| Subject: New Matilda: Letter to the Editor:
Reporting East Timor
Letter to the Editor: Reporting East Timor
By: http://newmatilda.com/home/listarticlebyauthor.asp?articleID=1852
Mark Aarons
Wednesday 11 October 2006
Your http://www.newmatilda.com/home/articledetail.asp?ArticleID=1839
editorial of 27 September claims New Matilda publishes ‘facts’ about
East Timor as you uncover them, but you provide no substantiation for the
conspiracy theories that underpin your reporter’s ‘journalism’.
John Martinkus’s claims need to be put into perspective. After all,
Xanana Gusmao was the leading figure in East Timor’s independence
struggle. Martinkus’s book, A Dirty Little War opens with Gusmao’s
preface, indicating he held Gusmao in high regard in 2001.
Internationally, Gusmao is viewed as East Timor’s equivalent to South
Africa’s Nelson Mandela embodying his people’s cause.
Yet Gusmao now stands accused of being behind the violence that led to
the resignation of his country’s first Prime Minister. If this
extraordinary claim were to prove to be correct, it would greatly diminish
Gusmao’s place in history, notwithstanding his long years as guerilla
commander, political prisoner and East Timor’s first President.
So, it is a very big call to accuse him in this way. The stakes are
extremely high for John Martinkus. The facts on which he builds his
interpretation need to be indisputable if his conclusion is to be widely
accepted. His journalism needs to be of the highest quality.
So how does Martinkus’s journalism rate in light of these high
stakes?
According to Martinkus’s letter to The Australian (27 September) he
is a ‘journalist’ and I am not. Martinkus seems to assume that because
he is a ‘journalist’ this somehow justifies unprofessional pursuit of
conspiracy theories, or that anyone who is not a journalist cannot
criticise his work.
As Ken Inglis records in volume two of Whose ABC?, I learned
investigative reporting from the late Allan Ashbolt, one of the founders
of 4 Corners and a master of forensic journalism. I was the founding
Executive Producer of Radio National’s Background Briefing and my first
major assignment was actually in East Timor in March 1975. My reports
include the exposure of Nazi war criminals in Australia, including
propagandist and senior Liberal, Lyenko Urbanchich.
Some of the major planks of good reporting Allan Ashbolt taught me
included: * Do not rely on hearsay, unless it can be corroborated by
substantial independent information. * Only rely on anonymous sources if
other evidence is publicly available that strongly supports their claims.
* Scrupulously examine source documents to ensure authenticity and that
they support the use you plan to make of them. * Apply rigorous
self-analysis to ensure that subjectivity does not intrude so that a story
simply fits your preconceived position rather than being a valid
conclusion based on evidence.
So how do these principles apply to Martinkus’s journalism on the
recent events in East Timor?
Hearsay
Martinkus relies on hearsay without corroboration from other sources.
For example, the Mesquita document is clearly not a first-hand account.
Rather, it relies on another person (Joaquim), who reports an alleged
conversation in a prison cell with the former police commander.
It is significant that Mesquita has not directly confirmed this hearsay
account, which has been around for seven weeks, nor has any credible
evidence emerged to substantiate its lurid claims against Gusmao. Even
Joaquim’s identity apparently remains a mystery.
Yet there are aspects to the document that seriously undermine any
claim to authenticity. For example, it is well known to Timorese that the
President lives at Balibar, not Dare, as claimed in the document, although
they are nearby each other.
Then there is the claim that two Australian Majors who allegedly
visited Mesquita in prison ‘immediately returned to Dare’. How would
Mesquita (or Joaquim) have known where they went afterwards? As they were
both confined in prison they could not have known what the Australians did
after they left. If they were told later by someone else that simply
builds hearsay upon hearsay. Anonymous Sources
Martinkus claimed last June to have ‘confirmed’ there had been
repeated approaches to senior Army commanders (including Brigadier General
Taur Matan Ruak ) by opposition and Church leaders and two foreigners to
launch coups against the Alkatiri Government.
The problem is that no sources were named to confirm the claim. Ruak
has not come forward to corroborate it, nor have other Army commanders.
Furthermore, none of those allegedly involved in these treasonous
conspiracies was named by Martinkus, including the foreigners, whose
nationalities even had to remain secret because of the information’s ‘sensitivity’.
So the story relies entirely on anonymous sources with no on-the-record
corroboration. Given that the people who were approached to commit treason
include the Army commander it might be expected that confirmation of these
extraordinary charges might have emerged.
