested their address for future verification [including by the news media], to strengthen the integrity of the NCBBF consultation process.

The Fiji Sun need not worry about the internal verification system of NCBBF.

It seems that the Editorial writer has not closely read the response forms it is criticizing and further, he has also not been reading or hearing the NCBBF repeated statements to the media that filling of the Response forms is voluntary.

Those who do decide to fill the forms will be under no compulsion or threat, for the forms provide for them to state their opinions freely if they support or do not support the draft Peoples Charter. It seems the Fiji Sun would like people to believe the Police and soldiers will be at these public consultations to intimidate people to support the draft Peoples Charter! The Fiji Sun will allege anything to discredit what it has already decided to oppose. The Response Form is transparent and it is simply a way of recording people's attitude to the draft Peoples Charter.

The Fiji Sun desperately wants the NCBBF public consultation process to be everything that it alleges. They are going to be disappointed because the consultation process was designed to have integrity.


Paragraph 6

Fiji Sun alleges: “But lets be under no illusions. This Charter will be declared accepted. It will be declared law, the Constitution not withstanding and this document that blatantly undermines the Constitution will be declared adopted in support of it”


Comment


The Fiji Sun Editorial writer obviously has been deaf to the NCBBF explanation that the draft Peoples Charter is merely a statement of commitment to certain principles and proposals for development.

It is not a legal document.

It will strengthen, not undermine the Constitution.

The Sun has not explained how the draft Peoples Charter undermines the Constitution.


Paragraph 7

Fiji Sun alleges: “This world of “newspeak” , as envisaged by the NCBBF, a world in which the Constitution in which Big Brother always knows what is best for us”

Comment

The attempt by the Fiji Sun to portray the NCBBF as promoting an Orwellian world of totalitarianism is a ridiculous fantasy.

The Fiji Sun in fact has created its own world of totalitarian propaganda by refusing to publish NCBBF responses to critical comments on articles that appear in the Fiji Sun, in blatant breach of the Media Code of Ethics and Practice that require the Fiji Sun to practice balanced reporting and publish comments that respond to its editorial and opinion articles.

It is sheer hypocrisy for the Fiji Sun to talk about democracy and the rule of law when it blatantly breeches its own media rules, to be fair, continuously and without shame.

Fiji Sun knows best what its readers should know and alternative views from the NCBBF it suppresses at all cost unless we are willing to pay to advertise them.


Paragraph 8

Fiji Sun alleges: “A world in which we end all coups by putting the military beyond Parliament and the Constitution”.

Comment Another preposterous claim! It is obvious that the Fiji Sun Editorial writers are unwilling to recognize that the NCBBF has the support of the RFMF to establish a better Constitutional democracy where the role of the RFMF is well defined and accountable to the Constitution and the Government. The Fiji Sun has never articulated a better, more practical path back to constitutional democracy than that espoused by the NCBBF because it seems mentally incapable of doing so.


Former Fiji Times journalist and columnists, Kamal Iyer, whose latest opinion article attempts justify the media bias:

And prominent academic Dr Biman Prasad on page 11 of the Sunday Times commented, "Journalists must add to the making of better policies by reporting in a neutral manner". This was part of a feature "In the face of poverty" written by Fiji Times senior journalist Robert Matau [...]If journalists stay neutral and just re-write press releases or take "no comment" as a non-story, then Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward would not have won the Pulitzer Prize for exposing the Watergate scandal that resulted in the downfall of US President Richard Nixon.

If Fiji's media wasn't vigilant then the quarter billion National Bank of Fiji scandal would not have been exposed if journalists just took Jai Ram Reddy and David Pickering's accusations of corruption as just cheap politicking[...]

Dr Prasad's statement of journalists sta[y]ing purely neutral is similar to the desire of the State and politicians to control the media. This also has been a relentless campaign since our Independence. There are those in government, or indeed in the wide spectrum of the society, who will not want the media to dig up the truth. They will want to control the media from reporting on what already is common knowledge amongst our citizens[...]

Dr Prasad's neutrality theory therefore has no logic. It is like a driver consistently engaging the neutral gear on his/her car to save fuel without realising the damage being done to the gearbox.

In the same way if journalists stay neutral, shut their eyes, seal their lips and regard their profession as another job, the nation will suffer irreparable damage because of the misdeeds of devious, power hungry, corrupt and treacherous personalities and politicians.



Kamal Iyer perhaps is well read about misdeeds and corrupt politicians in Fiji, that it is quite difficult to separate his comments, as a independent viewer and he as a colluding subject.

T.R. Singh's perspective of the Fiji media's veneer of impartiality, is highlighted in an article titled "FIJI: The myth of a balanced, neutral and fair media" which was published on Pacific Media Centre website.

