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2003 ARCHIVE:
MEDIA
RISE OF XENOPHOBIA THREATENS NEW ZEALAND REPUTATION OVER ZAOUI CASE
Guardian Unlimited: 15 December 2003
The xenophobic reaction in New Zealand to Algerian political asylum seeker Ahmed Zaoui is imperilling Kiwis' reputation for tolerance, writes David Fickling: 'Were it not for his situation, it would be easy to regard the whole thing as Kafkaesque farce; certainly, there has been a touch of the keystone cops in his treatment.
MEDIA
INDYMEDIA OFFERS SIS 'ASSISTANCE' WITH ALGERIAN POLITICAL PRISONER ZAOUI TAPE
Indymedia NZ: 8 December 2003
Indymedia activist offers NZ SIS assistance with video equipment. And Aotearoa Indymedia activist has come to the rescue this week by offering the New Zealand SIS assistance with its future video projects. This generous offer of capacity building came after the SIS admitted having had major technical problems during the secret illegal filming of a seven hour interview with asylum seeker and political prisoner, Ahmed Zaoui in December
last year.
ECONOMY
MIX OF LOCAL, REGIONAL NEEDED TO MAKE PACIFIC URBANISATION WORK
InterPress Service: 5 December 2003
A mix of local and regional approaches is needed to make urbanisation an engine of growth for small Pacific island countries, experts at a just-concluded conference in Fiji say, but just as key were debates about how this applies to a still predominantly rural region. By Kalinga Seneviratne
MEDIA
ROSS STEVENS AND UNI TAVUR: A KIWI LEGACY AMONG WANTOKS
Asia Pacific Network: 4 December 2003
A profile of foundation lecturer Ross Stevens and his role in establishing the University of Papua New Guinea journalism programme. Paper presented at the Journalism Education Association of New Zealand (Jeanz) conference, New Plymouth, 4-5 December 2004. Paper | PowerPoint summary [pdf file, 1mb]
MEDIA
THE BBC AND IRAQ: MYTH AND REALITY - BY JOHN PILGER
Pilger.Carlton.com: 4 December 2003
The second-worst case of denying access to anti-war voices was ABC in the United States, which allowed them a mere 7 per cent of its overall coverage. The worst case was the BBC, which gave just 2 per cent of its coverage to opposition views - views that represented those of the majority of the British people. A separate study by Cardiff University came to the same conclusion. The BBC, it said, had "displayed the most pro-war agenda of any [British] broadcaster". By John Pilger
MEDIA
PHOTOGRAPHER J0HN MILLER'S MIHI OVER HIS MEDIA PEACE AWARD
Asia Pacific Network: 12 November 2003
Photographer John Miller has been awarded a Special Achievement Award at the annual Media Peace Awards for his documentary photographs of issues protest in New Zealand.
MEDIA
PHOTOGRAPHER J0HN MILLER'S MIHI OVER HIS MEDIA PEACE AWARD
Asia Pacific Network: 12 November 2003
Photographer John Miller has been awarded a Special Achievement Award at the annual Media Peace Awards for his documentary photographs of issues protest in New Zealand.
MEDIA
TAPU MISA SLAMS NZ'S 'SMUG MEDIA' OVER PACIFIC COVERAGE
Pacific Media Watch: 8 November 2003
Columnist Tapu Misa has called for a stronger Pacific Islands voice in New Zealand mainstream media to provide balance in coverage of Pacific issues. Her outspoken message came in today's inaugural edition of Auckland University of Technology's new newspaper produced by final-year student journalists, Te Waha Nui - "The Big Mouth".
LITERATURE
JOHN PILGER: THE SILENCE OF THE WRITERS
Pilger.Carlton.com: 6 November 2003
In a column for the New Statesman, John Pilger recalls the involvement of writers in the past with campaigns about ominous world events, and asks: why are writers today silent about equally ominous events, especially rampant great power?