Yet when Martinkus’s subsequent report went to air on SBS TV’s
Dateline on 30 August the story was no further advanced, except that
Alkatiri claimed that the foreigners were either Australians or Americans.
Strangely, he could not say which, but apparently the information’s ‘sensitivity’
was no longer relevant.
So two months after Martinkus first made the claim to have ‘confirmed’
this long-running conspiracy the identities of those making the claims of
treason remain unknown, along with those who supposedly suborned treason.
Nor do we know what action the senior defence officers took in
response. After all, Ruak is supposed to uphold the Timorese Constitution
and had allegedly been asked to overthrow the Government. Surely he would
have taken action against those involved, starting as early as April 2005
when the first approach was allegedly made.
The problem with anonymous sources is that such people often pursue
their own agendas, sometimes personal, sometimes on behalf of their
superiors. That is why journalists have to corroborate at least some part
of what such sources tell them. They are only valuable if they have
genuine credibility.
In Martinkus’s case, anonymity has not been used legitimately to
protect sources, but as a means to get the facts to fit a preconceived
conspiracy theory.
Scrutiny of Documentary Evidence
One of the journalist’s professional obligations is to report any
facts contained in documents that might tend to support an alternative
version of a story, even if the journalist favours a different account.
The latter should be based on the balance of all the evidence, not on
selective use of documentary material to support preconceived notions.
A case in point is Gusmao’s three handwritten notes to Major Reinado
(documents available in full on New Matilda <http://www.newmatilda.com/admin/imagelibrary/images/Gusmao_letterbl52Sk87JIe3G.jpg>here).
Martinkus elevates these brief notes (on ‘With Compliments’ slips) to
the status of ‘letters’, thereby portraying them as ‘official’
correspondence.
However, any fair reading of the documents demonstrates there is a
powerful case that they represent the President’s attempt to calm the
situation by ensuring that various rebel forces (Reinado’s and Salsinha’s)
obeyed his orders to retreat to the cantons agreed with the Australian
forces.
Yet Martinkus made no effort to alert readers to this aspect of the
notes, instead using only selective quotes to make his own preconceived
case that they ‘proved’ that the President and Reinado were close
during the crisis.
Martinkus is entitled to his conclusion (although I think it is wrong
given the content of the notes as a whole), but I think it is
unprofessional to withhold important aspects of the material from his
readers.
Self-Analysis
The hardest part of investigative reporting is separating one’s own
beliefs from the facts and ensuring that the latter are not selectively
used to serve the former.
I have confronted this over more than 30 years of covering East Timor.
Although a passionate supporter of the people’s right to independence I
concluded nearly 20 years ago that my previously uncritical support for
Fretilin as the party of liberation and progress could not withstand the
scrutiny of the facts.
That is not to say that there are not many reasons to be proud of
Fretilin’s history and leading role in gaining East Timor’s freedom.
But there are also many unsavoury aspects to Fretilin’s history that
need to be confronted.
This does not justify the West’s (especially Australia’s) policy
failure between 1974 and 1999, or excuse Indonesia’s mass crimes against
humanity. I have analysed these issues in two articles in The Monthly.
However, there is now a substantial case to show that John Martinkus
simply operates as a partisan barracker for one side in a very complex
situation. From the moment he re-entered East Timor last June on
assignment for The Monthly, he has pursued a preconceived agenda: to ‘prove’
that Westerners (Australians and Americans) were involved with malign East
Timorese forces (the Opposition and the Church) in a conspiracy to
overthrow the Alkatiri Government.
Now he alleges that Gusmao gave orders to start the shooting and was
behind the recent violence.
Almost every device in the arsenal of a partisan reporter has been used
to pursue this case: * Use of hearsay evidence without corroboration. *
Reliance on anonymous sources without corroboration. * Selective use of
documents to fit preconceived theories. * And an absence of critical
self-analysis to ensure that subjective beliefs are not substituted for
the evidence.
At the very least, this amounts to unprofessional and partisan
journalism. At the worst, it is substantial evidence to support a charge
of propaganda.
John Martinkus’s recent coverage of East Timor can be found http://www.newmatilda.com/home/articledetail.asp?ArticleID=1825
here and http://www.newmatilda.com/home/articledetail.asp?ArticleID=1795
here
http://newmatilda.com/home/articledetailmagazine.asp?ArticleID=1852&HomepageID=164
Back to October menu
September
World Leaders Contact List
Main Postings Menu
|