Prof Wadan Narsey
Part I: Assessing the Fourth Estate: "media" and "journalists"
are not the same
The Fourth Estate
The media can be so powerful in the molding of public opinion and national
events, that a special term was coined to describe it - the "Fourth
Estate".
[The first three sources of social and political power were
supposed to be religious leaders, nobility and elected representatives in
parliament- with some cynically thinking that lawyers should be in there as
well].
Put crudely, the media can have three distinct roles in relation
to the government of the day: it may protect the public interest by acting as a
watchdog on both government and people; it can undermine governments in the
interests of powerful lobby groups, or it can be a propaganda arm of the government itself.
Fiji's media has arguably performed
all these roles over the last few decades.
Since 2009, however, the Regime's tight control and media self-censorship
has prevented the media from being a "watch-dog" on government, while
some media organizations have become largely propaganda arms for the Regime.
It is unfortunate, however, that some critics are targeting the hapless
journalists, who surely are minor cogs in the media machine.
The reality is that journalists are totally under the control of editors
and publishers, who in turn are ultimately controlled by the media
owners.
The real weak link in Fiji's media industry is that Fiji's media owners are not dedicated
"independent media companies per se", but corporate entities with
wider business interests, which are vulnerable to a variety of discretionary government policies.
Currently, the dominant Fiji media owners have far more to lose financially
if they allowed their media organizations to get on the wrong side of the
Regime, by letting their publishers, editors and journalists maintain a robust independent
and critical media organization.
The public should therefore scrutinize not the journalists, but the
owners of the Fiji media.
One of the most shocking revelations about Fiji society since 2009
has been the virtual lack of pubic protest about the ongoing media censorship
that has taken away our basic human right of freedom of speech and media.
To encourage our people to think more deeply about how far we have
departed from the wonderful benefits bestowed by a free and open media, this article
first outlines the criteria by which the media and the journalists are objectively
assessed internationally. I also give my personal impressionistic judgment
about the recent performance of the media and journalists.
Part II of this article will then look at the role of media
ownership in this sorry state of affairs.
But first, is the media really failing Fiji, as some allege?
Objectives of good public
media
Pacific journalism students can get a good grounding on the objectives,
principles and key issues by which public media may be judged, at any of the
journalism schools in the Pacific, such as at The University of the South
Pacific or the Auckland University of Technology.
The public can also look at freely available Internet sites such
as at (http://pmintegrity.com/pm_docs/PrinciplesofPublicMedia.pdf) which offer useful criteria to judge any
public media, whether in the Pacific or elsewhere.
For instance, does the Fiji media enable the public to:
(a) have full and free access to public information relevant to their lives, especially in monitoring government activities with the tax-payers' funds(b) ask questions, provide answers, share viewpoints, and extend public education(c) ensure an informed and engaged public that enables a strong and effective democracy(d) produce original cultural material that strengthens local communities and their culture.
There certainly have been improvements on criterion (d) in recent
years, driven largely by increased competition.
But the larger Fiji media organizations score quite poorly on the
more important criteria (a), (b), and (c).
These weaknesses of the
media are far more damaging to Fiji currently, because the Bainimarama Regime has operated unfettered for six years, without
an elected parliament and opposition parties who would normally have
scrutinized the government.
Current weaknesses of Fiji
media
Some journalist educators in the region, and other external parties,
have recently engaged in an acrimonious but interesting debate about the Fiji
media, with the Canadian USP Head of Journalism (Marc Edge) being forced to
leave.
Pacific Island journalism students should discipline themselves to
go beyond the raw personalities, emotions and largely unsubstantiated allegations
that surfaced, and clarify the journalism principles involved, so that they can
understand better their own profession and the current media environment.
As someone who has contributed prolifically through the media for
more than twenty five years (most of my writings are available on my website https://narseyonfiji.wordpress.com/) and interviews are in the Fiji TV
archives) my personal view is that the Fiji media has significantly
deteriorated since 2009.
