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	<title>Inter Press ServiceMEDIA: Indigenous Journalists Seek Identity</title>
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		<title>MEDIA: Indigenous Journalists Seek Identity</title>
		<link>https://www.ipsnews.net/2007/10/media-indigenous-journalists-seek-identity/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Oct 2007 07:36:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Marty Logan</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Just weeks after giving up her post, the former president of the parliament of Norway&#038;#39s indigenous Sami people has lambasted Sami journalists for shoving aside their culture in the rush to get a &#038;#39scoop&#038;#39. Aili Keskitalo told an international conference organised by Sami media organisations that reporters had &#34;violated&#34; personal limits during her tenure, including [&#8230;]]]></description>
		
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By Marty Logan<br />ALTA, Norway, Oct 8 2007 (IPS) </p><p>Just weeks after giving up her post, the former president of the parliament of Norway&#038;#39s indigenous Sami people has lambasted Sami journalists for shoving aside their culture in the rush to get a &#038;#39scoop&#038;#39.<br />
<span id="more-26058"></span><br />
Aili Keskitalo told an international conference organised by Sami media organisations that reporters had &quot;violated&quot; personal limits during her tenure, including when she was hospitalised with a brain stroke and when it was rumoured that she was pregnant. &quot;This leads me to the question: is this Sami journalism or a bad copy (of mainstream journalism),&quot; asked the former president, who delivered the critique with a smile as keynote speaker at the opening of the conference &#038;#39Same Voice, But Different&#038;#39 in northern Norway, Sami territory.</p>
<p>&quot;My experience is that Sami media want to publish the most juicy and dramatic details, maybe to impress the Norwegian media,&quot; added Keskitalo, who was speaking to about 40 indigenous journalists from around the world in Alta, a town of 20,000 people above the Arctic Circle. She resigned as the first Sami woman president, after serving just two years of a four-year term, reportedly because of protracted disputes with her vice-president.</p>
<p>The Sami, Europe&#038;#39s only indigenous people, are native to what are now Norway, Finland, Sweden and Russia. Best known as reindeer herders, about half of today&#038;#39s Sami population of 80,000 lives in Norway.</p>
<p>Some journalists at the conference readily admitted that they often find themselves agonising over whether to publicise some news or shelve it to protect their community. &quot;You have a vested interest in the future of your own people &#8230;the information that you uniquely have access to as a tribal member, you have to weigh&quot; (whether or not to publicise it), said Ronnie Washines from Yakama Nation Multimedia Services in Washington State in the United States.</p>
<p>A member of the Native American Journalist Association, Washines added that leaders of indigenous communities are notorious for trying to limit freedom of indigenous media. But today they &quot;are beginning to understand that trying to keep secrets is no way for the tribe to advance. If that means being open to everyone, then that&#038;#39s a risk worth taking.&quot;<br />
<br />
The indigenous media conference, which ended Sunday, brought together journalists from the Nordic countries and other European nations, North America, Asia, Africa, Australia and New Zealand.</p>
<p>Many participants said the organisations they represent are hoping to boost the sharing of indigenous peoples stories from around the world. &quot;We already have collaboration with Sami broadcasting, Maori broadcasting (from New Zealand) and the Aboriginal Peoples TV Network, in Canada,&quot; said Pia Christensen, head of news at Kalaallit Nunaata Radioa in Greenland, adding, &quot;we want it to be more regular.&quot;</p>
<p>Like other indigenous media organisations, Christensen&#038;#39s has been limited by resources. &quot;On our side most of the problems (with collaboration) have been technical &#8211; our equipment was never really updated. But in May we went digital, so it&#038;#39s much easier now,&quot; she said in an interview.</p>
<p>In her speech, former president Keskitalo also asked if Sami journalists &quot;always choose the easy way out?&quot; For example, instead of approaching members of the Norwegian parliament with tough questions about the importance they give to Sami issues, reporters constantly go after Sami parliamentarians &#8211; who have less decision-making power &#8211; with those questions, she suggested.</p>
<p>Norway&#038;#39s Sami Parliament, which sat for the first time in 1989, acts mainly as an adviser on issues to the Norwegian Parliament: it also administers some of the money provided for Sami affairs by the Norwegian state. Sweden and Finland have also established Sami parliaments.</p>
<p>Sami journalists appeared to accept at least some of the ex-president&#038;#39s criticism. The president &quot;was very correct. We have been following her. I was the first one who reported that she was pregnant &#8211; but I contacted her first to confirm it; she was happy I did that,&quot; said Liv Inger Somby, a journalist at Sami Radio, a division of Norwegian public broadcaster NRK.</p>
<p>Inger added that she is willing to publicise issues that she knows are likely to upset the Sami community, and she spends a lot of time deciding how to present those stories while minimising the hurt. &quot;I hear people say &#038;#39we have to protect our people. Why are you discussing these things&#038;#39? As a journalist it&#038;#39s my job to tell the negative as well as the positive news; it&#038;#39s my job to explain why this is happening here,&quot; she added in an interview.</p>
<p>The veteran Sami journalist described reporting on the court case of the deputy mayor of a Sami community, who had sex with a 16-year-old girl. During the trial, the girl testified that she had had sex with 17 different men. &quot;It was such a sad story,&quot; remembered Inger. &quot;I was thinking, as a Sami journalist do I have to report all these details to all the Sami people?&quot;</p>
<p>&quot;In the end I avoided the details. I decided to tell the story of how this man used the girl,&quot; she recalled. However, reporters from the national media publicised the details, which resulted in a probe by the media ombudsman. The ombudsman &quot;decided that we were the only ones who didn&#038;#39t do anything wrong,&quot; said Inger.</p>
<p>*Marty Logan is a former IPS journalist who now works with the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Nepal.</p>
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