Fiji Times refused extension, media decree amended

Attorney General Aiyaz Sayed Khaiyum said Fiji Times had asked for more time as the cutoff date for the expressions of interest closed last week.

Khaiyum said the media decree is quite clear that all media companies established in the Fiji must be 90 percent local owned.

“Fiji Times had asked for an extension in the three months, they said they wanted to sell their business and that extension has been refused because that goes towards the essence of the decree and so Fiji Times still has the 28th of September 2010 to comply with the provisions of the decree.”

Khaiyum said Fiji Times will close down if it does not comply with the media decree cutoff date.

“The organization needs to comply with the media decree so the decree is quite specific, so if you do not comply with the decree that you business is closed down.”

Meanwhile, amendments have been made to Fiji’s media decree to exempt a number of persons, and organizations from various provisions of the decree.

Those exempted from provisions of the decree include government or statutory bodies, schools and universities that have websites and others as stipulated in the amendment.

Khaiyum said those exempted will not have to apply for registration of their businesses or websites, and the exemptions will be made by Prime Minister  Frank Bainimarama, the military chief who is also the minister for information.

“What the decree does is that it moves a step further in the sense that it gives the prime minister the powers to exempt the application of the decree to certain organizations in the first place. For example some schools who have a website who may have a newsletter — so they may say oh we fall under the decree so we have to apply for the exemption, what this amendment does is to say — it does not apply to you in the first place,” the AG said.

 

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