First and foremost, the connotations of neutrality, which Iyer so callously diminishes, is the corner stone of quality journalism. Unfortunately, those foundations have been seriously eroded in Kamal's Iyer's case, whose idea of neutrality is more closer to Robert Novak's outing of Valerie Plane.

It is beyond a stretch for Iyer to even consider himself and Victor Lal in the same league with Washington Post's Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, whose reports ignited the Watergate scandal.


On the aspect of accuracy and balance, a Fiji Daily Post article reports that the New Zealand's Broadcasting Standards Authority (BSA), has upheld the complaints by Fiji's Solicitor General regarding Michael Fields reports on Radio New Zealand.

The excerpt:
NZ broadcasting authority upholds S-G complaint
15-Sep-2008 08:24 AM

THE New Zealand Broadcasting Standards Authority (BSA) has upheld the complaint by Fiji Solicitor-General, Christopher Pryde against an item by journalist Michael Field broadcast on Radio New Zealand in March this year.

The BSA’s decision was received by the Solicitor-General’s office on Thursday.

Pryde had complained that the update on events in Fiji in the broadcast was an “uneducated, ill-informed, deeply biased, unbalanced, and false account of recent events in Fiji”.

The comments were in relation to the appointment of Riyaz Sayed-Khaiyum as head of the Fiji Broadcasting Corporation (FBC), the deportation of Russell Hunter, Justice Scutt’s criticism of the Shameen Report, and the criminal attack on the judge.

Radio New Zealand had said that the statements complained of were not material to the discussion.

The BSA said that the public has a right to expect that news and current affairs programmes would present material accurately.

Having upheld the complaint, the BSA declined to make any orders but said that the publication of their decision would serve as a reminder to commentators that they must ensure the accuracy of factual statements.


Fiji Sun also published the news story on BSA's decision.










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Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Religion and Politics- A Dangerous Cocktail In Fiji?


Fiji Sun Editorial comments on the warnings by the Fiji Police to the organizers of the Methodist Church conference.

The excerpt of the FS opinion:


Double standards at party meetings

The Fiji Labour Party meets this weekend. And the National Federation Party has its annual conference in Nadi on Saturday. It would be naive in the extreme to imagine that the subject of the draft People's Charter - the hottest topic of the hour - will not come up for discussion at either event.

The FLP will support it while the NFP is more likely to take an opposing view. The question now is what line will the Fiji Police Force take?

We know it will take a very firm line at the Methodist Church annual conference which opens in Suva today. The police do not want the charter to be discussed, it seems. They have advised the church that if the Soqosoqo Duavata ni Lewenivanua Party wishes to take part it will be considered a political meeting for which the church does not have a permit.

Further, the church has been told that if the SDL wishes to use the occasion to campaign against the charter, the police will close the meeting. Police will increase their presence and closely monitor the conference. What are they afraid of?

The church conference is highly unlikely to be an occasion for any breach of the peace. If there is political activity, it won't take the form of riotous assembly or any other kind of illegal behaviour. The same can be said of the FLP and NFP gatherings. Once again we see how the police are politicised.

The once proudly independent force has become a tool for the suppression of dissent and the promotion of a political ideology. This is deeply worrying. It is no secret that this newspaper has had serious differences with the SDL and its policies in the past. We called some those policies racist then and we call them racist now. But that is our opinion which - so far at least - we are free to express.

Why should not the SDL be accorded the same right - the same right as any other political party - to put its policies and opinions before the people? What is the regime afraid of? Much of the SDL's support resides in the rank and file of the Methodist Church just as much of the FLP's natural constituency is among the cane farmers and parts of the trade union movement.

There is nothing new, abnormal or even objectionable about that. What is abnormal and completely objectionable is the use of the police to prevent one party from addressing its constituency while giving another free rein. The people who drive this kind of activity surely cannot believe that it will not be noticed by the people of Fiji or that it will somehow make dissent go away.

The fact is it will have the opposite effect. They will never admit it, but the SDL organisers will regard this ham-fisted use of the police as manna from heaven. For if the regime really wants to promote a party or even a point of view, the most effective way is to ban it. In the meantime the Fiji Police Force must assert its independence It has to enforce the law - that is to say the constitution - and not the interim (or any) government.


The Fiji Sun (FS) Editor highlights the alleged double standards of the Fiji Police, regarding the issue of political meetings.

The FS Editor claims that, since Fiji Labour Party and the National Federation Party also are holding their respective meetings; the SDL should also be free to hold theirs. That premise is correct up to a point.

What is abnormal and highly objectionable is that, SDL party is not holding their political meeting in isolation, it is being held in unison with the Methodist conference.

Sadly, the FS Editor attempts to to justify the SDL's position of hijacking the Fiji Methodist Church annual festival, despite the response of Fiji Methodist church leaders, who are distancing themselves from remarks made by certain SDL party officials, as reported in a Fiji Times article.

