Pacific Media Watch

17 September 2014

FIJI: RSF condemns 'out of proportion' blackout before historic poll

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Voters out in force early at a Suva polling station in the Fiji general election today. Image: Deborah Steele/twitter
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PARIS (Reporters sans Frontières / Pacific Media Watch): Reporters Without Borders condemns the drastic media blackout that Fiji’s government imposed for the past two days on today's parliamentary elections.

FromMonday morning until close of polls today, news media and journalists could be jailed or fined if they breach the Elections Decree.

The government’s grounds for imposing the ban 48 hours ahead of these historic elections are to prevent excessive influence on voters.

As well as banning any ads promoting political parties and candidates, election decree No. 11 forbids interviews and political debates about the elections. The ban also applies to all news websites and online social networks, although how this aspect of the decree will be enforced is not explained.

The decree also applies to foreign journalists if their media are accessible to the Fijian public. The Media Industry Development Authority (MIDA) has said that media may publish information provided by the national electoral office if they submit their reports to the MIDA prior to publication.

Paragraph 4 says anyone contravening the decree could face up to 10 years in prison or a fine of 50,000 Fijian dollars (20,000 euros).

'Scale of censorship'
“The scale of the censorship imposed by this decree is out of all proportion,” said Benjamin Ismaïl, the head of the Reporters Without Borders Asia-Pacific desk.

“While restrictions on publishing opinion polls, projections, partial results and even political advertising are completely understandable, banning all political commenting for several days and introducing prior censorship is both draconian and unenforceable.”

A total of 450 journalists, including 37 foreign journalists, have been accredited to cover the elections.

Although the blackout has been in effect for the past two days, several online information sources report that posts on online social networks are directly violating the decree. Nonetheless, no one has so far been punished.

Reporters Without Borders and the Pacific Media Centre have recommended a constitutional amendment and adoption of a freedom of information law in Fiji in their joint submission to the UN Human Rights Council ahead of Fiji’s Universal Periodic Review by the council next month.

Fiji is 107th out of 180 countries in the 2014 Reporters Without Borders press freedom index.

Pacific Scoop elections coverage

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