Channel 7 seeks judicial review of ‘racism’ ruling

SURVIVAL INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE

10 October 2012

Australia’s Channel 7 seeks judicial review of ‘racism’ ruling

Paul Raffaele said a Suruwaha girl refused to shake his hand because she wanted to kill him. In fact, he was wearing so much sun cream the Suruwaha thought he had a skin disease.Paul Raffaele said a Suruwaha girl refused to shake his hand because she wanted to kill him. In fact, he was wearing so much sun cream the Suruwaha thought he had a skin disease.
© Channel 7

Australia’s Channel 7 goes to court tomorrow (11 October) seeking judicial review of a devastating ruling against it by the press regulator ACMA.

ACMA found that the Channel broke the ‘racism clause’ of the broadcasting code by screening a report about a Brazilian tribe so extreme it was labeled ‘Freakshow TV’ by Survival International.

The report labelled Brazil’s Suruwaha Indians child murderers; ‘Stone Age’ relics; and ‘one of the worst human rights violators in the world’.

Survival complained to Australia’s regulator ACMA Channel 7 refused Survival’s request to issue a correction to its report, broadcast on its Sunday Night program.

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Astonishingly, Channel 7 is not seeking to overturn the substance of the ruling. Rather, it wants the court to declare that the various statements in the report, such as ‘These lost tribes encourage the murder of disabled children’, were not ‘factual’ in nature.

The report portrays the Suruwaha as the 'worst human rights violators in the world'.The report portrays the Suruwaha as the 'worst human rights violators in the world'.
© Adriana Azevedo/Survival

Survival’s Director Stephen Corry said today, ‘Channel 7 is asking the Australian court to reject the regulator’s findings by declaring that its viewers were not likely to have believed its ‘news report’ in the first place! Whether or not there is anything wrong with knowingly broadcasting its sordid inventions as ‘news’, its denigration of the Suruwaha is beyond a joke and should not be allowed to stand.’

Note to Editors:

Survival has written a set of ethical guidelines to help filmmakers work responsibly with tribal peoples. It is also using its Stamp it Out campaign to challenge racist depictions, however unwitting, in the media.

Read this online: http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/8739

Survival International helps tribal peoples defend their lives, protect their lands and determine their own futures. Founded 1969.