Fiji Times condemned over 'security threat' report
Fiji Times condemned over 'security threat' report
5
March 2001
* Pacific Media Watch Online: http://www.pmw.c2o.org
*
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FIJI TIMES CONDEMNED OVER 'SECURITY THREAT'
REPORT
* See Pasifik Nius and PMW items 3248, 3226, 3171, 3166, 3165
SUVA (Pacific Media Watch). - Fiji's ousted
elected Prime Minister
Mahendra Chaudhry and the military
forces spokesman have condemned a
Fiji Times newspaper
report claiming that Chaudhry was a "threat to
national
security" if he returned as prime minister, according to
media
reports.
The Sun reported on 5 March 2001 that
the front page coverage in the
Sunday Times the previous
day was condemned by both Chaudhry and
military media
spokesperson Captain Ned Taito.
The Sunday edition report
was written by senior journalist Margaret
Wise. Both her
and her newspaper, The Fiji Times, have been at
the
centre of controversy over coverage of the attempted
coup by George
Speight on May 19 and reporting on the
Fiji Labour Party-led coalition
government while it was
in office.
The newspaper and reporter had been accused of
bias by a University of
the South Pacific media academic
at a conference of journalism educators
in Mooloolaba,
Queensland, last December.
The Sun quoted Chaudhry
criticising The Sunday Times over using an
unnamed
military source for such a report.
He described it as a
"preposterous statement", saying people wanting to
make
such comments should go on record.
Chaudhry also called on
news media groups to follow "fair
journalism
principles".
He said that at no stage had
the military told him he was a threat to
national
security, adding that he had always worked for national
peace
and reconciliation.
The Sun quoted Captain Taito
as describing The Fiji Times report as
"misleading". He
said the military had not issued such a statement.
"We
can't understand how a paper can go and publish a story
without an
official spokesman's statement," said Captain
Taito.
"We have at no stage had meetings, issued [media]
releases or told
someone that Chaudhry is a threat to
national security."
The Fiji Times carried no matching
report about the responses of
Chaudhry and the military
media spokesperson. The original report by Ms
Wise
carried no balancing statement.
* On January 26, the Fiji
military and the ousted elected government
both accused
the Fiji Times of misreporting, calling on the
newspaper
and other news media to be "more responsible"
over reports about an
apparent ultimatum to the interim
regime during a presidential briefing.
The military had
reportedly said it would maintain law and order for
a
constitutionally legal government if the Court of
Appeal Court upheld a
ruling that the administration was
illegal.
The newspaper had also reported that the military
would seek foreign
help if needed to maintain national
security.
During the Court of Appeal hearing, Queen's
Counsel Geoffrey Robertson,
the lawyer for the refugee
farmer Chandrika Prasad challenging the
interim regime,
was critical of The Fiji Times'
reporting.
+++niuswire
ENDS