Today it is Fazeer, yesterday it was Verne Burnett, the day before that it was Tony Fraser, and before them there were Jones Madeira, Afzal Khan, Gideon Hanooman-singh and several other journalists who could claim with different levels of legitimacy and for different shades of reason that their work and the freedom of the state-owned media were infringed by a government in office usurping state property and violating constitutional rights.
But the names mentioned only deal with contemporary times, the last 15 years. Previous to that period, none other than Surujrattan Rambachan, Karl Hudson-Phillips and the leadership of the Organisation of National Reconstruction had cause to take the board and management of state-owned Trinidad and Tobago Television to court for denying them the right to the expression of legitimate political opinion on state television. In a significant judgment, Justice Deyalsingh ruled that the rights of the complainants were violated and that, especially, state-owned media had the responsibility to allow all shades of political opinion to be vented in the public market place for public consumption.
But even before that imbroglio, the infamous James Alva Bain, as chairman of the national broadcasting system inclusive of TTT and 610 Radio, fired the likes of Raoul Pantin, Wilbert Holder, Tony Williams (brother of Eric Williams) Leo DeLeon, Jimmy Maynard and banned from the airwaves of the stations the voices and personalities of Basdeo Panday, Raffique Shah and George Weekes. I refer to the history because we need to place in perspective contemporary events to inform an understanding of what has taken place and, most importantly, to gain an insight into the nature of the problem and what is to be done.
The history shows that our political culture has thrown up politicians who are intolerant of political opinions which are opposed to theirs and are absolutely hostile to those who are critical of them. When in opposition, politicians urge on the media when they are critical of the government of the day. But the moment they are elected, they find every reason to seek to delegitimise media and damn a few of the very journalists they praised the day before when they were in opposition. But curtailment of journalistic freedom is only the most public transgression. Over the decades, the management of state-owned media has been bullied into making them the exclusive tool for government use. On occasion, air time has been corruptly commandeered during an election period: Stations are instructed to pre-empt scheduled programming at the desire of parties/governments to put ministers on the air with the thinnest of excuses that the subject is of national importance.
At another level, party hacks are hired to do the bidding of governing parties disguised as governments: People who have little understanding of media and even less capacity for serious contemplation of the functions of media are placed on boards merely to look after the interest of the party and the government in the narrowest possible conception of that term. Towards the privately-owned media, politicians/governments deny non-compliant media houses of advertising revenue, even refuse them foreign exchange to purchase newsprint. Conversely, heavy massaging is applied to media whose managers are willing to compromise journalistic principles. Incidentally, this is not a T&T phenomenon. In many Caribbean states, media owned by the State are converted into "government-owned;" no pretence here.
This usurpation has had disastrous effects on the operations of state media, on standards of journalism, on the financial viability of those media, with regard to the quality of governance of the country; and has negatively impacted the democracy being attempted. But "irony of ironies," the attempts at keeping state-owned media compliant with government policy and party ambitions have not achieved the objectives of the governments. Control of state media has not saved governments from the wrath of the electorate. If there were more space we could have traced the history of the usurpation of state-owned media and the fortunes of political parties at the next election using the captured media.
The history has shown that the first casualty of any attempt to stifle opinion and to control journalists at the state-owned is the loss of credibility of the media stations. The experience has been that the audience share of state-owned media declines precipitously once it is perceived that the government of the day is interfering. With the decline in audience share goes the advertising dollar, staff morale sinks, suspicion and intrigue take centre stage within the state media as employees most naturally seek to protect their jobs, and if news-carrying is one way to ensure they pay their bills and mortgage at the end of the month, then its "devil takes the hindmost."
Patronage becomes the order of the day, overtaking journalistic integrity, creativity and energy and soon enough governments find themselves in the position of having to bankroll the state media in perpetuity. The culmination of usurpation is that the government of the day gains little as the audience disappears. Ironically, even supporters of the ruling party are no longer interested in viewing and listening to the state-owned media because they are perceived as having little social value. Under the Panday regime of 1995-2001, the National Broadcasting Network, after Mr Panday had excoriated it as a means of having it subject to his will, told UNC supporters that NBN was biased against the Government. At the same time, PNM supporters perceived it as being captive of the ruling UNC. Others outside of both camps became sceptical. Bombarded on all sides, the media house inevitably crashed.
But leading up to that time and when ICN (precursor name to NBN) began turning a profit, the PNM promised privatisation. Manning called the election early and lost but there was no evidence that the government would have kept its word. Indeed, the PNM had another opportunity post 2001 to establish a viable and independent state media; it maintained its grip on the institution. The People's Partnership Government, notwithstanding what has happened in the Fazeer Mohammed case, has an opportunity to evolve a state-owned media house that would meet the requirement for professionalism and independence. Alternatively, the PP Government can continue on the well-trod path of the short history as listed above.
* To be continued