A COUPLE OF DECADES AGO, when I was working as an editor with the Daily Nation in Kenya, our then editor-in-chief, George Githi, had this to say:
For governments which fear newspapers there is one consolation: We have known many instances where governments have taken over newspapers, but we have not known a single incident in which a newspaper has taken over a government.
This quote has stuck in mind since then.
But in recent times, with the global surge of the information superhighway, many news media or information websites have been giving governments a rocky time.
Websites might not have exactly taken over governments, but the Internet has certainly given a dramatic impetus to the winds of change.
As media educator and film maker Bob Hooper argues,
If the Soviet Union was brought down by the fax machine, Malaysia's transition to new leadership will be driven by the Internet ... In the power struggle between [Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad] and his former protege, [Anwar Ibrahim], at least in cyberspace, clearly holds the advantage (Hooper 1998).
In Indonesia, momentous change and a move to independence, or at least autonomy, in East Timor, unthinkable a year ago, has been fuelled by the Internet. Just last month, students from the Institute for the Study of Information Flow (ISAI) and NGO activists pressured the House of Representatives to draft a new press freedom bill before the inauguration of a new president and cabinet after the general election on June 7 (Pacific Media Watch 1999a).
The need for a new bill, the campaigners claim, stems from a risk that the new political élite in Indonesia will be made up of the same people who controlled and exploited the nation during the Suharto era.
Websites focusing on developments in Indonesia and the courageous activism of the Alliance for Independent Journalists (AJI) seeking freedom of speech and information have hastened the changes.
In China, activists have been imprisoned for advocating democracy.
Software engineer Lin Hai was arrested on 25 March 1998 for providing 30,000 email addresses to a pro-democracy Internet newsletter. On 20 January 1999, he was sentenced to two years in prison.
Physicist and dissident Wang Youcai was sentenced on 21 December 1998 to 11 years in prison; the charges against Wang included trying to organise a peaceful opposition party and sending email messages to dissidents in the U.S.
When I checked out the Blue Ribbon Free Expression Website today - one of the world's four most "hit" sites - almost 20,000 email messages had been sent to the Chinese Government on behalf of Lin Hai and Wang Youcai.
A press release will be issued when the number of messages reaches 30,000 to match the number of email addresses Lin Hai was convicted of sending.
In Zambia, the revelations on a Website of the independent Post newspaper had been so threatening to the national government that authorities last month laid siege to the editorial offices and printing plant and arrested eight journalists (Pacific Media Watch 1999b).
The editor-in-chief, Fred M'membe, well known in Commonwealth media circles, was charged with espionage - along with the eight staff members - over a front page story that questioned the country's military capacity to withstand an incursion from neighbouring Angola.
In Yugoslavia, international protests earlier this month followed the police shutdown of the independent Radio B92 and three other radio stations in Yugoslavia in a crackdown on dissent (Foreign Correspondent 1999).
According to B92's website, "our premises have been sealed off" and the station's director had been "ousted" from his job. He was replaced by a political hack from the country's ruling Socialist Party, effectively imposing Government control.
The Internet has played a prominent role in the Balkans conflict. Since foreign journalists were expelled from Yugoslavia, much information has been relayed to the outside world via email and the World Wide Web.
Even in the South Pacific, in spite of relatively few users, news sites on the Internet have caused more than ripples.
In 1997, the Websites of both daily newspapers in Papua New Guinea "came of age during the Sandline mercenary crisis, underscoring the value of content on the Internet" (Robie 1997).
During the decade-long secessionist rebellion against the Papua New Guinea Government, the Bougainville Freedom Movement's Webpage based in Australia publicised - and still publicises - the struggle for peace. It has had remarkable success with its Website and a global email list in setting a Pacific-wide and global media agenda.
"With the Internet, we have broken a barrier and gone out to the world, and the world is listening, watching and waiting,'" says Vikki John, the movement's national coordinator in Sydney.
And in Fiji, the freedom of the Internet affair last year and the latest media website which was established last month - and quickly featured a controversial interview with Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka as the election looms next month - have been provocative to say the least (Robie 1998a).
The Internet is transforming the way radical movements try to change the world and exploit the media message.
