The Post

Stuff introduces new charter following apology toMa¯ori

- KatarinaWi­lliams

Stuff has introduced a new company charter with Te Tiriti o Waitangi at its core, after a major internal investigat­ion uncovered evidence of racism and marginalis­ation against Ma¯ori.

The media company issued an historic public apology today after its Our Truth, Ta¯ Ma¯tou Pono investigat­ion, which saw about 20 Stuff journalist­s scrutinise its portrayal and representa­tion of Ma¯ori from its early editions to now.

The findings unearthed numerous examples of journalism practices denying Ma¯ori an equitable voice in Aotearoa.

Stuff chief executive Sinead Boucher said it was imperative the company reckoned with its past but denied the investigat­ion was an exercise in political correctnes­s or being ‘‘woke’’.

‘‘I don’t buy into that at all. If you think the job of the news media, in our company and others, is to hold the powerful to account, well, we are the powerful.

‘‘We really have had an enormous impact in shaping public thought in New Zealand and societal norms, not just reflecting them, and I think it is only fitting that a progressiv­e company can pause and have a look at itself,’’ Boucher said.

She acknowledg­ed the presence of racism and unconsciou­s bias in the company’s digital and print products over its 163-year

history, and too often a monocultur­al approach had been taken that prioritise­d Pa¯keha¯ world views.

Boucher was adamant Stuff could not hold others to account without facing up to its own past as a first step towards repairing the harm the company’s history has caused to its relationsh­ip with Ma¯ori.

‘‘When the project started, we didn’t know what we were going to find. They didn’t start off with a particular agenda . . . we just thought it was really critical that if we were going to embed the Treaty principles into our charter that we need to do that examinatio­n and be up for whatever difficult finding might come out of it.

‘‘After doing a deep examinatio­n . . . the finding was that, over time, there had been many instances of where you could say that the work that our papers produced could have perpetuate­d negative stereotype­s or misconcept­ions against Ma¯ori.’’

Boucher said she ‘‘struggled to think of a more important piece of work that our newsroom has produced’’.

The new charter lays out Stuff’s commitment to ‘‘redressing wrongs and to doing better in future in ways that will help foster trust in our work, deeper relationsh­ips with Ma¯ori and better representa­tion of contempora­ry Aotearoa’’.

Boucher also acknowledg­ed Ma¯ori were under-represente­d in Stuff’s newsrooms, something the company ‘‘definitely [had] to address and redress’’.

In May, Boucher took control of Stuff from its previous Australian owners, Nine. The shift into New Zealand ownership provides the company with the opportunit­y to reset and reposition the business, and its value system, she said.

‘‘Our people advocated for the Treaty principles of partnershi­p, participat­ion and protection to be embedded in our new strategy.

‘‘The Stuff charter sets down a pou tiaki (guard post) to ensure we guard against this kind of inequity in our reporting and business practices in the future.

‘‘Our wish is to be a trusted partner for tangata whenua for generation­s to come,’’ Boucher said.

 ??  ?? Stuff chief executive Sinead Boucher says: ‘‘Our wish is to be a trusted partner for tangata whenua for generation­s to come.’’
Stuff chief executive Sinead Boucher says: ‘‘Our wish is to be a trusted partner for tangata whenua for generation­s to come.’’

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