SCIENCE
NEW ZEALAND ROW AS FREEZE ON GENETIC MODIFICATION ENDS
BBC World: 30 October 2003
New Zealand's debate over Genetic Modification (GM) has returned to centre stage as a moratorium on releasing GM organisms into the environment expires. But in a nation dependent on agriculture and simultaneously proud of its green credentials, opposition is not fading away. Some protesters have gone to dramatic lengths to make their point. Mothers against Genetic Engineering, led by one of the former Thompson Twins, Alannah Currie, has produced a dramatic billboard showing a woman with four breasts being milked. By Kim Griggs
POLITICS
TONGAN GOVERNMENT DENIES CONSTITUTIONAL 'SHUT DOWN' PLAN AGAINST TAIMI 'O TONGA
Pacific Media Watch: 20 October 2003
The Tonga Government has denied claims that the kingdom's constitution has been amended to shut the Taimi 'o Tonga newspaper out of the country. The Legislative Assembly voted this week by 16 votes to 11 to change the constitutions Clause Seven a move opponents say will severely restrict freedom of speech.
MEDIA
THE SWORD OF DAMOCLES IN THE PACIFIC: TWO REGULATORY CASE STUDIES ON MEDIA FREEDOM
PR2K3: 19 October 2003
David Robie's paper on media freedom in Fiji and Tonga presented at the Public Right to Know Conference in Sydney, 17-19 October 2003. 140 kb
MEDIA
AUT JOURNALISM COVERAGE OF THE PACIFIC MEDIA CONFERENCE - CHALLENGE TO MAINSTREAM
AUT Journalism: 6 October 2003
A team of seven student journalists from Auckland University of Technology have filed a series of reports on the Pacific media conference. Jacqui Stanford sums up: "The underlying message was clear - Pacific Islanders are an ingredient of New Zealand and should be represented in the national media.
MEDIA
FIJI HAD 'FIRST EMBEDDED JOURNALISTS IN PACIFIC', SAYS BABA
Pacific Journalism Review: 5 October 2003
A former Fiji deputy prime minister says the Pacific's first "embedded journalists" were reporters who worked too closely with George Speight's rebels in the ousting of his government. Launching the New Zealand edition of Pacific Journalism Review at the weekend, Dr Tupeni Baba told academics, journalists and delegates at the Pacific Islands Media Association (PIMA) conference many reporters had been too influenced by Speight's militants.
MEDIA
PACIFIC JOURNALIST RAPS NZ 'TRAVEL JOURNALISM WITH A WHINE'
AUT Journalism: 3 October 2003
New Zealand mainstream media coverage of Pacific issues is often little better than travel writing, says Agence France-Presse correspondent Michael Field. The New Zealand-based correspondent, who has the distinction of being the most banned journalist in the Pacific, derided the coverage as "travel journalism with a whine" during a keynote address at the two-day Pacific Islands Media Association (PIMA) conference in Auckland.
REGION
PACIFIC JOURNALISM REVIEW FEATURES IRAQ MEDIA WAR
Pacific Media Watch: 21 September 2003
Pacific Journalism Review was published in New Zealand for the first time this week and features a series of articles about Iraq and the media war, Maori media constructing a Maori identity, and international coverage in the Pacific. The journal, which has relocated to Auckland University of Technology from the University of the South Pacific, has been redesigned with wider international content along with the traditional Pacific media articles.
Expert commentators challenged in PJR
>>> www.pjreview.info
REGION
US 'WAR ON TERROR: GLOBALISATION AT GUNPOINT
Green Left Weekly: 10 September 2003
Green Left Weekly provides news, information, opinion and debate from an
environmental and left perspective.
Featured this week: US 'war on terror': Globalisation at gunpoint. In October 1999, Henry Kissinger, secretary of state under US presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, candidly remarked: "What is called
'globalisation' is really another name for the dominant role of the United States." Since 9/11, Washington has the "war on terror" as cover to impose US-dominated "globalisation" at gunpoint. Is al Qaeda really a threat?
>>> www.greenleft.org.au/current/553p15.htm
REGION
FORMER PACIFIC ACADEMIC AWARDED A$95,000 FOR CYBER LIBEL
Pacific Media Watch: 7 September 2003
A former Pacific academic who has been stalked over the internet for five years has begun international action to stop a hate campaign against him. Dr Trevor Cullen, a journalism lecturer at Edith Cowan University in Perth and former head of communication arts at Divine Word University (DWU) in Papua New Guinea, was this week awarded $95,000 in damages by the West Australian Supreme Court in his defamation case against Los Angeles-based retired lawyer Bill White.
