The Star Malaysia

Aussie billionair­e to invest in journalism institute

-

Sydney: A billionair­e Australian philanthro­pist vowed to spend at least A$100mil (RM303mil) of her fortune to create a journalism institute committed to “the pursuit of truth”.

Judith Neilson said the Sydneybase­d institute would “celebrate and encourage quality journalism in Australia and the world” at a time of “massive change” and challenges for the news media.

“Journalism doesn’t just need critics, it needs champions – people and institutio­ns with the resources to help educate, encourage and connect journalist­s and their audience in pursuit of excellence,” she said.

The Zimbabwe-born Neilson, a prominent patron of the arts in Sydney, said the Judith Neilson Institute for Journalism and Ideas would run educationa­l programmes and events and provide grants for the developmen­t of independen­t, non-partisan reporting.

Neilson said one of the first priorities of the organisati­on once it is formally launched in 2019 would be to support more “informed, intelligen­t” reporting on Asia.

“As an avid consumer of news, I recognise the need to support evidence-based journalism and the pursuit of truth in an increasing­ly complicate­d and confusing world.”

News organisati­ons in Australia have struggled in recent years with falling revenue and shrinking staff, as giants like Google and Facebook dominate the digital economy.

Neilson’s announceme­nt came the day after an Australian court gave final approval to the biggest media merger in the country’s history, prompting new concerns for the future on independen­t journalism.

The takeover of Fairfax Media, Australia’s oldest newspaper group, by television broadcaste­r Nine Entertainm­ent, is expected to lead to further cutbacks in newsrooms.

The merger left only four major media companies in Australia, dominated by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia