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FIJI
Fiji’s diverse and energetic media have remained
strong despite ongoing political instability in the country. Tensions
between indigenous Fijians and the ethnic Indian population dominate political
and social life and are often played out in the media, which include several
English- and Hindi-language newspapers, the partially privatized Fiji
TV, and two major radio broadcasters that operate English-, Fijian-, and
Hindi-language channels.
Two years after a failed coup by businessman George
Speight, who claimed to be fighting for the rights of indigenous Fijians,
the battle for power has moved from the streets to the courtroom. In February,
Speight was sentenced to life in prison for treason, and legal proceedings
against other coup participants dragged on throughout the year. Meanwhile,
the opposition Indo-Fijian Labour Party, which was ousted during the 2000
uprising, directly challenged the legitimacy of Prime Minister Laisenia
Qarase’s government. The party brought a court case against Qarase, an
ethnic Fijian, claiming he had failed to abide by constitutional requirements
to form a multiethnic coalition government after narrowly winning general
elections in August 2001. The High Court ruled in favor of the Indo-Fijian
Labour Party, and the case is slated to go before the Supreme Court in
2003.
Members of the local media told CPJ that they were
able to report on these sensitive court proceedings without significant
interference, and that violent attacks and harassment against journalists
had declined under the Qarase administration. Nevertheless, some officials
launched verbal attacks on the media for exposing social or political
problems. Qarase dedicated three pages of an official speech to criticizing
Fiji TV, calling the station “eager beavers famous for its spin and bias.”
In August, a senator who is also a Methodist minister, responded to media
reports of financial irregularities in the church by calling journalists
“agents of some powerful foreign agencies, agents of evil planning against
Christianity.” A week later, on the Senate floor, another legislator blamed
journalists for the breakdown of Fijian society. “They are indeed Satan’s
agents and forces,” he said. “They are mad crazy loonies and crazy people.”
Ofa Swann, a member of the opposition New Labour
Party, called on her colleagues in Parliament to stop using their positions
to lambaste the country’s journalists. She also advocated raising journalists’
salaries, an issue of major concern for those in the media industry. “The
media can be both convenient and annoying,” she said. “However, they are
there for a reason, and they are not just there for politicians.”
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