Journalism students might wish to do solid empirical analysis
of the content (topics, objectivity, column inches, length of time) of the Fiji
media output since 2006, to examine the extent to which my impressions below
are substantiated by the data.
- Since 2006, there has been a tendency to suppress information that might throw the Regime in a negative light
- Citizens have not been allowed to ask critical questions, or give their own critical views even in Letters to the Editor (while huge space is given to entertainment).
- Reporting is totally unbalanced with Regime and pro-Regime statements given multiple times the exposure given to opposing views.
- views of Regime opponents or even serious academic criticisms of some specific Regime policies since 2009 have been either totally blanked out or receive a bare bones coverage (I have personally been a victim of this- I elaborate below) .
- Some media (editors and journalists) often present pro-Regime opinions as facts without any critical questioning.
I suspect that there would be general agreement that the Fiji media
has not been a strong opponent of media censorship or a strong supporter of democracy.
Just five important examples
For those coming late into the debate, I give just four examples of
the media's failure to scrutinize and question adequately the illegal unelected
Regime's spending of tax-payers' funds:
- The Regime has bluntly refused to release its own Auditor General's reports on government revenues and expenditure since 2006, although it is clear from limited budget data that there has been serious over-spending and financial irregularities by the Military and Police, amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars (while the Regime has jailed a former Prime Minister on alleged corruption amounting to a few thousand dollars some twenty years ago);.
- The Regime refuses to allow the audit of the Fiji Regimental Funds which are thought to have been seriously abused by several RFMF commanders.
- The Regime has refused to release the audits on the massive over-expenditures and capital write-downs at the FNPF's investments at Natadola and Momi Bay, by a Regime appointed Board.
- The Regime has not publicly denied that ministers' salaries were at one stage being paid through a private accounting firm owned by the aunt of the Regime's Attorney General (it may be regularized now but the evidence has yet to be presented).
- There have been several cases of nepotism involving the Bainimarama family.
Yet the media frequently articulates the Regime's statements
that
- it did the 2006 coup because of alleged massive corruption in the Qarase Government (yet no evidence has yet been shown after six years);
- the country must be guided by the principles in the Charter, which include accountability and transparency of government.
The Regime, without practicing the principles itself,
- has demanded monthly financial audits from the Yash Ghai Constitution Review Commission which received its funding not from tax-payers but international donors;
- is now demanding total financial transparency from the political parties and leaders receiving voluntary funding from the public, while excluding its own Ministers for the last six years.
Since 2009, the media has not been able to point out the Regime's
fundamental inconsistencies and gross hypocrisy, as it would have done in any
free democratic country, whether developed or developing.
This is evident even by a cursory reading of my articles published
in Fiji media just prior to 2009 and those that had to be published on blogs thereafter
because of media censorship in Fiji.
How assess Fiji journalists?
Standards by which professional journalists, whether in the
Pacific or elsewhere, may be assessed are easily available on the Internet and
I quote extensively from this website of the Society of Professional
Journalists based in US http://www.spj.org/ethicscode.asp. Journalists must:
- seek truth and report it.
- be honest, fair and courageous in gathering, reporting and interpreting information.
- support the open exchange of views, even views they find repugnant.
- give voice to the voiceless;
- recognize a special obligation to ensure that the public's business is conducted in the open and that government records are open to inspection.
- act independently and be free of obligation to any interest other than the public's right to know.
- as a profession, be accountable to the public: encourage the public to voice grievances against the news media, admit mistakes and correct them promptly, expose unethical practices of journalists and the news media, and abide by the same high standards to which they hold others.
By these universally desirable criteria and even a cursory study
of the actual media output, Fiji journalists come up very short indeed
at this point in time.
But I certainly would not hold the journalists responsible for the
current status quo, whatever the appearance of their failure.
For what comes out as the
media's "output", is not the copy that journalists give to their
editors or would like to give.
Journalists are at the lowest rung in the media machine, the front-line
workers, told by the editors what to investigate and write up, giving their
output to the editors, who then edit and
put their stamp on the final product, even if there is a personal byline given
to an article.
