https://asiapacificreport.nz/2019/11/04/moale-james-citizen-journalism-countering-deliberate-media-silence-on-west-papua/
Moale James: Citizen journalism countering ‘deliberate’ media silence on
West Papua

By *Pacific Media Watch*
<https://asiapacificreport.nz/author/pacific-media-watch/> -

November 4, 2019

*
<https://asiapacificreport.nz/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/urn-publicid-ap-org-506685e01ab44a23a6dd476c65f6119dIndonesia_Papua_Protests_25214-780x515.jpg>*
“Citizen journalism” coming out of West Papua has created global pressure
on the Indonesian Government. Image: Free West

*OPINION:**  By Moale James*

*What should we expect for the future of media freedom in the Pacific? And
how do we sift through the “bullshit” as emerging journalists? These were
two of the many questions raised at the pre-conference keynote for the
**Melanesian
Media Freedom Forum
<https://www.griffith.edu.au/learning-futures/service-learning/events-and-innovation/melanesian-media-freedom-forum>**
at
Griffith University, Brisbane.*

Attending on the night where various media professionals, many with
extensive careers in the Pacific. A few notable attendees included SBS
correspondent Stefan Armbruster, retired foreign correspondent Sean Dorney,
radio journalist Pauline Nare and academic Dr Tess Newton Cain.

Key note speaker, Professor David Robie focused the night’s conversation on
the lack of media freedom in West Papua with the main issue being the lack
of international media attention and its effect on opportunities to make
positive humanitarian changes.

*READ MORE:* WEST PAPUA: PMC director blasts politicians, media over
‘shameful silence’ on rights violations
<https://pmc.aut.ac.nz/pacific-media-watch/pmc-director-blasts-politicians-media-over-shameful-silence-west-papua-rights>

To date, 528,000 West Papuans have lost their lives
<https://asiapacificreport.nz/2017/09/21/west-papua-five-facts-about-indonesias-dark-dirty-secret/>
to
a slow-motion genocide.

Dr Robie and audience members expressed their disgust and concern at the
silence and inaction from international governments and the lack of media
reporting on these events



With a death toll as high as this, it becomes clear that the lack of
journalistic reporting on this issue is a deliberate decision. This is not
a number that can simply be ignored.

Dr Robie likened the media situation in West Papua to the cases of imprisoned
female investigative journalists in Iran
<https://asiapacificreport.nz/2019/10/18/iran-a-hugely-friendly-country-behind-the-sabre-rattling/>.
The deliberate action of imprisoning critical journalists who are exposing
human rights abuses is a mirrored pattern in the Pacific.

However, although there are international journalists being imprisoned
there is an exciting emergence of “citizen journalism” a term that
describes the creation, collection and distribution of news and information
by the public on the internet and social media.

West Papuans are using the resources that they have on the ground and in
their hands to capture the human rights abuses they are experiencing and
actively sharing these online, forcing open the eyes of the world onto the
slow genocide occurring in West Papua.

The “citizen journalism” coming out of West Papua has created global
pressure on the Indonesian Government, which initiated a blackout across
West Papua
<https://asiapacificreport.nz/2019/09/02/three-more-dead-in-west-papua-as-confronting-video-emerges/>
on
August 21, 2019  in response to the growing unrest. Black spots are still
active today in Jayapura and Manokwari.

Coming to the end of the keynote presentation, Dr Robie unfurled the West
Papuan flag  from behind the podium. In an act of solidarity, he asked all
attendants to stand with him and make the promise that they would endeavour
to be honest, passionate and critical journalists when it came to writing
about the atrocities in West Papua.

If mainstream media are deliberately choosing not to report on the events
in West Papua, then independent journalists must make the conscious
decision to do so instead.

As the lecture came to an end it became clear that conversations around
West Papua did not simply end with the slideshow. Conversations and
deliberate actions of those present following this event are sure to be the
catalyst for change for media freedom in not only West Papua but across the
Pacific.

Papua Merdeka from Sorong to Samarai.

   -

   *Moale James is a student at the University of Queensland undertaking
   her Bachelor in Journalism. Moale also proudly identifies as a mixed-race
   Papua New Guinean-Australian.*

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