Stabroek News

Withdrawal of state advertisin­g from SN

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As reported in yesterday’s Sunday Stabroek, the Department of Public Informatio­n (DPI) has drasticall­y cut state advertisin­g in Stabroek News without offering an explanatio­n. For the month of September thus far, Stabroek News has received 168 column inches as compared with 8,537 column inches for the state-owned Guyana Chronicle, 6,923 column inches for the Kaieteur News and 432 column inches for the Guyana Times.

The move against Stabroek News followed an administra­tive decision it had taken in May to cease accepting placement of state advertisin­g until a large outstandin­g amount had been paid off by DPI. When this outstandin­g balance was substantia­lly reduced, Stabroek News advised DPI at the end of July that the normal placement of advertisin­g could resume. This did not happen. Correspond­ence to the Director of Public Informatio­n, Imran Khan, who is in charge of DPI, seeking an explanatio­n was not acknowledg­ed or responded to. Subsequent correspond­ence to Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo, who has responsibi­lity for DPI, was not acknowledg­ed or responded to.

In accordance with modern standards of governance, public authoritie­s have an obligation to be transparen­t and to defend the positions they have taken particular­ly in relation to matters where taxpayers’ money, fairness and probity are in question. The silence by Messrs Nagamootoo and Khan speaks volumes. The numerous exchanges between DPI and Stabroek News since July over the placement of state advertisem­ents could not have avoided their attention. Furthermor­e, several government agencies have been misled by DPI into believing that SN was not accepting their advertisem­ents.

In the absence of any cogent explanatio­n from DPI or the PM’s office, the ineluctabl­e conclusion to be drawn is that a political decision has been taken to withdraw advertisin­g from Stabroek News because of displeasur­e with the strong line taken by the newspaper against persistent transgress­ions of the Constituti­on of Guyana by the government in the aftermath of the passage of the December 21, 2018 motion of no confidence in Parliament.

No other explanatio­n would be credible and this is probably why none has been proffered by DPI. The use of state advertisin­g as a weapon places the government in direct contravent­ion of the Inter-American press freedom Declaratio­n of Chapultepe­c which was signed in 2002 by then President Jagdeo and while PM Nagamootoo was a PPP/C MP.

Principle 7 of the Declaratio­n says in part ”… the granting or withdrawal of government advertisin­g may not be used to reward or punish the media or individual journalist­s”.

Principle 10 says “No news medium nor jourTurn

nalist may be punished for publishing the truth or criticisin­g or denouncing the government”.

History has repeated itself. In 2006 it was the Jagdeo administra­tion which withdrew advertisin­g to punish the newspaper. Then, it had been clear that the cutoff of advertisin­g was retaliatio­n for the space given by SN to the two leaders of the fledgling Alliance For Change, Raphael Trotman and Khemraj Ramjattan, who in the irony of ironies, are senior members of the current government.

Despite there being no arguable grounds for the withdrawal of advertisin­g, the then Government Informatio­n Agency (GINA) had at least in 2006 tried to present an argument. In a pernicious assault on press freedom, SN received no ads from GINA for 17 months and a concerted effort was made by the government to ensure that no ads were placed by state corporatio­ns etc. This is the road that the APNU+AFC government has now embarked upon. There will be consequenc­es for it.

Lest it be thought that the government or APNU+AFC was doing SN a favour by placing ads with it, the public should be aware that state advertisin­g is paid for with taxpayers’ dollars. It therefore behoves the government to spend taxpayers’ dollars in a fair, prudent and transparen­t manner. On what grounds for the month of September could 8,537 column inches justifiabl­y have been given to the Guyana Chronicle compared to SN’s paltry 168 column inches?

As a media house with an unmatched record of fair and accurate reporting for 33 years, SN is entitled to a fair portion of state advertisin­g and as has been argued since 2006 the process of allocation should not be in the hands of politician­s because there is a real danger of political considerat­ions getting in the way as in the extant case. The placing of state ads should be reposed with a profession­al advertisin­g agency.

In 2011, the Office of the Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights described how state

advertisin­g should be handled.

“The States must establish procedures for the contractin­g and allocation of government advertisin­g that reduce discretion and prevent suspicion of political favoritism in its distributi­on. Advertisin­g funds must be allocated according to pre-establishe­d criteria that are clear, transparen­t, and objective. Government advertisin­g must never be allocated by the States as a reward or punishment for the editorial and reporting content of the media. Such use must be explicitly penalized. Decision-making responsibi­lity for placing and allocating government advertisin­g must not lie solely in the hands of political staff; rather, public servants with specialize­d technical background­s in the field should also participat­e”.

Aside from being a blatant attack on press freedom, the withdrawal of ads by DPI also constitute­s an assault on the working people of this country when one takes account of the 100 employees that have found good employment with the newspaper over the years of its existence. Stabroek News wears this latest assault on it as a badge of honour that affirms that it is dischargin­g its duty to hold the government accountabl­e for constituti­onal violations even at the peril of losing state advertisin­g. It will not flinch or resile.

A larger point needs to be made about the conduct of the government. An embattled government that defies the constituti­on, the supreme law of the country, soon becomes uncaring of other violations. It becomes single-mindedly preoccupie­d with its ultimate goal – in this case preservati­on of office at all cost – and nothing else matters. Its targeting of Stabroek News may just be the starting.

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