An event aimed at showcasing the Gayoom government’s “commitment to press freedom†ended in farce on Monday when Foreign Minister Dr Shaheed and Information Minister Mohamed Nasheed both inexplicably failed to turn up, while Fisheries Minister Abdullah Kamaluddeen slept through most of the meeting.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs organized the event, inviting journalists from across the political spectrum to come to Darubaruge in Male’ at 1:30pm. In addition to reporters, Maldivian Democratic Chairperson Mohamed Nasheed (Anni) also attended.
“We were told that Dr Shaheed and the Information Minister would be present. It was rumoured that they would announce a raft of new press regulations,†said Minivan News correspondent Will Jordan, who was at the event.
Jordan and other participants were disappointed, however, when advertised keynote speakers failed to appear, leaving only Chief Government Spokesperson Mohamed Hussain Shareef (Mundhu) to represent the regime’s views on press freedom.
Fortunately, the British High Commissioner to Colombo, Dominick Chilcott, was also on hand and spoke about the value of a free media from the perspective of a successful democracy.
Despite the best efforts of the two featured speakers, they nevertheless failed to engage the assembled press corps, who were perhaps understandably wary after hearing several unfulfilled promises of increasing media freedom over the last year.
When Mundhu opened the floor to questions from the assembled journalists, “There was an uncomfortable silence, and unimpressed journalists stared blankly at the government spokesperson,†Jordan reported.
In typically blunt fashion, Anni broke the silence, announcing, “The ministers haven’t turned up, this clearly isn’t going to plan. We might as well break for lunch.â€
Mundhu explained that the ministers had been “tied up on business,†while Dominick Chilcott tried to reassure the skeptical audience that Shaheed and Nasheed were not “trying to pull a fast one†and deliberately evading journalists. Nevertheless, members of the press had already begun to leave. The meeting was not reconvened.
Had the meeting yielded an announcement of improved press freedom legislation or even a healthy debate on the state of the media in Maldives, it may have proved a badly needed publicity boost for the government, currently under fire from some quarters for continuing a crack-down on press freedom.
On Friday, Maldivian immigration officials deported Minivan News journalist Phillip Wellman, a US national, and banned him from returning to the country for two years.
The government claimed Wellman did not have the “proper authorization†to visit the country, while Minivan News assessed that the government made a politically motivated immigration decision against a journalist.
Wellman’s expulsion is the latest in a series of attacks on press freedom, including the continued prosecution of reporters under old, draconian regulations.
While the government has verbalized a commitment to press freedom on many occasions, there is minimal evidence to date that legislators have taken any concrete steps to protect journalists.
Today’s “Press Freedom Seminar†did not even proffer the standard rhetoric, sadly echoing instead the silence that plagues oppressed journalists in the Maldives.