Furthermore, behind the editors
are the publishers who exercise control over the editors and the media
organization, on the broad nature of what ultimately goes into print or on the
airwaves.
There is no public information, and not likely to be any, on the
inter-reactions between publishers and editors (Bookmark: this is a great
research topic for Pacific journalism students).
But even publishers have to do what the media owners tell
them to do. Again, there is no public information, and not likely to be, on the
inter-reaction between media owners and publishers. (Bookmark: what a great
research topic for Pacific journalism students).
The harsh reality in Fiji is that any journalist or editor or
publisher, who insists on maintaining his or her media independence is soon out
of a job or thrown out of the country, with no legal redress, or even total
circumvention of judicial decisions. It has happened in recent years.
Journalists and editors soon get the message. Jobs are scarce in Fiji and there is no dole
to look after your family if you do not have a job.
Despite these constraints, there are a few journalists, editors,
publishers, and indeed, even a small media
owner or two, who courageously attempt to be professional, without committing hari-kari.
Bottom line: it is totally unfair
to point the finger at journalists, editors, or even publishers, for the weaknesses
of the Fiji media industry.
The public must therefore demand that the hitherto silent media
owners behind the scenes, come out of the shadows, and be publicly accountable
for their media's output and failures outlined above.
The unfortunate reality is that these media owners have severe
conflicts of business interests in Fiji, with their media interests.
I will briefly look at the dominant media payers: The Fiji Times, Fiji
Sun, Fiji TV, Fiji
Broadcasting Corporation (FBC), Communications
Fiji Limited, all of which practice some form of self-censorship or other.
At a USP journalism meeting not too long ago, a radio journalist
strangely demanded proof that the media was
practicing self-censorship, while the Regime's Permanent Secretary
simultaneously was pleading with journalists not to practice self-censorship.
The section below presents my personal experience with respect to
television, newspapers and radio which throws a little personal light on the
matter.
Part II: The practice and predicament of the Fiji
media owners
The Fiji Times predicament
The two major print outlets are The Fiji Times and the Fiji
Sun.
The Fiji Times, once owned by the Murdoch empire, recently
changed hands because of a Regime decree requiring local ownership.
The Regime has been penalizing The
Fiji Times by arbitrarily denying it advertising revenue amounting to more
than a million dollars a year, all (or probably more) diverted to the Fiji Sun.
A Fiji Times editor and
publisher have been hauled into court and faced heavy penalties over what many
would see as minor infringements.
Since 2009, its senior writers have been reluctant to take
articles from me, or even reply to emails.
The Fiji Times new owner is a local business mogul, Motibhai and Company Limited, whose leading director
and multi-millionaire Motibhai Patel, was recently found guilty of corruption and jailed over a relatively minor matter
involving a Government corporation of which he was Board Chairman.
Motibhai Patel is currently in Australia for medical treatment,
while a bench warrant has been issued for him to return to Fiji to face additional
charges of abuse of office arising out of the same chairmanship of the Government corporation. Here is stress indeed.
An additional factor is that Motibhai Patel has a considerably
larger financial interest in leasing duty free outlets at the Nadi Airport from
Airports Fiji Limited (AFL) which is under the direct control of the Regime.
Once enjoying a complete monopoly, these lucrative duty free
outlets were recently opened up to competition through the entry of another
local company (Tappoos) which also happens to have large business deals with
the Fiji National Provident Fund, the largest financial institution in Fiji,
and also under the direct control of the Regime.
All airport leases were recently dissolved by Decree (not
challengeable in court) and reallocations are pending.
Any further reduction of space for Motibhai Patel by AFL (which
may occur purely with the commercial objective of increasing government
revenue) has the potential to significantly reduce Motibhai's profits by
amounts which are far greater than the profits from The Fiji Times which has already taken a beating because of the denial
of Government advertising.
It is totally understandable if the current publisher and editor
of The Fiji Times were to take great
care to minimize newspaper content critical of the Regime.