NEW ZEALAND
FOX CLAIMS 'CONFIDENTIALITY' DEAL TO MAINTAIN SILENCE ON MAORI TV CRISIS
Pacific Media Watch: 1 September 2003
Former Maori Television Service (MTS) chief Derek Fox says he is restrained by a confidentiality agreement from commenting on reports of a sexual harassment case against him. But he told Television NZ One's Sunday current affairs programme he had never sexually harassed anyone in his life.
NEW ZEALAND
FOX QUITS AS HEAD OF MAORI TELEVISION AMID CONTROVERSY
NZ Herald: 22 August 2003
The controversy-plagued Maori Television Service (MTS) is in trouble again, this time with the resignation of chief executive Derek Fox.
REGION
WHO CONTROLS THE PACIFIC ISLANDS FORUM?
Asia-Pacific Network: 20 August 2003
One wonders how the founding fathers of the South Pacific Forum meeting in 1972 would have thought then of an Australian Secretary-General for the Pacific Islands Forum. Stan Simpson poses some tough questions for Australia.
WEST PAPUA
THE FORGOTTEN PACIFIC NATION
IndyMedia: 15 August 2003
West Papua remains in a state of military oppression, increasing environmental degradation, and cultural genocide under brutal Indonesian occupation. A Free Papua protest at the Forum venue in Auckland
SOLOMON ISLANDS
WARLORD HAROLD KEKE SURRENDERS TO AUSTRALIAN-LED PEACEKEEPERS
BBC World: 13 August 2003
One of the main rebel leaders in the Solomon Islands, Harold Keke, has surrendered to the Australian-led force that is trying to restore peace in the Pacific nation.
INTERNET ABUSE
PACIFIC CYBER VICTIM SEEKS RECORD COURT PAYOUT AGAINST BILL WHITE
Pacific Media Watch: 2 August 2003
A Pacific media academic stalked by cyber for the past five years expects to be awarded Australian record damages this week in an internet defamation case.
FIJI
QARASE'S 'FIJIAN PARAMOUNTCY' CABINET RULED 'ILLEGAL'
BBC World: 18 July 2003
Fiji's Supreme Court has ruled the nationalist government of Laisenia Qarase must include members of the Fiji Labour Party-dominated opposition. In a landmark decision, judges unanimously said Qarase breached the constitution when he excluded MPs from the Labour Party from his cabinet after a post-coup election almost two years ago.
The court ruling: www.munroleyslaw.com/alert/Judgement.pdf
INDONESIA
US FREELANCE REPORTER BILL NESSEN FACES FIVE YARS' IMPRISONMENT AS 'SPY' FOR ACEH GUERRILLAS
Democracy Now: 16 July 2003
U.S. freelance journalist, William Nessen, is facing five years in prison in Indonesia. He is being held and interrogated by the Indonesian police officially on immigration charges. The Indonesian military has accused Nessen, an accredited journalist, of spying for the Free Aceh Movement (GAM).
SOLOMON ISLANDS
PEACE-KEEPING FORCE TAKES SHAPE
BBC World: 30 June 2003
A forum of Pacific nations has unanimously agreed to intervene in the Solomon Islands, to restore law and order. Foreign ministers from 16 South Pacific nations decided at an emergency meeting in Sydney that they would support an Australian proposal for a multinational force to be sent to the troubled archipelago.
WAR ON IRAQ
THE FAKING OVER PRIVATE JESSICA
BBC World: 26 June 2003
Flashback: Jessica Lynch - an all American icon of the war. Captured by the Iraqis. Saved for the nation in a daring helicopter rescue. This was a script made for Hollywood. Made by the Pentagon. But it wasn't all that it seemed, reveals BBC documentary War Spin.
LAND RIGHTS
MAORI ANGER OVER NZ COASTLINE, SEABED LAW PLAN
BBC World: 24 June 2003
The New Zealand Government has said it will pass a law preventing indigenous Maori tribes from claiming exclusive ownership of the nation's coastline and seabed. It follows a ruling last week by the Court of Appeal which said Maori tribes could pursue their claim, New Zealand media reported.
JUSTICE
SEXUAL 'SINS OF A FEW' TROUBLE FUTURE OF PITCAIRN ISLAND
BBC World: 20 June 2003
Faced with a trial of some of its islander menfolk over long-standing alleged sex crimes, the future for Pitcairn Island looks bleak. It will take the wisdom of several Solomons to save the best of this small, marvellous, imperfect speck of cultural diversity, and to ensure that Betty Christian has no excuse for asserting that, 213 years after the Bounty mutiny, Britain was at last taking revenge on the mutineers.
