Time for reset on Tonga media - PFF
PACIFIC FREEDOM FORUM·SATURDAY, 14 OCTOBER 2017
20171015
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Remember the people’s right to
know, and reset public media.
That's the call from
regional media watchdog Pacific Freedom Forum (PFF) as
months of controversy continue at Tonga's public
broadcaster, the Tonga Broadcasting
Commission.
“Government needs to stop using so-called
losses as an excuse to apply punitive changes aimed at
gagging newsroom and management in a leading public
broadcaster of the region”, says PFF Chair Monica
Miller.
“Informing the public about what is happening
with their own tax dollars is a key role of state
broadcasters, who are not faced by the profit-margin
pressures of commercial broadcasters.
“But if a
national broadcaster is expected to excel and deliver
commercial targets on arguable resourcing, government needs
to question itself rather than act against the public
interest."
The PFF concerns are raised in the wake of the
latest management changes at the TBC, with the two most
senior journalists removed from news
duty.
Transferred
Viola Ulakai, TBC
news manager, and Laumanu Petelō, the editor, were
transferred to the commission's sales department.
Kaniva
Tonga reports that the “restructuring” order was made
under direction of new TBC board chairman, Dr Tu’i Uata,
who replaced ‘Ahongalu Fusimālohi last month.
Says
Miller, “Being moved from the editorial side of news to
the sales department is an absolute horror for any
journalist.
“Laumanu and Viola are leading Pacific
trailblazers in journalism that is unafraid to ask the hard
questions, and continues to put the public right to know to
the fore. They are passionate about what they do and have
faced cultural barriers and stereotypes about women in
Pacific newsrooms for decades.
“We respectfully urge
the government to enter into a special dialogue with
Tonga’s media and repeat earlier calls for Tonga to show
regional ‘leadership’ and invite independent monitors to
oversee talks between government and our Tongan media
colleagues.”
Transfer of the two staff from the TBC
newsroom follow months of complaints from Prime Minister
Akalisi Pohiva over what he claimed was unfair, unethical
reporting.
Disputes over reporting first came to a head
in May this year, after a minister declared "void" the
automatic renewal of former general manager, Nanisē
Fifita.
She took the government to court but a
judge ruled against her.
“Pacific media colleagues
everywhere are dismayed at this treatment of two women in
journalism who have done nothing but be journalists,” says
Miller.
“We urge Tonga’s leadership to take their
grievances and allegations over breaches of ethics or
standards by any journalist, to the national media body or
to bring them to our attention where a mediated and
objective report can be made
possible.”
LINKS
Tongan
broadcasting chief blames TBC shake-up on news failure
https://asiapacificreport.nz/2017/10/13/tongan-broadcasting-chief-blames-shake-up-on-news-failure/
Tongan
journalists who clashed with PM reshuffled out of TBC
newsroom
https://asiapacificreport.nz/2017/10/11/tongan-journalists-who-clashed-with-pm-reshuffled-out-of-tbc-newsroom/
PM
Pohiva criticises media for not covering Atalanga, passport
and Tongasat scandals
http://kanivatonga.nz/2017/09/pm-pohiva-criticises-media-for-not-covering-atalanga-passport-and-tongasat-scandals/
TBC
shake-up forces senior journalists out of newsroom to take
on new roles
http://kanivatonga.nz/2017/10/tbc-s...