Thakur
Ranjit Singh
What
we learn from History is that we
do not learn from History.
Action taken by Fiji
Media Industry Development Authority (MIDA) on
Ratu Timoci Vesikula’s reported “hate-speech” and punishment
meted by MIDA need to be viewed from a Historical rationale and
perspective. We need to appreciate how a Western type free and
partisan media in the past contributed to fall of democracy and
Fiji’s political instability.
Any
democracy that does not grant equality, fairness and social justice
to all its citizens is not worth defending – that is what I
proclaimed in a seminar held in Auckland in the aftermath of
Bainimarama takeover of Qarase government in December, 2006. I have
held that view since, and feel honoured to be branded supporter of
Bainimarama.
The
latest one to do that is Wadan Narsey, who named me as a cheerleader
of Bainimarama. Response to that later, but he has been critical of
the decision of Fiji
Media Industry Development Authority (MIDA), and
its Chairperson, Ashwin Raj. MIDA has slated and punished FIJI TV for
breaching strict laws that have been put in place subsequent to past
upheavals where media have been seen indulging in mischief-making. I
know this - as a former publisher of Daily Post, I was removed by
Qarase for being too nosey. I have conducted a research on Fiji
media. Perhaps Wadan needs to have a read of that thesis and
appreciate how a partisan media can be a threat to democracy.
[Electronic version available at:
http://aut.researchgateway.ac.nz/handle/10292/2554]
Perhaps
this illustration will help bring to reality those who think the
Western concept of media freedom is some religious mantra essential
for Fiji:
“Nationalists
plan protest march
NATIONALISTS
around the country are ready to support their leaders and plans to
overthrow the government.
The
statement promised a blood pledge in honour of Fijian ancestors to:
- Overthrow the Chaudhry Government
- Establish a 100 per cent vanua based Fijian parliament and ban any non-indigenous person from parliament.
- Declare Fiji a Christian state
- Establish a programme of Fijianisation in education, business and the economy.
Mr
Butadroka fuelled the crowd’s enthusiasm with remarks aimed at the
Indian race.” (My
emphasis)
This
journalistic miracle appeared in The
Fiji Times
on 22 May, 1999 - three days after Chaudhry’s Peoples Coalition
Government was sworn in. It was reported by an I-Taukei journalist,
Dionesia Tabureguci, and must have passed along the great legends at
the
Fiji Times
that time, Editor, Samisoni Kakaivalu, Editor- in-Chief Russell
Hunter; and Netani Rika and Margaret Wise may also have been around
in the newsroom. My research and thesis which was a partial
fulfilment of the requirements for degree of Masters in
Communications Studies (MCS) at Auckland University of Technology’s
(AUT’s) Journalism School showed some starling results. Media, as
the fourth estate, is supposed to be the last bastion of democracy.
However, in case of Fiji, ironically, the most influential press,
Rupert Murdock’s The
Fiji Times,
appear to have contributed to the fall of democracy, and we are
paying the price for it now.
One
year rule of People’s Coalition Government was led by an
Indo-Fijian Prime Minister, Mahendra Chaudhry between May 19, 1999
and May 19, 2000 when Speight’s putsch – attempt to overthrow a
democratically-elected government took place. During that period,
sensational headlines in The
Fiji Times,
penned by I-Taukei journalist screamed aloud:
Rabuka warns on race bomb, Chiefs warn on Bills, Threats on MPs,
State under fire, NLTB boss warns Chaudhry, Church leader warns
Chaudhry, Chief’s paper wants to oust Chaudhry, Landowners take
over school, PM under fire, PM should quit, says Rewa MP, Taukei
workers threaten action, Holy land, Stand up, Qarikau urges Ra,
Landowners shut offices, Taukei vow to remove PM, Chief warns of war,
Eviction time, Racist group in land talks, Tora warns Chaudhry, Bau
chiefs warn Chaudhry, Closure threat on airport, Adi Senimili warns
Chaudhry.......and
so on shocking display of sensational and divisive reporting.
It
appears that in one year, every form of a Fijian leader warned and
threatened Fiji’s Prime Minister, just because he happened to be an
“Indian”. The
Fiji Times
and freedom of press gave ample opportunity for hatred and
sensation to be amplified throughout the nation by the largest and
most influential newspaper.
During
that time, new groups of militant and nationalist make-shift
organisations sprang up overnight to oppose government’s
initiative. Their little known leaders with suspect following were
given undeserved exposure by the press under the guise of media
freedom despite such utterances bordering on sedition and
hate-speeches. These were also in clear breach of Media Code of
Conduct, and out of reach of self-regulatory and hardly effective
toothless tiger, Fiji Media Council.