CYBERSPACE
LOS ANGELES TIMES EXPOSES PACIFIC CYBER-STALKER BILL WHITE
Pacific Media Watch: 15 June 2003
Café Pacific is among the scores of individuals and organisations around the South Pacific region - including Divine Word University staff - who have been the target of a series of attacks published on websites created by Californian cyber-stalker Bill White. A Los Angeles Times reporter, Steve Hymon, has filed an exposé on the cyberspace activities of White. In turn, his own newspaper has become a target of abuse.
PACIFIC ISSUES
TERRORISM TAKES TOLL ON POLITICS
North Shore Times Advertiser: 13 June 2003
Politics in the South Pacific is increasingly determined by terrorism and this reality poses a significant challenge to the region's media. It puts a greater demand on the region's media and journalists for more training and professionalism. By Nicole Jellard.
BROADCASTING
RUCTIONS IN PACIFIC ISLANDS RADIO SPOIL YEARS OF HARD WORK
New Zealand Herald: 11 June 2003
The biggest story in the Pacific Island community is the dumping of the providers of the Pacific Island radio network by the trust that the Government appointed to oversee it. It came after months of acrimony that began almost the moment Niu FM hit the airwaves. Commentary by Tapu Misa.
TELEVISION
FIJI TIMES URGES GOVERNMENT TO DROP CONTROVERSIAL DRAFT MEDIA BILL
Pacific Media Watch: 31 May 2003
The Fiji Times, the country's largest and most influential media organisation, has called on the government to withdraw its controversial draft media law, saying the proposal would all but deprive Fiji Islanders of their right to freedom of expression. "If government is prepared to drop this draft entirely, it does not mean the media of Fiji is the only winner. Everyone wins," the newspaper's board of directors said in its submission.
TELEVISION
MEDIA CRITICS BLAST ANGLO-AMERICAN WAR ON IRAQ COVERAGE
Pacific Media Watch: 8 May 2003
Two media critics have strongly criticised New Zealand and some global media coverage of the Anglo-American war on Iraq especially television describing it as biased and "failing spectacularly" to do its job. The attacks came in two separate seminars in Wellington by Scoop editor Alastair Thompson and in Auckland by Auckland University of Technology senior journalism lecturer David Robie on World Press Freedom Day.
TRANSNATIONALS
TRANZ RAIL WINS ROGER AWARD FOR THIRD TIME OVER 'CORPORATE GREED'
Asia Pacific Network: 2 May 2003
Tranz Rail has won the Roger Award for New Zealand's worst transnational corporation for an unprecedented third time, Foreign Control Watchdog reports in its latest issue. And the company was accused of "corporate greed".
MEDIA
FIJI TV'S MONOPOLY, OWNERSHIP AND THE COMMERCE COMMISSION
Asia Pacific Network: 24 April 2003
Lagging behind in commerce and pressured by globalisation, Fijians urgently need TV programs that will educate them about where their world is going, nationally and globally. Fijians also need TV programs that will help preserve and strengthen Fijian language and culture, also rapidly eroded by globalisation. But, despite its Fijian ownership, Fiji TV is a failure with respect to both sets of objectives. By Dr Wadan Narsey
MEDIA
CENSORING THE PACIFIC MEDIA - MEDIAWATCH COMMENTARY
Asia Pacific Network: 13 April 2003
Shooting the messenger is a favourite sport among many South Pacific politicians. Every so often the hunting season reopens with a flourish. And right now open season has been declared, particularly in Papua New Guinea, Tonga and Kiribati, where recent legal moves have become an ominous threat to the Pacific's freedom of the press. By David Robie
WAR ON CONFLICT
ARAB VOLUNTEERS BATTLE US TROOPS IN BAGHDAD, REPORTS AL-JAZEERA
Asia Pacific Network: 26 March-21 April 2003
Twenty-one Iraqis were killed and one United States Marine was shot dead in separate firefights in Baghdad, only a day after invading US-led forces occupied the centre of the capital. Large numbers of non-Iraqi Arab fighters took to the streets resisting the US forces in several areas. And where is Saddam Hussein? Check out Cursor's media patrol.