This would not even require any instruction from the owner- merely
human sensitivity on the part of the publisher and editor to their elderly owner's
predicament.
The Fiji Sun
The Fiji Sun is owned by
the CJ Patel family (key director Sandip Patel), a large corporate player in
the Fiji economy with major importing and franchising interests involving many international
brands.
CJ Patel recently purchased the monopoly Rewa Dairy company, concurrently
with the receipt of substantial discriminatory assistance from the Regime, thereby
raising the price of milk and milk products.
CJ Patel's Financial Controller (a Sri Lankan) has been appointed
by and serves the Regime on a wide range of influential Government Boards often
as the chair.
On the Fiji National Provident Fund, the Board with the direction
and support of the Regime, has rammed through massive reductions to existing
pensions by Decree, with an already
existing legal challenge being thrown out of court (although under the ill-fated
Ghai Draft Constitution, such challenges would have been re-allowed- thereby
sealing its own fate).
The Fiji Sun owners therefore
face the prospect of enjoying many financial incentives (including a monopoly
on government advertising revenues) to be totally supportive of the Regime through
the news paper, and censor opposite views, as it has blatantly done for the
last four years.
I can testify that the Fiji
Sun not only will not print most articles by me questioning Regime policies
(thereby driving me to the blogs and ultimately my own website), but freely prints
pro-Regime articles viciously attacking me and my views, while refusing me the
right of reply in my own country.
[I acknowledge that they have allowed an article from me on
electoral reform (when the Ghai Commission was still in favour) and a letter to
the editor on the destruction of mangroves by developers, completely counter to
established environment policy planning].
Television and radio
There are two television stations of which two will be discussed
here: Fiji Television, and the government-owned Fiji Broadcasting Corporation,
which started off as a radio station.
The historically dominant Fiji Television is independently owned
by Fijian provincial councils (Yasana Holdings) and other private shareholders
including the local business mogul and tycoon Hari Punja.
Hari Punja has a wide variety of business interests in Fiji, many
vulnerable to discretionary government policies or tariffs and other measures
with potential costs far outweighing any profits from Fiji TV.
Negatively perceived by the Regime, Fiji TV faces the trauma of having its license currently renewed on a
six monthly basis, arguably a blatant policy of intimidation.
Its management and senior staff have been subjected to
intimidation by the Regime and it now practices self-censorship on many
programs which previously would have been called good "investigative
journalism".
Fiji TV Management has told me (and understandably they had to
think about their employees' jobs) that
they regretted I was persona non-grata
on many programs which used to previously seek my contribution as an economist commenting
on current policy matters.
They also could not run any more special programs which previously
performed the valuable task of publicizing and popularizing the results and
policy implications of several Fiji Bureau of Statistics Reports which I have authored
over the last three years. There was
nothing particularly political in these reports.
Fiji Broadcasting
Corporation
The FBC, which originally had trilingual radio stations (Fijian,
Hindi, English), has recently ventured into television, and is totally under
the control of the Military Regime.
The current CEO who is the brother of the Regime's Attorney
General, was appointed after the Regime sacked the previous CEO with no
apparent justification.
In the absence of publicly available financial statements, it may
be surmised that FBC only survives because of massive subsidies from Government
advertising, ultimately paid for by tax-payers.
Neither the FBC radio stations nor the FBC television station has
over the last three years sought my views on any economic matter, which they
used to do routinely before media censorship began in 2009.
The other independent radio company also with trilingual radio
stations, and probably more popularity, is owned privately with local magnate,
Hari Punja originally having substantial shares and the chairmanship until last
year, when the Regime's Decree banned media cross-ownership.
This is a largely profit-oriented entertainment based media
outlet, with little emphasis on public education programs, hence little
possibility of raising the ire of the Regime, while a few clearly pro-Regime
staffers easily achieve the opposite.
[Punja chose to sell his shares in the radio stations in order to
keep his television shares which probably offer greater financial benefits to
his company throughout Fiji and Sky Pacific.]