It has also given the alternative news media a tremendous boost.
The modest Green-Left Weekly, for example, which covers environmental, political, gender, labour and human rights issues, has just as big potential as the $350,000-a-year Sydney Morning Herald site.
Early examples of effective use of the Internet was demonstrated in the 1990s by Latin American guerrilla movements such as Mexico's Zapatistas and Peru's Tupac Amaru.
The use of cyberspace to spread their message quickly has been adopted widely among activist groups around the world. As InterPress Third World news agency's former Manila bureau chief Kunda Dixit says:
Across the world, human rights activists, national liberation movements, indigenous groups from the Ogoni to the Karens, NGOs and activists have found silicon bonding in the horizontal communication provided by the Internet.
Its inherent anarchy, decentralised nature and freedom from official control has made the Internet the ideal medium for civil society (Dixit 1997: 148).
However, although they may have mastered the Internet to bypass government control over traditional media and reach a larger audience, most of these groups have not yet adapted their messages to their new medium. Often their Internet message is still doctrinaire and parochial.
The Internet is especially suited to underground organisations, NGOs and alternative media because a Website can easily be moved from one country to another.
Many radical groups also avoid censorship by operating through sympathisers based in other countries who have access to the Internet.
In many ways the Internet is a contemporary equivalent to the days of the pamphleteering style of journalism two to three centuries ago - when news media were genuinely a pluralistic "marketplace of ideas".
This is in sharp contrast with the conventional news media of today which has been rapidly shrinking, swallowed up by closures and takeovers by the Rupert Murdoch, Bertellsman and Ted Turner style of mega media corporations.
Surviving independent media voices have been gagged by the trivial era of "infotainment" and "tabloid" babblespeak.
But the degree to which people can benefit from the Internet's democratisation potential, bringing about true decentralisation or spreading knowledge and awareness of issues, and education, will depend on how much support the "information poor" get to log on.
In countries like India, for example, only seven in every 1000 people have a phone.
Low cost is also one of the great advantages of free speech on the Internet. Except for the initial cost, building a Website is less expensive than running a newspaper, and it reaches a newspaper-size audience running to thousands.
The cost savings of the Internet is an important factor in the digital technology revolution happening in many newsrooms around the world. The Singapore Straits Times is one of the world leaders in Internet innovation.
The Straits Times sends reporters and photographers into the field locally and abroad all the time. In addition, the paper has nine bureaus abroad. And two offshore editorial units - a Sydney office consisting of a fulltime team of Australian subeditors - and an office in Manila supplementing the art and infographics output of the paper's Singapore-based team.
The telephone bills have in the past been astronomical.
As the paper's business editor and a technical expert, Paul Jansen, says, the Internet and email have now made the newspaper's economics far rosier (Jansen 1998).
Today, our reporters in the field and from our overseas bureaus, can choose to file their reports directly into our computer system through a special modem connection, or through email which we then pick up and transfer to our main system in a simple two-step "save file" and "drag and drop" procedure.
Since email involves calls only to the Internet Service Provider in the sender and recipient's respective countries, there is no IDD charge, just local call charges.
In the South Pacific, after a slow start, the news media cyberspace revolution has rapidly caught on.
The first news site was curiously the Tonga Chronicle, a sort of hybrid affair on Tahola Kami's pioneering Kavabowl Website in late 1995. However, the first actual full newspaper online in the Pacific was the University of Papua New Guinea's journalism training newspaper Uni Tavur, hosted on the Sydney University of Technology's "Online Journalist" website in March 1996.
By August 1996, The National in Port Moresby, the fastest growing newspaper in the South Pacific, had developed the first daily newspaper Website online in the region. One of its sister papers in the Rimbunan Hijau timber group of companies, The Star in Malaysia, had a long-established and successful Website.
The [National's] Website, the first daily news one in the region, was the innovative brainchild of the general manager, S. F. Yong. A cyberspace buff and enthused by the lively Website of The Star, he was convinced it could be done in Papua New Guinea too.
Every day he and a senior systems executive colleague wade through the paper, converting files into html format and gaining enormous international goodwill for the paper as a result (Robie 1997).