Media
in general and The
Fiji Times
in particular provided ample opportunity for anybody who wished to
take a pot-shot at the highest seat of the country- the President and
the Prime Minister. A responsible media, especially in a developing
country, divided on racial lines would be expected to exercise
caution in allowing such dereliction of ethics and duties to allow
such show of disrespect to the leaders of a developing nation under
the guise of media freedom.
In
a multiracial developing country where the makeup of the newsroom
does not reflect the population of the country, we can have very
partisan reporting. The
Fiji Times,
with a majority I-Taukei gatekeepers and news reporters fell in that
category. I suppose FIJI
TV
also falls in that category now. In my research, it showed that those
writing sensational and “negative” articles on Indo-Fijians and
Chaudhry government were I-Taukei, who comprised over seventy-five
percent or three quarters of those penning those news items that
showed by lines. Media researchers have established that journalists’
race and own political views crept into newsrooms. Politics in Fiji
is so often mixed with issues like culture loyalties that it could
become difficult for reporters to maintain impartiality and
direction, especially if they come from same racial and cultural
groups as those reported on. In a country like Fiji battling with
racial issues, environmental factors encourage an atmosphere of
ethnocentrism and racial feelings within journalism.
While
research already shows dereliction of duties of print media, no
research appears to have been done for TV in general and FIJI
TV in
particular. However its ownership and gatekeeper profile, points to
something to be worried about. Therefore, it was timely for MIDA to
pull it up, bring into notice, nip in the bud and even punish it for
the irresponsible and sensational reporting camouflaged as news item.
It
is nonsensical to say that items said in vernacular and directly
translated
did not carry hate-speech. More than the spoken words, the tone, the
body language, hidden idioms and mannerism of mother tongue may speak
a lot more than the English translated version. If MIDA or a similar
regulatory body with initiative, teeth, interest in national welfare
and national development existed in 1999/2000 when media became a
threat to democracy in Fiji, perhaps Fiji may have seen a more stable
politics. That is why media schools in Fiji have to appreciate
understand and value the concept of Development Journalism, more
popular and socially and economically beneficial in multi-racial
Developing nations. (That, maybe later, or perhaps Media Maestro Mark
Edge can add his Canadian bit)
Fiji
is not ready for the Western type of cut-and–paste democracy.
Neither is it ready for the Western concept of First World unfettered
and uncontrolled
media freedom. Western Democracy and Western Media Freedom concepts
have failed Fiji in the past.
We
need home-grown solutions for both, and Fiji’s move in this
direction needs better appreciation through an informed historical
perspective and understanding of rationale for such decisions.
[Thakur
Ranjit Singh is a media commentator and post graduate scholar in
communication studies from Auckland University of Technology (AUT).
Electronic link of his research thesis on Fiji media is available on:
http://aut.researchgateway.ac.nz/handle/10292/2554.
He runs his blog site FIJI PUNDIT at: www.fijipundit.blogspot.co.nz]
10 comments:
Hahaha, this is quarrelsome and irascible Marc Edge's dream come true. He he comes like a bull at a red flag...
I might, if I could get through it. Unreadable.
I am a first language speaker, and it's readable enough to me. As usual, your head is too far up your own uppity arse, so you can't see much of anything. The story of your downfall in Fiji - intolerable arrogance mixed with extreme stupidity. No wonder you have such a miserable, meaningless life.
This chap is still unemployed and living off the New Zealand taxpayer. Both him and Cros.
Cros has paid his dues to the NZ tax payer many times over, and Thakur is a useful, productive, and was a gainfully self-employed citizen of NZ.
This gem from ashwin raj sounds downright impressive, I must say, even though I confess I can't understand it:
"Rampant anti-intellectualism, purist and locationist jibes and the very curious rise of self selected moral entrepreneurs who give philanthropy without democracy now seem to be the dominant discourses of this particular strand of democracy propagated by the proverbial monkey of good governance called the “interim administration."
Where is Ashwin Raj? On TV he is usually very outspoken and never short of fancy words. The silence is deafening. Looks like he has crawled and slunk back into the hole he emerged from.
This sleazy coward Raj is a total embarrassment to the illegal regime. The fact that the useless military are allowing treasonous people like Raj and Saneem to dictate to Fijians in their own country is a disgrace. The Fiji military is raping their own nation. Utter fools!
Now you realize! How legal were 1987 and 2000 regimes? What have you done to Rabuka and Speight? One time heroes - one is languishing in jail and the other on the footpath, every door shut. You and your boisterous gang ran amok in the streets of Suva trashing and looting, aware that the Fiji military was ultimate backup. Now it has turned the guns in your direction and you say Fiji military is raping their own nation! if this is raping the nation, then it should have done this long time ago. It is not raping the nation but protecting it from being raped by fools like you!
How on earth this guy got a job at the USP as Head of School of Journalism.? He can neither read nor understand! Conceit and arrogance spill out, as it did when he was in Fiji.
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