Other reports:
>> David Robie: The media disinformation war, May 3
>> John Pilger: Something deeply corrupt is consuming journalism, April 25
>> George McGovern: The reason why, April 11
>> John Pilger: Crime against humanity, April 10
>> War toll on journalists, April 8
>> Pictures the US media don't want you to see, April 7
>> Al Jazeera suspends Iraq broadcasts, April 3
>> US newspaper sacks photographer over faked photo, April 3
>> Who is next for 'liberation'? - a Pacific view, April 2
>> Peter Arnett sacked after Iraq TV interview, April 1
>> Al-Jazeera in the news, March 29
>> Russell Brown's Hard News spin on al-Jazeera , March 28
>> The US Lone Star rides off into the sunset, March 28
>> Russell Brown's Hard News weblog, March 28
>> Hackers attack al-Jazeera for showing US dead, March 28
>> One rule for them: Five PoWs are mistreated in Iraq and the US cries foul. What about Guantanamo Bay? March 25
>> Wansolwara Online: Fiji peace groups continue vigil against war on Iraq, March 25
>> Robert Fisk: Saddam starts to sound like Uncle Joe, March 25
>> The Media Column: 'More news doesn't always mean better news', March 25
>> BBC reporter visits Baghdad's wounded, March 25
>> Frontline news: reporters face new wartime hazards, March 24
>> John Pilger: A compliant press - backgrounder before the war began, March 21, 2002
>> John Pilger's Iraq file
>> Café Pacific's picture and cartoon gallery
>> Reporters Sans Frontières special Iraq war reports
>> MediaChannel's special background reports
>> BBC World
PAPUA NEW GUINEA
PROPOSED LAW MOOTED BY MPs TO GAG LOCAL AND FOREIGN CRITICS
Pacific Media Watch: 4 April 2003
POLITICS
WEST PAPUAN STRUGGLE GAINS GROUND - AND CLOUT WITH NEW VANUATU OFFICE
Asia Pacific Network: 31 March 2003
MEDIA
JOHN PILGER BLASTS NZ INTERVIEW 'DISGRACE' OVER INVASION OF IRAQ
Pacific Media Watch: 22 March 2003
Television New Zealand interviewer Kim Hill has been stunned by a stinging personal attack from independent Australian journalist John Pilger during their television interview about the US-led invasion of Iraq. Pilger accused Hill of not being prepared for the interview and labelled their 25-minute session "a disgrace". The interview for Face to Face with Kim Hill was conducted between Hill in Wellington and Pilger at TVNZ's Sydney studio. By Louisa Cleave, of the NZ Herald. >> More pictures
MEDIA
ACCUSED JOURNALIST, EX MP LIED HEAVILY, SAYS JUDGE CONVICTING THEM OF TREASON
Pacific Media Watch: 22 March 2003
MIDDLE EAST
THE ROVING EYE: THIS WAR IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY ... 'SHOWDOWN IRAQ'
Asia Times Online: 20 March 2003
MEDIA
BANNED TONGAN NEWSPAPER PUBLISHER CALLS FOR 'FIGHT FOR JUSTICE'
Pacific Media Watch: 15 March 2003
The publisher of the banned Taimi 'o Tonga newspaper, Kalafi Moala, tonight told a packed New Zealand audience that Pacific people should join a wider struggle for free speech and against oppression. He told the audience at the "Pollywood Shorts" screening of productions by Pacific film-makers that free speech was vital for Tonga and the rest of the Pacific. By David Robie. New ban on Taimi. Pictured: Film-maker Stan Wolfgramm.
MEDIA
'PAPUA NEW GUINEA ON THE BRINK' - THE CONTROVERSIAL REPORT
Centre for Independent Studies: 12 March 2003
MEDIA
AUSTRALIA CLOSE YET SO FAR FROM PACIFIC ISLAND NEIGHBOURS
Pacific Media Watch: 9 March 2003
The Australian government's dismissive attitude toward its nearest neighbours in the Pacific, including its forcible relocation of unwanted asylum seekers to small island nations there, is sowing resentment from that region. This is what witnesses from both business lobby groups and non-government have been telling a public hearing of the Senate's foreign affairs, defence and trade committee, reports Bob Burton.
