Much criticism of both the local and international media’s role during the May 2000 coup in Fiji emerged after the crisis. Critics included editors and journalists of the local and international media and political and historical analysts who knew the ‘real reasons’ behind the coup and did not see this being reported. This article analyses interviews with 17 journalists, 13 local four foreign reporters, who covered the coup, and their reaction to criticisms made against them over coverage. It also assesses possible effects on some journalists by the so-called Stockholm syndrome because of their close association with businessman George Speight and his fellow captors who held the Mahendra Chaudhry government hostage for 56 days
The coup polarised the races in Fiji— or so it seemed, thus creating a situation in which many repor...
This case study on the state of the media in Fiji in 2016 highlights some problems of development jo...
A tragic result of the repressive media environment in Fiji has been a huge brain drain within the i...
Speight and seven renegade members of the élite 1st Meridian Squadron special forces engulfed the Fi...
In May 1999, Mahendra Pal Chaudhry was sworn in as the first Indo-Fijian Prime Minister of Fiji. A y...
This special edition of Fijian Studies looks at the mainstream news media in Fiji. The journal attem...
Brigadier-General Sitiveni Rabuka, the former prime minister of Fiji who gained notoriety for stagin...
In May 2000 a gang of soldiers and failed politicians, with George Speight at their head, burst into...
Fiji has endured four coups in the past 22 years. On 10 April 2009, President Ratu Josefa Iloilo sus...
May 19, 2000. Fiji’s democratically elected multiracial government is hijacked by a group of armed g...
Fiji Television's Close-Up programme on 28 May 2000 featured an outspoken media analysis o...
In a time of crisis, when there is a signifi cant amount of uncertainty about the means and motivati...
Both the Fiji Times and the Daily Post reinforced the colonial myth that Fijian ...
This article examines the cultural, political, ethnic and economic forces that have shaped the evolu...
During the violent coup staged by businessman George Speight in Fiji in May 2000, accurate informati...
The coup polarised the races in Fiji— or so it seemed, thus creating a situation in which many repor...
This case study on the state of the media in Fiji in 2016 highlights some problems of development jo...
A tragic result of the repressive media environment in Fiji has been a huge brain drain within the i...
Speight and seven renegade members of the élite 1st Meridian Squadron special forces engulfed the Fi...
In May 1999, Mahendra Pal Chaudhry was sworn in as the first Indo-Fijian Prime Minister of Fiji. A y...
This special edition of Fijian Studies looks at the mainstream news media in Fiji. The journal attem...
Brigadier-General Sitiveni Rabuka, the former prime minister of Fiji who gained notoriety for stagin...
In May 2000 a gang of soldiers and failed politicians, with George Speight at their head, burst into...
Fiji has endured four coups in the past 22 years. On 10 April 2009, President Ratu Josefa Iloilo sus...
May 19, 2000. Fiji’s democratically elected multiracial government is hijacked by a group of armed g...
Fiji Television's Close-Up programme on 28 May 2000 featured an outspoken media analysis o...
In a time of crisis, when there is a signifi cant amount of uncertainty about the means and motivati...
Both the Fiji Times and the Daily Post reinforced the colonial myth that Fijian ...
This article examines the cultural, political, ethnic and economic forces that have shaped the evolu...
During the violent coup staged by businessman George Speight in Fiji in May 2000, accurate informati...
The coup polarised the races in Fiji— or so it seemed, thus creating a situation in which many repor...
This case study on the state of the media in Fiji in 2016 highlights some problems of development jo...
A tragic result of the repressive media environment in Fiji has been a huge brain drain within the i...