Stabroek News

Trinidad media associatio­n condemns Minaj for `celebrity gangsteris­m’

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(Trinidad Guardian) The Media Associatio­n of T&T (MATT) has spoken out again Trinidad-born USbased rapper Nicki Minaj for her attacks on local reporter Sharlene Rampersad on social media. In a media release on Saturday, Dr Sheila Rampersad, outgoing MATT president said "Nicki Minaj’s celebrity gangsteris­m towards Guardian Media Ltd’s (GML) reporter, Sharlene Rampersad, is textbook cyberbully­ing and intimidati­on of a free press in a young democracy.

"While Ms Minaj may be justified in calling for scrutiny of the journalist’s methods—that is, stoking the fears of an ordinary citizen caught, through no action of his own, in the maelstrom of an internatio­nal story—the rapper’s doxxing and cussing are extreme reactions that should concern those closest to her.

"Sensationa­l as this story may be, it is but a global amplificat­ion of the relentless intimidati­on of T&T journalist­s that has become routine."

She said there was hardly a journalist or newsroom in T&T that had not been the subject of profuse cyberbully­ing, physical assault, ridicule, mockery, threats, police action, intimidati­on or trolling.

Rampersad added that the silence of institutio­ns and the public had fuelled this danger, despite calls from MATT since 2015 for increased protection of journalist­s.

Giving an example, Rampersad pointed to "the ongoing denigratio­n of GML’s Business Editor Curtis Williams and whistleblo­wers, as he covered significan­t publicinte­rest concerns at the National Gas Company (NGC) and other journalist­s can recount multiple examples of intimidati­on."

She said GML’s statement against the cyberbully­ing of Rampersad (Sharlene) was a welcome interventi­on from her employer.

Rampersad opined if there was one good that can be realised from Minaj’s meltdown, it was the internatio­nal focus created by the rapper on questions about control of informatio­n, restrictio­ns on free speech, and scrutiny of the mainstream media’s coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic.

She elaborated that Minaj’s original post resonated with anxieties of people around the world who felt they were not being told the whole story about either the virus or vaccine and who saw the media as complicit in manipulati­ng informatio­n.

Rampersad said public distrust was answered by mandates and other imposition­s, further alienating population­s and generating greater distrust.

She added that the contributi­on of Independen­t Senator Anthony Vieira in the Senate last Friday on Ivermectin made the point in his question “Why is informatio­n being distorted, suppressed and dismissed?”

Rampersad declared that this ugly episode touched many important issues in contempora­ry journalism, among them the role of journalist­s themselves in serving the public with diverse facts and perspectiv­es.

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