OZ MEDIA PROTESTS: NO NEWS ON PAGE 1
Redacted front pages of major Australian newspapers on Monday. The move was part of a coordinated campaign by the country’s media to highlight government secrecy that is often justified on national security grounds.
CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA: Australia’s major newspapers published redacted front pages on Monday in a coordinated campaign to highlight government secrecy that is often justified on national security grounds.
Rival media businesses first banded together to fight for press freedom in June after police raided the Canberra home of a News Corp journalist and the Sydney headquarters of Australian Broadcasting Corp in search of leaked government documents that had formed the basis of news reports embarrassing to the government.
A former army lawyer has been charged over the leaks and several journalists could also be charged.
The newspaper front pages ask: When government keeps the truth from you, what are they covering?
Examples of secrecy include the government’s refusal to disclose which nursing homes haven been found to abuse and neglect elderly residents.
The government also did not disclose how much agricultural land has been sold to foreign entities.
“Australians should always be suspicious of governments that want to restrict their right to know what’s going on,” News Corp Australia’s executive chairman Michael Miller said.
The media campaign began on the day the new Australian federal police commissioner Reece Kershaw testified for the first time before a senator committee that is holding an ongoing inquiry into police issues.
Kershaw, who has been in charge of police for less than three weeks, said he planned to meet news editors soon to discuss their concerns on press freedom.
“Police independence and freedom of the press are both fundamental pillars that coexist in our democracy,” Kershaw said.
“I strongly believe in these two pillars.”