All these media organizations have virtually stopped the kinds of
critical analysis of the Military Regime or news items, they regularly and
responsibly carried before the 2009 abrogation of the 1997 Constitution.
A large part of the explanation has to be that none of the
"owners" of the major media outlets are purely dedicated to the
media, and instead have other far more valuable economic interests which are extremely
vulnerable to discretionary policies by the Regime.
This is a problem not just for Fiji, but also internationally.
Media ownership and media independence
Those
interested in the Fiji media debate and journalists especially, might want to read
a most recent and excellent study by Michelle Foster, Calling the Shots: how media ownership affects the independence of the
news media. A Report to the Center for International Media
Assistance. November 27, 2012, available here: http://cima.ned.org/publications/calling-shots-how-ownership-structures-affect-independence-news-media
Following a study of four diverse countries
(US, China, Serbia and Honduras), Foster concluded that "Who owns the
media and its infrastructure and who controls its sources of capital and
revenue are crucial for any media system" with possibly "adverse consequences for the ability of
citizens and communities to hold their governments accountable".
Foster concluded that while governments'
control of media markets can bring
about greater transparency and diversity (and I quote directly from her study):
"yet the entire system
can also be designed to limit independent reporting:
- Regulators can allocate the broadcast spectrum in ways that lack transparency.
- Government agencies can use political criteria for issuing media licenses.
- Cross-ownership restrictions can prevent independent voices from gaining traction.
- Government agencies can direct advertising budgets as rewards and punishments.
- State organs can transform public service media into ruling-party mouthpieces.
- State news agencies can simultaneously access tax-free government funding while competing against independent media for advertising revenue."
Fiji media observers will know how applicable these findings also are
to Fiji.
One would have need to add real physical intimidation of editors
and journalists by the Military Regime, resulting in eventual departure
(resignations) of some of them from their jobs or deportation from the country.
[Bookmark: Another great PhD research topic in journalism: the
impact of media ownership on media independence in Fiji and Pacific Islands.]
An ethics code for media
owners?
This country is in the throes of developing codes of ethics for
non-existent parliamentarians, political parties and leaders (although not apparently
for unelected Regime Ministers who have totally controlled the country with an
iron fist for the last six years, with no end in sight).
When, if ever, is the Media Authority of Fiji and Professor
Subramani going to develop a code of ethics for media owners, publishers,
editors and journalists?
Why is it that despite three years of controversy over media
censorship, Professor Subramani is not to be seen or heard?
Subramani certainly has not come to the defense of the vulnerable
journalists and editors who have been at the total mercy of the Regime, and who
are being made scapegoats for the failings of the media owners.
There are also crucial policy matters which need to be clarified
and guidelines established.
Given the problems caused by conflicts of interest in business
ownership, that should be a central item on the agenda: media owners should not
have any other substantial business interests in the economy.
It has also been the experience elsewhere in the world, that the
selection of a government owned media organization is not the most economically
efficient mode of delivery of public services which a purely profit-oriented
company would not engage in, and for which there will always be an unfilled
need.
As such, there is a clear need for competitive bidding for
tax-payers'/government resources to enable "not-for-profit" services
to be made available to the public.
If Professor Subramani is not up to these and other
responsibilities as the Head of the Media Development Authority, he needs to
resign and let someone more committed do the job instead of further tarnishing
his reputation.
Currently, his total silence on media censorship conveys the
message that he is yet another embittered Indo-Fijian academic emigrant who has
come back to Fiji to blindly assist the Bainimarama Regime deny Fiji people
their basic human right of freedom of speech, perhaps driven by tired empty
mantra of racial equality.
Perhaps the Fiji public one should be grateful that he has not
gone the whole hog with Regime propaganda, as did Dr Shaista Shameem during her
charade as Director of the Human Rights Commission.
The most depressing aspect of all this is that the educated Fiji
public have shown no concern whatsoever over the loss of their basic human
right and liberty of freedom of expression.
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