It is understood that the ministry's concerns focused on articles
appearing on Asia-Pacific Network/Café Pacific
website. I teach Internet
journalism at USP (including having set up the regional Pacific Journalism Online website), have maintained the Café Pacific site for two years at universities, and it has only
become an issue in Fiji.
In the case of Ingrid, the complaints concern her weekly Media
Watch column in the Daily Post and her part-time teaching at
the Fiji Journalism Institute - at the request of local journalists.
The president of the USP Staff Association, Dr Ganesh Chand,
has defended us, saying we have "perfect freedom" to
carry out research and publish in areas of our expertise. The Fiji
Council of Trade Unions secretary Pratap Chand has also called on the
government to "stop victimising and harassing" us.
Many organisations and individuals have strongly supported us, but few of their letters have been reported in the local press which raises serious questions about the impartiality of the Fiji news media.
However, both newspapers did support us in the editorial columns, the Fiji Times describing the response to us as "draconian". Labelling Senator Bole's attack as "vicious", Fiji's Daily Post said the Government was "not fully and properly informed" on the issue.
The Post added: "The saddest thing is the defeaning silence from the Pacific Islands News Association and the Fiji Media Council. By failing to support the rights of journalists, like Mr Robie and Ms Leary, whether they be teachers, students or whatever, these organisations are helping to destroy the very freedom of expression they have so often said they protect."
New Zealand's national staff association representing academics at all of the nation's universities made a strong protest to both Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka and Information Minister Filipe Bole in support of us. Executive director Rob Crozier, of the Association of the University Staff, said: "We view very seriously attacks on academic freedom."
"As a member of UNESCO, Fiji will be a signatory to the Recommendation on the Status of Higher Education teaching personnel, which was adopted by UNESCO in November 1987," he said.
"All higher-education teaching personnel should enjoy
freedom of thought, conscience, religion, expression, assembly and
association as well as the right to liberty and security of the person
and liberty of movement.
"They should not be hindered or impeded in
exercising their civil rights as citizens, including the right to
contribute to social change through freely expressing their opinion of
state policies and of policies affecting higher education. They should
not suffer any penalties simply because of the exercise of such
rights."
One of the founders of the journalism programme at USP, Professor Andrew Horn, who is now in Harvard University in the US, also defended us. In a message, he said: "For too long the countries of the Pacific basin have relied excessively on external media sources to provide information and to set the parameters of debate, while local print and broadcast services were content to serve very restricted interest groups."
It was precisely these sorts of problems, Horn argues, that the USP journalism programme was established to address: "Your work to help in the professionalisation of the region's media community, to expand its scope and give greater confidence to its practitioners should be applauded by the peoples and the governments of all 12 of the university's member states."
Bill Southworth, executive director of the NZ Journalists Training Organisation, said the Pacific journalism community was "disappointed" at the continuing harassment of Leary and me: "In the latest incident, anonymous 'sneaks' have drawn it to the Government's attention that Robie and Leary have been writing commentaries on journalism and guest lecturing at the Fiji Journalism Institute."
Added Southworth, a former editor of the Fiji Sun: "Perhaps those who wish to silence Robie and Leary should take time to read Fiji's new constitution. Section 30 says every person has the right to freedom of expression, including the freedom to receive and impart ideas.
"Even Kiwi journalism lecturers."
Many journalists have also protested. Vimal Madhavan, chairman of the Fiji Journalists Association and member of the Press Council of Fiji in 1986/87, says: "Threats to journalists, foreign or local, such as questioning their
right to work, is as much an assault on our freedoms as sending in armed
troops to shut down a newsroom."
John Manukia, Pacific Affairs reporter with the New Zealand Herald, says: "Nothing less than democracy and freedom of expression is at stake. To suggest that writing columns in local newspapers and on the Internet goes against the description of work permits is ridiculous. You are doing work in your field of expertise. To suggest otherwise is nonsense and I condemn such an act."
The events of the past two weeks are an indictment of the current standard of Fiji journalism, and the lack of fairness and balance in the media. Sadly, after my five years living in Papua New Guinea, I would have to say that the professionalism of Fiji news media does not compare favourably.
David Robie is publisher of Café Pacific and journalism coordinator at the University of the South Pacific.