The National Online Website is arguably still the most popular cyberspace newspaper in the South Pacific.
Its long-established rival, the PNG Post-Courier, followed the next month, in September 1996, with a classified advertising Website linked to the News Ltd advertising Website in Australia.
Finally, the Post-Courier also introduced a news Website in December 1996. This meant a 100 per cent web presence for Papua New Guinea's national daily newspapers at a time when New Zealand, for example, only had a handful of newspapers on line.
Following this, Websites were set up by PNG's national news weekly, The Independent (owned by the nation's churches) in 1998, EM TV (1997) and NauFM (1997).
News media organisation websites have been slow to take off in Fiji, although the sister radio station of NauFM, FM96 (Communications Fiji Ltd), had established a lively Website in 1997, and the news magazine Pacific Islands Monthly (1997) has a popular site which is mainly a teaser for potential subscribers.
Islands Business International (1999) has also developed a website. Many other news media have developed sites in the region too, including American Samoa (1997), Cook Islands (1998), French Polynesia (1996) and an Auckland-based Tongan newspaper, Tongan Times (1998).
But now probably the most innovative Pacific news media development on the Internet is the debut last month of fijilive - a combination of the news magazine resources of The Review news magazine, the Daily Post newspaper and Bula Networks radio.
This is backed up by what the publishers claim to be the largest Pacific Website archive, two years in the making. Although the long-established Pacific virtual library and media site of the Australian National University might dispute this claim, there is no doubt that fijilive is a remarkable resource.
Publisher Yashwant Gaunder is matter-of-fact about his objective: "Our immediate aim is to provide an award-winning information source on Fiji."
Initial "hits" ranged around 800 a day by the end of two weeks, but the target is about 2000 hits a day. However, although Fiji has the largest number of Internet users in the Pacific, about 2500, this is still a tiny market.
Fiji's largest circulation daily newspaper, The Fiji Times, is also planning a Website as part of an upgrade of its computer pagination system. The company says its PIM Website is the only media one making a profit in the Pacific.
What do all these rapid and dramatic changes mean for the traditional methods for journalism education in the Pacific? Like elsewhere in the world, it is a major challenge.
According to one recent Australian study, 168 new journalistic tasks and practices have been identified as emerging as an influence of the Internet. Journalism educator Mark Pearson concludes "influences of the Internet upon both the context of journalism and its practice render current approaches anachronistic and demand a reevaluation of the aim, role and function of journalism education" (Pearson 1998).
Nevertheless, another journalism educator, Stephen Quinn, was heartened by his research that the educators appeared to be ahead of the Australian media industry in computer-assisted reporting (CAR). He suggested they "take the lead and drag the media into the digital era".
Quinn also says that Pacific tertiary institutions ignore Internet journalism education "at their peril".
In a sense, the University of the South Pacific has already taken the lead in the region, last year introducing basic Internet web design and CAR techniques in two courses, 201 Print and Online Journalism and 302 Journalism Research.
In the Print and Online course, this means Web design is integrated with the training newspaper Wansolwara and online editors process the web edition.
In Journalism Research, students have been introduced to the Internet and databases as part of researching HIV/AIDS stories, the Fiji elections, media reports and major regional stories, such as the controversial shutdown of two faculties and a journalism programme at the University of Papua New Guinea.
Currently they are working on Pacific human rights assignments.
The USP journalism programme also provides an Internet news digest, Pasifik Nius, feeding websites such as Pacific Islands Report and researchers worldwide.
Journalism students also contribute to the Cyber-Times electronic newspaper at City University, Hongkong.
As Kunda Dixit points out:
While we may think that we live in the age of information, more and more of that information is completely useless in working out answers to global problems or searching for alternative [economic strategies] more suited to living on a planet with finite resources (Dixit 1997: 151).
Virtually all second and third-year journalism students will routinely get Internet tuition. The USP journalism newsroom has five World Wide Web computers available for regular use by students.
By the standards of journalism schools in Australia or elsewhere, this may not seem much. But by the standards of South Pacific media newsrooms, where probably no more than one Internet computer is available for reporting - and this is probably locked up in the general manager or chief editor's office, it is remarkable.