MEDIA
THE TAIMI 'O TONGA BAN AND PACIFIC MEDIA HYPOCRISY
Pacific Media Watch: 9 March 2003
MEDIA
THEIR MASTER'S VOICE - OPINION ON MURDOCH'S EDITORS AND WAR
Pacific Media Watch: 2 March 2003
MEDIA
FIJI TIMES BLASTS 'ONE-SIDED' METRO REPORT, 'THE STREET IN FIJI', ON POVERTY AND PROBLEMS
Pacific Media Watch: 1 March 2003
MEDIA
PUBLISHER OF BANNED TIMES OF TONGA NEWSPAPER PLEDGES TO FIGHT ON
Pacific Media Watch: 27 February 2003
www.asiapac.org.fj/cafepacific/resources/aspac/pacmedia03.html
PIMA appeal for banned newspaper readers to rally in support
Government 'insults intelligence' of common Tongans
MEDIA
TAKEUCHI DENIES MOST OF SAMOAN EDITOR'S CONTROVERSIAL EDITORIAL
Pacific Media Watch: 21 February 2003
WARMONGERING
ABC'S ASIA PACIFIC SETS UP SPECIAL WEB RESOURCE ON IRAQ POLITICAL SAGA
RA's Asia Pacific: 15 February 2003
Millions of people in rallies across the world have protested against the planned invasion by US-led military forces. A new Radio Australia special website IRAQ: OUR REGION REACTS is up and running. Editorially, it will be using reports from the ABC's newsroom, Asia-Pacific, Pacific Beat, regional correspondents, and articles and commentaries.
New Zealand rallies for peace: www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/HL0302/S00104.htm
www.abc.net.au/asiapacific/specials/iraq/
TERRORISM
BALI AFTER THE BOMBS - BBC ASIA PACIFIC SPECIAL REPORT

MEDIA
CCF CALLS FOR TV BROADCAST OF COUP DOCO WITH 'SEDITION' FOOTAGE
15 February 2003
INTERNET ABUSE
DAVID ROBIE CHALLENGES US CYBER-STALKER BILL WHITE
8 February 2003
MEDIA
COMMONWEALTH EDITOR SLAMS 'RACIST' WAITANGI NON-MAORI BAN
5 February 2003
MEDIA
INDO-FIJIAN POLITICIANS BLAST SAMOAN PUBLISHER
5 February 2003
MEDIA
AUSTRALIAN PROFESSOR EXPOSES PACIFIC CYBER-STALKER
4 February 2003
Bill White: Cyber-stalker
WAR ON TERRORISM
EMPIRE STRIKES BACK FIRST
30 January 2003
DEVELOPMENT
AUSTRALIAN AID MOTIVES CHALLENGED
30 January 2003
MEDIA
FIJI SUN BLASTS RIVAL PAPERS OVER SUVA's LORD MAYOR CONTROVERSY
29 January 2003
INTERNET ABUSE
DWU CYBERSTALKER BILL WHITE LAUNCHES FRESH ATTACKS
27 January 2003
>> Clown forum
>> Background Coppcar Unmasked
POLITICS
FBI REPORT SAYS CORRUPTION BEHIND FIJI COUP
21 January 2003
CYCLONE AMI
NZ ORION FLIGHT EASES WORST DAMAGE FEARS
16 January 2003
>> RNZAF pictures of cyclone damage at Scoop | >> Geoff Mackley picture at NZ Herald
USP WINS ANOTHER OSSIE AWARD FOR WANSOLWARA
14 January 2003
PRESS FREEDOM IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC: TONGAN LAWSUIT WIN SPARKS OPTIMISM
12 January 2003
CHARGE CHAUDHRY WITH 'SEDITION', SAYS MEDIA MINISTER
11 January 2003
INDONESIAN SHAKE-UP - WILL GOVERNMENT WRECK THRIVING TV INDUSTRY?
11 January 2003
WHY JOURNALISTS ARE 'COWED INTO SILENCE'
4-12 January 2003
SCOOP PHOTOGRAPHER CRITICISES SOME MEDIA OVER COPYRIGHT BREACH
3 January 2003
>>www.rambocam.com
>> The Weekend Australian's report on Mackley's landing on Tikopia
>> Aid boat reaches cyclone-hit Pacific isle - ABC
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