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about avaiki nius agency
Avaiki Nius Agency is an advocate for media centrality, evolving out of a quarter century of islands journalism.
Historically, Avaiki refers to heritage across Polynesia, drawing inspiration from traditional freedom, transparency and accountability. Avaiki is used mostly in the Cook Islands, where this agency was founded in 1999, going online in 2004.
Echoes of Avaiki link islands across the world's largest ocean, starting with Havaiki in Tonga, Hawaiki of Aotearoa, Hawaii in Hawai'i, Havai'i being the ancient name of Raiatea in French Polynesia and Rapa Nui, and, originally, an ancestral Savai'i in Samoa. Nius is wantok for news, the central focus of agency advocacy, alluding also to ancestral missionary day links with Melanesia.
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about avaiki
tiny poll shows small suspicion of foreign corruption
NEWS Nearly 52 weeks after it started, a year-long poll into corruption shows only a tiny majority of visitors cast a vote - with an even tinier majority believing corruption comes mostly from foreign influences. The corruption poll has just 15 hours left to run. Only 38 people from thousands of visitors to the Avaiki Nius Agency blog site have so far voted in the poll. DOZEN Of them, a dozen believe corruption comes from foreign influences. A slightly larger number - 14 - believe corruption is about half and half between local and foreign origins. Ten out of 38 voters believe corruption is mostly "local." Site monitoring services suggest 20,000 unique visitors to the small agency site since going online in May 2004. " EMBARASSING " "It's a bit embarassing to be an advocate for web2 and have so few visitors to my own sites," says agency editor Jason Brown. "As a voluntary effort, I like to delude myself that the agency has a small but influential role to play." Volunteering thousands of hours to web2 futures over the last four years, Brown urges colleagues to take part in the poll before the clock runs out roughly 15 hours from now. WIDER RESPONSE, PLEASE "And to share the link with as wide a range of networks as they can, to get a wider response base to the poll." A better response would help answer questions over whether corruption is caused by mostly foreign or local influences, or half and half, says the agency editor. Avaiki Nius Agency has previously criticised well known organisations like Transparency International, for focusing mainly on the symptoms, not causes of corruption. However, that viewpoint is not one widely shared, at least not among the tiny poll response so far, with the clock ticking down to the last dozen or so hours. . . .
Pacific Freedom Forum 14 Nov Final
Pacific Freedom Forum
Media Statement
PFF calls on Fiji to stop assault on human rights
Friday 14 November, 2008: On behalf of all supporters of a free media in the Pacific region, we the members of the Pacific Freedom Forum (PFF) express our concern and alarm at the Interim Government of Fiji’s escalating campaign of intimidation against media freedom in Fiji.
We respectfully appeal to the Attorney General of Fiji Mr Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum to immediately stop his continuing and unreasonable legal pursuit of Fiji Times editor Netani Rika and Publisher Rex Gardner over the paper’s recent publication of a letter to the Editor which was critical of the High Court of Fiji’s validation of the 2006 military coup.
The Pacific Freedom Forum also directs this appeal to the Interim Prime Minister of Fiji, Commodore the Hon. Voreqe Bainimarama, whose portfolio responsibilities include the Ministry of Information.
Co-chair Susuve Laumaea of Papua New Guinea said, “The PFF has been moved to make its second media statement on this issue in less than two weeks (see the PFF’s 31 October statement PFF warns against growing culture of intimidation in Fiji) because of the Attorney-General’s November 11 announcement that the Government will apply to the High Court to impose jail sentences on the Fiji Times Publisher and Editor over this matter, and is also seeking to impose a hefty fine on the newspaper.”
“We readily acknowledge that professional media standards require that freedom of expression also carries a responsibility to respect the legal rights of others, ” said Laumaea.
“However, we note that the Fiji Times has already publicly and prominently apologised for any legal breach it may have committed, by printing a front page admission that it was in contempt when it published the offending letter to the Editor, and has offered to pay costs.”
PFF Co-chair Samoan journalist Monica Miller, said in any other democratic country, such an apology would be sufficient.
“While we do not condone the Fiji Times’ failure to live up to its own high standards by publishing the letter in question, this careless oversight has already deeply embarrassed a newspaper with a long and proud record in Fiji, and could also lead to a significant financial penalty, “ said Miller.
“We believe that a major lesson to be learned from this affair is that there is an urgent need for higher standards of subediting, and a much stronger commitment by media proprietors in Fiji and around the South Pacific to training journalists in this vital skill,” continued Miller, a past president of the Pacific Islands News Association.
“The people of Fiji should realise that this is not just a media freedom issue. It is a human rights issue.”
The PFF is particularly concerned that the action by the Attorney-General will infringe on the citizens of Fiji’s rights to free speech. People may now think twice about writing letters to the daily papers to express their legitimate thoughts and opinions, in case they somehow upset the Attorney-General (or indeed any other Government official.)
We believe the Attorney-General’s actions are contrary to the “Freedom of Expression” provision enshrined in Chapter 4, Section 30 of the Constitution of Fiji, which states:
(1) Every person has the right to freedom of speech and expression, including:
(a) Freedom to seek, receive and impart information and ideas; and
(b) Freedom of the press and other media.
It also goes against the principles enshrined in Article 19 of the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states:
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.
PFF calls on Fiji’s Interim Prime Minister, His Excellency President Josefa Iloilo, and the nation’s church and community leaders to counsel the Attorney-General to cease these attacks on the inalienable human rights of the people of Fiji.
And we pray that organisations that stand for human rights in Fiji and around the world will join us in lobbying against the actions taken by Fiji’s Attorney General. ENDS
CONTACT:
PFF interim Chair
Susuve Laumaea | Sunday Chronicle Newspaper | Papua New Guinea
Mobile: 675-684 5168 | Office: 675-321-7040 | Email: susuve.laumaea@interoil.com
PFF interim co-Chair
Monica Miller | KHJ Radio | American Samoa
Mob 684 258-4197 | Office 684 633-7793 | Email: monica@khjradio.com
The Pacific Freedom Forum are a regional and global online network of Pacific media colleagues, with the specific intent of raising awareness and advocacy of the right of Pacific people to enjoy freedom of expression and be served by a free and independent media.
We believe in the critical and basic link between these freedoms, and the vision of democratic and participatory governance pledged by our leaders in their endorsement of the Pacific Plan and other commitments to good governance.
In support of the above, our key focus is monitoring threats to media freedom and bringing issues of concern to the attention of the wider regional and international community
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support for sasako over no-show
- vast distances,
- scattered populations,
- traditions,
- persisting colonial influences,
- poor economies and unstable political regimes,
- lack of infrastructure,
- fragmented and insignificant market places for both goods and ideas.”

