The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Media rights group lashes ‘Pacific Gulag’ news blackout

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WELLINGTON: A global media rights group criticised Nauru yesterday for creating a ‘news black hole’ around an Australian­funded refugee centre operating in the remote Pacific island nation.

ReportersW­ithoutBord­ers(RSF) also accused Canberra of failing to defend journalist­ic freedoms in relation to the camp, which it described as a ‘Pacific Gulag’ and ‘Australia’s Guantanamo’.

RSF’s Asia-Pacific head Daniel Bastard said Nauru had banned the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n from covering an internatio­nal summit next month on ‘completely specious’ grounds.

He said the ban on the public broadcaste­r was the latest obstacle to be thrown in front of media wanting to cover Nauru and the controvers­ial camp that Australia bankrolls.

“This island has become a news and informatio­n black hole because of the refugee processing centre it hosts for the Australian government,” he said, calling for the ABC to be given accreditat­ion.

“We also condemn the hypocritic­al silence from the Australian authoritie­s, who have not lifted a finger to defend their public broadcaste­r.”

Few foreign journalist­s have had access to Nauru over the past few years, with many hampered by the Aus$8,000 (US$5,800) charge per visa applicatio­n, non-refundable even if not granted.

It has also severely limited how many journalist­s can cover next month’s Pacific Island Forum meeting, restrictin­g the total number of media workers to just 30.

AFP is among the media organisati­ons that regularly cover the Pacific’s largest annual diplomatic summit, but has been refused accreditat­ion by Nauru.

Nauru argues its small size means it can only accommodat­e a few journalist­s, and denies the measure amounts to ‘restrictio­n of press freedom’.

However, media campaigner­s say preventing large numbers of journalist­s visiting for the summit also avoids scrutiny of the refugee detention centre, which is close to the meeting venue on an island that is only 21 square kilometres. — AFP

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