David Robie
08 May 2019
When Pacific countries reflect on the state of their media today, marking , they know the reality is much worse than the ticks they got from a global media freedom watchdog last month.
Five of the seven Oceania nations scoped in the Asia-Pacific region scored with apparently significant improvements in the 2019 Reporters Without Borders () . Papua New Guinea rose by 15 points to 38th in the global table of 180 countries.
But media freedom advocates know the rankings can be deceptive.
New Zealand rose one place to seventh (to remain in the top 10) and Australia dropped two places to 21st, just one spot above Samoa, which was unchanged but described as “losing its status as a regional press freedom model”. Fiji (52), Timor-Leste (84) and Tonga (45) all “improved”.
West Papua is the , but this Melanesian territory is hidden within the Indonesian statistics.
The RSF index has a , and the algorithms reflect that global media freedom has been declining, with growing hostility towards journalists since the last index survey. The situation in the Pacific has also been deteriorating.
While there might not be assassinations, murders, gagging, torture and “disappearances” of journalists in Pacific island states, threats, censorship and a climate of self-censorship are commonplace.
Take Papua New Guinea as an example again. Last week, amid what appeared to be the , described by many critics as a , an opposition leader made an against the country’s two foreign-owned newspapers.
Vanimo-Green MP Belden Namah, leader of the PNG Party which is one of two major groups in the opposition, put the Australian-owned Post-Courier and Malaysian-owned National newspapers “on notice” that an incoming new government would “” to the media.
Angered by the two dailies for not running his news conference stories, he threatened to regulate the print media should a new government be installed after the vote of no-confidence due on May 7.
Last November, one of Papua New Guinea’s leading journalists, EMTV’s award-winning Lae bureau chief Scott Waide, was by his company. It had been under pressure from the O’Neill government to have him sacked.
Why? Because he exposed the “inside story” of a and a scandal over the purchase of luxury Maserati cars during the Asia Pacific Economic Forum () hosted by Port Moresby.
Columnist Vincent Moses :
Peter O’Neill is acting like another Chinese dictator in Papua New Guinea by exerting control over both state-owned and private media to not report truths and facts that expose his government and their corrupt acts to PNG and the world.
The strong condemnation that followed forced EMTV to reverse its decision and the network reinstated Waide.
In the North Pacific, a magazine editorial last week blasted traditional chiefs on Yap in the Federated States of Micronesia for demanding the expulsion of a probing US reporter.
The magazine’s editor-in-chief, Mar-Vic Cagurangan, strongly defended her Yap correspondent, Joyce McClure, who has been living on the island for the past three years. She said declaring the correspondent a persona non grata would set a “dangerous precedent”.
Joyce McClure’s reporting provided transparency, which was “vital to every democratic society”, Cagurangan wrote.
Cagurangan has had to defend her team’s journalism before. Last September, she stressing the tough times Pacific publishers and editors of small publications face dealing with threats from advertisers in tiny markets.
Given the small market, where there is a thin line between business and government, operating a media outlet is much more challenging locally.
In Fiji, the independent New Zealand website last month inflicted by the Chinese company Freesoul Real Estate on the remote tourism island of Malolo. The website exposed how Fijian news media had been effectively gagged by 13 years of draconian media legislation and a climate of fear since the 2006 military coup.
Although democracy has returned and two post-coup elections have been held in 2014 and last year, journalists are often .
Opposition leader Sitiveni Rabuka, the man who staged Fiji’s first two coups in 1987, said the “rot and culture of fear” in the civil service and the “intimidated and cowed media” were now so ingrained in the country that it had taken foreign journalists to break the story.
The RSF media watchdog warned in its about totalitarian propaganda, censorship, intimidation, physical violence and cyber-harassment in the Asia-Pacific region. The pressures meant it now took a “lot of courage … to work independently as a journalist” in the region where democracies were struggling to resist various forms of disinformation.
The watchdog singled out China and Vietnam, which both dropped one place to 177th and 178th respectively on the global list of 180 countries, as the worst culprits.
About 30 journalists and media workers are detained in Vietnam, with nearly twice as many being detained in China. The latter country is of in view of its growing economic, aid, trade and strategic influence in the region.
The report says:
China’s anti-democratic model, based on Orwellian high-tech information surveillance and manipulation, is all the more alarming because Beijing is now promoting its adoption internationally.
China has embarked on strategies of seducing key journalists in the Pacific region with junkets to Beijing where they can be introduced to .
The RSF index sees the growing raft of cyberlaws in the Pacific as an example of this .
In spite of the pressures, Pacific journalists and publishers like Mar-Vic Cagurangan vow to fight on.
We will continue telling the story and exploring the truth. We are not your enemy. We are your neighbours committed to upholding the principles of democracy.
, Professor of Pacific Journalism, Director of the Pacific Media Centre,
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