The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Backlash begins over Michael Jackson abuse documentar­y

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LOS ANGELES: Some radio stations in Canada and the Netherland­s stopped playing Michael Jackson’s music and fans bombarded Oprah Winfrey with hateful messages after the broadcast of a documentar­y about alleged child abuse by the late singer.

“Leaving Neverland,” in which two adult men say they were befriended by Jackson and were abused by him from the ages of seven and 10 in the early 1990s, was met with a mixture of horror and disbelief after a twopart airing on US cable channel HBO on Sunday and Monday.

Winfrey, herself a sexual assault survivor, conducted her own follow-up interview with accusers Wade Robson and James Safechuck in a special that was broadcast on Monday night in front of an audience of assault victims.

Winfrey was aware of the attacks they might face.

“All the anger - you guys are going to get it,” she said during the interview. “You’re going to get it. I’m going to get it. We’re all going to get it.” Robson told Winfrey he had already received death threats.

Jackson’s family has called the documentar­y and news coverage of the accusation­s in it a “public lynching” and said he was “100 per cent innocent.”

His estate has called the documentar­y a “rehash of dated and discredite­d allegation­s,” and filed a lawsuit against HBO in February, saying it breached a 1992 agreement that the cable channel would not disparage Jackson.

The “Thriller” singer, who died in June 2009, was acquitted at a 2005 trial in California on charges of molesting a different 13-year-old boy at his Neverland ranch in California. In 1994, he settled a sexual abuse lawsuit concerning another 13 year-old boy.

“Leaving Neverland,” which features detailed interviews with Robson, Safechuck and their mothers and wives, will be shown in Britain and in other nations later this month.

Dutch station NH radio said it would stop playing Jackson’s music for a few weeks.

“I don’t think people can listen to the songs the same way anymore. They are supposed to make you happy, make you sing and dance,” NH radio editor Arjan Snijders said in a Tuesday broadcast.

Canada’s Cogeco Media, which owns several radio stations in Montreal, said it had temporaril­y pulled Jackson’s songs from airplay because of the documentar­y.

“We are attentive to the comments of our listeners, and the documentar­y released on Sunday evening created reactions,” Cogeco Media spokeswoma­n Christine Dicaire said in a statement. “We prefer to observe the situation by removing the songs from our stations, for the time being.”

Streaming music services Spotify and Apple Music and radio network iHeartRadi­o did not respond to requests for comment on their policy regarding Jackson following the documentar­y.

Jackson’s fans worldwide rallied round the singer using the Twitter hashtag #MJInnocent. Some of them raised funds to pay for posters on London buses with the slogan “Facts Don’t Lie. People do. MJInnocent.”

“So many in media, inc @Oprah, blindly taking #LeavingNev­erland at face value, shaping a narrative uninterest­ed in facts, proof, credibilit­y,” Jackson’s brother Jermaine wrote on Twitter.

“jermaine - come on,” replied actress Rosie O’Donnell, saying she believed the accusers. — Reuters

Some radio stations in Canada and the Netherland­s stopped playing Michael Jackson’s music and fans bombarded Oprah Winfrey with hateful messages after the broadcast of a documentar­y about alleged child abuse by the late singer.

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Michael Jackson was accused of child abuse.

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