This is a presentation made in Saint Lucia on June 30, 2003 - 15 years ago - when I was asked to talk about the interface between the media and offices such as that of an Ombudsman. I believe it urges early contemplation of a variety of media issues currently of major concern.
There is not a lot I would revise, but there are certainly issues I have thought much more about over the years.
There is not a lot I would revise, but there are certainly issues I have thought much more about over the years.
Nature and dimensions of the media industry in the Caribbean
This
aspect of the discussion requires an exploration of several internal and
external dynamics and the manner in which they relate to each other and would
require a far greater amount of time and energy to adequately address. It is,
however, a most important element of our examination of the role of the mass
media in entrenching the functions of official institutions such as the Office
of an Ombudsman. And so, I would prefer, to offer just a few general comments.
An
initial set of observations we may wish to make would include comments on: the
changing media landscape with special reference to the use of new technologies
and the corresponding emergence of non-traditional media institutions; patterns
of media ownership in the context of neo liberal government policy; the impacts
of these developments on access to the mass media by Caribbean people;
standards of professional performance in the media and the direct and indirect
impact of emerging social policy initiatives on the free press.
The
Changing Media Landscape
The
rapid growth of new information technologies has served to dramatically
diversify the existing range of mass media platforms. There are now debates,
for example, on where Internet-based media ought to located on the national
media landscape and whether persons involved in such activity can be considered
a part of the cadre of mass media professionals.
There
are also issues related to intellectual property and access to the material
being disseminated via these media. Development communicators, in particular,
have been concerned with the possible linkages between these new media and
their traditional counterparts.
Patterns
of Media Ownership
This
area of concern owes much to the traditional dominance of broadcast media in
the region and the manner in which neo-liberal macro-economic policies have
recently influenced a widening of access to ownership of radio and television
systems. The current worldwide debate on the use of broadcast ownership
policies, as opposed to direct content regulation, in order to promote
diversity is not entirely irrelevant, but is certainly not an immediate concern
in most Caribbean jurisdictions. In many instances, though, the continued
insistence on state dominance of the broadcast sector poses a singular threat
to promotion of diverse views and the development of alternative sources of
information and opinion.
Standards
of Professional Performance
There
has been intense and recent debate on the building of higher standards of
professional performance in the Caribbean media. This relates only in part to
the emergence of new technologies, but is by no means exclusive to it.
Governments,
private enterprise, social organisations and the media themselves have often
initiated such discussions. For the most part, media institutions have not
responded very proactively to redress striking deficiencies in the quality of
resources resident in their newsrooms and production departments. This stresses
the need for journalists and media workers to intervene on their own behalf
through the development of professional organisations with a mandate to pursue
new opportunities for training and professional enhancement. The ACM sees this
as among its major priorities.
Emerging
Social Policy Initiatives
The
several social crises that have accompanied Caribbean societies into the new
era have been met by a string of corresponding social policy initiatives. Many
Caribbean societies are, for example, debating cultural policies and new
directions in training and education. New policy frameworks are also being
devised to attend to issues such as conflict and the disintegration of so many
of our societies.
These
initiatives have not been having a neutral impact on the free press. Cultural
policies to counter the impact of what is described as the penetration of
non-Caribbean cultural value systems have led to the proposed imposition of
measures such as broadcast content quotas and other such threats to the free
operation of media enterprises. The ACM is, in this regard, keeping a close eye
on official content-related interventions in the broadcast media including the
somewhat misguided attempt to impose indigenous content quotas.
Matters
of social cohesion also, for example, led in Trinidad and Tobago to formulation
of equal opportunity legislation which, in its initial design, dramatically
threatened notions of free expression and, by extension, the practice of the
free press. In Jamaica, proposed anti-corruption legislation was eventually
amended when it was brought to the government's attention that restrictions on
media reporting on corruption investigations considerably hampered the work of
the free press.
The
region has also recently been characterised by a new era of politics with an
unprecedented string of changes in government and, in some instances, a
rotating of roles between government and opposition. Exposure to this apparent
level of political vulnerability is, in my view, partly responsible for what
can only be described as a new wave of subtle but dangerous threats to free
expression and the free press in our countries.
Implications for enhancing the work of the Ombudsman
Now,
where does all of this leave the Ombudsman? For one, I believe the unfolding scenario
pretty much leaves us on the same side of the information fence. If there isn't
a sufficient and effective basis for asserting a change in the culture of
silence and secrecy afflicting our societies then we may as well just pack up
and go home.
The
truth is, notwithstanding our creative candour as expressed in the calypso and
chutney and other cultural expressions, our small, essentially authoritarian
societies all eventually resort to silence over the risk of change. Witness the
conspiracy of silence over the abuse of women and children. Witness the
institutionalisation of discrimination. Witness the presence of the
untouchables in our societies. We know them all very well. They run free and
they run rampant. They cross the political divide. They are among us. We see
them on the television and they are in the newspapers all the time.
In
some respects, the role of the media and the role of the Ombudsman are almost
identical. Some jurisdictions have entrenched free press and free expression
provisions to ensure that, at least prima facie, the media enjoy the benefit of
constitutional cover for their work. By comparison, such constitutional
protections are not in all instances provided Ombudsmen and their equivalent.
The
fact that there are these mutually inclusive objectives but uneven capabilities
ought to mean the emergence of a level of collaboration which does not now
exist. But this cannot happen if there is not a greater level of confidence in
and respect for our respective roles.
Regional networks and outlets
I
am assuming that this sub-heading of the task I have been assigned refers to
regional media outfits that might be pre-disposed to outputs from the
respective Ombudsman's offices. But it might also relate to existing
information networks with explicit developmental objectives and which bring
professional communicators with their counterparts in the regional press.
I
can be of much more use in making suggestions with respect to the latter group.
In this regard, the Information for Action group
(http://groups.yahoo.com/group/caribinfo/) devised by development communicators
in environment and health and Caribbean journalists about three years ago,
might be a useful platform for messages related to the work of the Ombudsman.
There
are also several international efforts that routinely feed information to
regional and international journalists and communicators on development issues
that can be of use. The Drum Beat Forum
(http://www.comminit.com/drum_beat.html) of the Development Initiative
partnered by institutions such as the Rockefeller Foundation, BBC World Service
Trust, The CHANGE Project, CIDA, Exchange, FAO, Johns Hopkins University Center
for Communication Programs, OneWorld, The Panos Institute, PCI, Soul City, The
Synergy Project, UNAIDS, UNICEF, USAID and WHO can also be quite useful.
Regional and Individual Country Issues
This
sub-heading would require a session of far greater duration than this current
one to do justice to the subject of free press issues in the region. What I can
offer though would be a general comment on the state of the free press in the
region.
I
am convinced that even as there exists relative peace between the major social
actors and the press, there is a pervasive, underlying ambivalence on issues of
the free press that will eventually land us in a lot of trouble very soon. I am
observing the diplomatic, official silence on the recent jailing of journalists
in Cuba; the absence of any direct reference to attacks on the press in Haiti
at multi-lateral discussions with this new CARICOM ally and I am very
uncomfortable with the ease with which it had been possible to use immigration
regulations, that are ostensibly in transition pending a CARICOM single market,
to expel journalists and media workers from some of our jurisdictions.
As
mentioned before, we also need to be equally nervous about the slew of social
policy objectives supportive of notions of development that threaten free
expression and the unhindered work of the mass media, based on misguided notions
of an explicit developmental role for the press.
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