Church unaware of counter campaign

Thursday, August 14, 2008

THE Methodist Church says it's not aware of an awareness program to counter the People's Charter.

Church secretary general Reverend Ame Tugaue says he doesn't know who made comments about the church working with the Soqosoqo Duavata Ni Lewenivanua party during the course of the church's annual conference.

"Who is the person making these comments," he asked. "I've spoken with the Police Commissioner on this issue." Mr Tugaue denied the church think-tank was meeting members of the SDL party.

Police spokeswoman Ema Mua could not be reached for comment.

Party president Solomone Naivalu said earlier the awareness program would continue. Mr Naivalu said the campaign would coincide with the interim Government's public relations program. "We have decided in the next six weeks to counter issues affecting members of the SDL party - the Fijian people," he said.

"The strategy we have decided on is to work with Christian churches, especially the Methodist Church. Two of us (SDL executives) are part of the Methodist Church think-tank and the SDL's stand on the charter is almost the same as the church." Mr Naivalu said their view would be also distributed at the Hibiscus Festival.

Acting interim Prime Minister Ratu Epeli Ganilau said it was a pity the SDL party had opted out of the NCBBF process.

Apparently, the SDL party President, Solomoni Naivalu was quoted in the Fiji Village article, stating that religion and politics go together.

Politics and Religion Go Together-SDL
Publish date/time: 13/08/2008 [14:04]

The SDL party has today stressed that politics and religion go together as they get ready to use the Methodist Church conference to go against the draft People's Charter.

SDL President, Solomoni Naivalu confirms that they will ensure that all the Methodists coming to the conference in Suva from tomorrow know why the draft should be opposed. When questioned on whether this would see the mixing of religion and politics, Naivalu said their stand is clear on this issue.

Naivalu is now hoping that the Methodist Church standing committee will give them the green light to distribute information on why the draft Charter needs to be opposed.

Meanwhile Director of Information and Military spokesperson, Major Neumi Leweni said if the issues to be discussed at the church conference turn political, then it will be a political assembly and police need to look into the matter.


Raw Fiji News blog posting, blasts the folly of the SDL President. The excerpt of the RFN post:

SDL President a no brainer
August 13, 2008

SDL President, Solomoni Naivalu, is already proving to be another bad choice by the ousted political party. And the party’s management committee members who decided to use the Methodist Church conference to promote their anti-Charter drive are a tactless bunch of people too. No wonder they were easily toppled from power. Key players in the party just don’t have what it takes to know when and how to attack, when not to piggy back and when to be still and be quiet.

SDL party seem to lack badly in the strategic and PR side of things and it shows. The same old thinkers who think people in this day and age can be bought by their provincial, chiefly and hollyghost bullcrap are still there. People are tired and weary of all these color-barring status seekers and wouldn’t give a damn what color blood runs in anyone’s veins. Whether it’s royal blue, red, black, yellow or even pollkadot orange and purple, they wouldn’t care less. All they want is food on the table, education for their children, water from their taps and the very basics of life. SDL have a lot of strategic political learning to do from Mahendra Chaudhry, but not his lies though.

The SDL party is repeating simple mistakes that got them and the nation into soo much trouble during their reign. They are placing incapable, no brainer individuals in key positions who always end up costing them their arm, leg, leadership term and possibly an election win if they are not careful. Naivalu is one of them. He is an opportunist and didn’t hesitate to jump ship to SDL when SVT started sinking. Making an announcement on SDL’s desire to piggy back on the Methodist Church conference is not worthy an announcement at all. Not only is the scum bag letting the cat out of the bag but who really wants to know! Just get on with it and test how effective it’ll be!

The guy has no understanding of good governance and its disappointing to see that the ousted SDL Prime Minister, Laisenia Qarase didn’t raise this during their discussion. How could they put the Methodist Church into jeopardy by making such a pronouncement. And how could they even suggest it when two of their members are part of the Methodist Church think tank? Isn’t that a conflict of interest? The Methodist Church must not allow Naivalu and his uncreative SDL management committee to use them. They have a totally different agenda from that of the church. SDL is in the business of winning elections, the church is in the business of winning souls. And as for Naivalu, RFN predict he will take SDL to ruin. The guy has no credibility. No one respects him. He is a put-off.



It is selective for the Fiji Sun Editor to obfuscate the difference between a religious and a political organization and the permits issued by the Fiji police are by extension given to one entity, not both.
While the SDL party had hoped to capitalize on this opportunity, to spread their political ideology within the Methodist church conference, it came with the price of having the conference permits being canceled outright by the Police.

Unfortunately, the difference between the two organizations have been blurred by some SDL party sympathizers, who are also lay preachers, and as such these blurring of roles also come with the baggage of blurring of ideals and blurring of finances. Where does this blurring begin and where does it end?


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