Journalists must seek permission to go to Fiji
AAP
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Foreign reporters must now seek permission to set foot on Fijian soil, says the embattled military-led government, after throwing out a New Zealand journalist on Tuesday.
Television New Zealand reporter Barbara Dreaver was expelled from the country after spending an "anxious night" in a high-security detention centre near Suva airport.
Dreaver had flown in on Monday night to cover the escalating diplomatic row between New Zealand and the government, led by self-appointed prime minister Frank Bainimarama.
The interim government said Dreaver was added to the blacklist of foreigners banned from entering Fiji after presenting a story this year that was "totally the opposite to what was actually happening on the ground".
Fiji's interim Attorney-General Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum said the government had since implemented a policy requiring all foreign media to get approval before entering the country.
"Now there is a policy that foreign journalists who come in, they need to seek the concurrence of the permanent secretary of information," Sayed-Khaiyum said.
"It is very simple. Everybody knows that. Barbara Dreaver turns up at the airport without having sought that permission, so obviously she has been told to go back."
But Dreaver, one of several journalists, including two Australian publishers, to be removed from the country this year, said the policy was "nonsense" as other New Zealand reporters on her flight had been allowed entry.
She said her detention was over a story aired last April which exposed large-scale poverty in a Fijian town which the government took exception to.
"They didn't like it, it's as simple as that, so they weren't going to let me in," Dreaver said.
"I'm not the first to be expelled. I certainly won't be the last either."
Australian publisher of the News Limited-owned Fiji Times, Evan Hannah, was deported from Fiji in May after Bainimarama ruled he was a threat to national security.
Three months earlier, another Australian publisher, Russell Hunter of the Fiji Sun newspaper, was thrown out of the South Pacific country after the paper carried articles critical of the regime.
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