The journalism facilities are also put into context when it is realised that the university as a whole has just eight computers in the libraryıs Internet Café for the use of more than 5000 students.
The University of Papua New Guinea pioneered journalism education on the Internet in the Pacific in 1996. At a time when UPNG was still waiting to go online, a partnership with UTS's Department of Journalism and Social Analysis meant that the UTS Online Journalist website hosted UPNG's initial efforts (Robie 1998).
The Papua Niugini Nius email listserve service and website were also created in 1996 in partnership with Pactok Communications, a low cost Asia-Pacific regional email and website cooperative with partners in Cambodia and Malaysia as well as South Pacific states.
By March 1998, the pivotal centre of Internet initiatives in journalism education moved from UPNG to the University of Hawai'i and USPıs main Laucala campus in Fiji. In Hawaiıi, it took just over a year for Pacific Islands Report to become a key regional news source with around 15 stories a day.
A collaborative project of the Hawai'i's East-West Center's Pacific Islands Development Program and the Center for Pacific Islands Studies at the University of Hawai'i it aims, according to editor Al Hulsen, to increase public knowledge and understanding of the Pacific.
Three journalism students are involved in the project.
At USP, in April 1998, the USP Journalism programme launched Pacific Journalism Online, the region's first extensive Internet journalism training tool and research resource.
In August 1998, UNESCO awarded a F$5000 grant to USP Journalism to help develop the project. Equipment was purchased and a journalism graduate was employed part-time to upload files for the website, including the training newspaper Wansolwara Online subsite.
This role has now been taken over by journalism students as they become trained in Internet publishing.
One particular plus of the Internet training, is a growing awareness of the Pacific region as a whole. Never before have journalism students - or journalists for that matter - had such quick and comprehensive access to the regionıs news media and other research sources.
The new curriculum involves greater attention to issues of legal risks across international jurisdictions, ethics, privacy, confidentiality, freedom of expression, social justice, business acumen and consumer protection as well as the technical skills involved.
However, online journalists still vitally need the key abilities of critical thinking, research skills, story-telling and a passion to keep people informed.
These then, are the fresh voices of the future in Pacific cyberspace. Hopefully, their brand of journalism will contribute to regional solutions rather than problems.
References:
Blue Ribbon Freedom of Expression website, http://www.eff.org/blueribbon.html
Dixit, Kunda (1997), Dateline Earth: Journalism as if the Planet Mattered, Manila: InterPress.
Foreign Correspondent (1999), "Belgrade police shut down independent (sic)", foreign@onelist.com at the Journalism Department, University of Queensland, April 3.
Granier-Deferre, Karine (1998), "Radical politics embrace the Internet", International Herald-Tribune, September 28.
Hooper, Robert A. (1998), "An Internet driven national transition: Was Vice-President Gore's speech a catalyst for change or a strategic blunder", Los Angeles Times.
Jansen, Paul (1998), "Slashing costs, expanding sources, raising quality - One organisation's battle to enslave technology for the Newsroom", paper presented at the Commonwealth Editors' Forum in Penang on October 22.
Pacific Media Watch (1999a), "2014 INDONESIA: Students urge House to discuss press bill", March 27.
Pacific Media Watch (1999b), "2010 ZAMBIA: Police charge The Post editor with 'espionage'," March 25.
Pearson, Mark (1998), "Curricular implications of the influences of the Internet upon journalism", paper presented at the Journalism Education Association (JEA) conference at Yeppoon, Queensland, December 1-4.
Robie, David (1997), "Hot-wired Pacific media", Pacific Journalism Review, Vol 4 No 1, pp 61-70.
- (1998a), "Café Pacific and Pacific Journalism Online: Cyberspace media in an Island state", paper presented at the Journalism Education Association (JEA) conference at Yeppoon, Queensland, December 1-4.
- (1998b), "The Internet and journalism education in the South Pacific", paper presented at the Commonwealth Editors' Forum, Penang, Malaysia, October 21-23.
David Robie is senior lecturer and coordinator of the Journalism Programme at the University of the South Pacific. He presented this paper at the World Association for Christian Communication (Pacific Region) "Media Control and Ownership Consultation", 12-15 April 1999, Nadi, Fiji Islands.