African Communities Council rejects ruling newspaper front-page story was not racist
SBS News has chosen not to identify the women.
The 2020 front page story. Source: The Courier-Mail
The Press Council ruling on Thursday said the story did not breach its Standards of Practice rules and publishing their identities âreflects the seriousness of the womenâs actionsâ and was not due to âpersonal characteristicsâ.
âItâs a very disappointing outcome because it sanctions racism, it sanctions racial vilification and it sends a message that you can publish an article targeting a particular racial or religious group and thatâs okay,â said the president of the Queensland African Communities Council Beny Bol.
âIt shouldnât be okay, itâs encouraging that sort of behaviour and it also diminishes the community confidence in the institution.â
âGiven the outcome and the ruling weâve seen, who would waste their time to lodge a complaint to the Press Council hoping that they would correct their wrong? I donât have confidence in the way they handled the matter.â
Beny Bol is the president of the Queensland African Communities Council. Source: Stefan Armbruster/SBS News
The Press Council in its ruling said âat the time of publication, it was a matter of public record that the women ⦠had been charged with criminal offencesâ over failure to comply with COVID-19 travel restrictions and so âtheir reasonable expectations of privacy had been diminishedâ.
âThe Council acknowledges that the headline is provocative given the language used and the prominence of the womenâs images alongside it â¦. [but] accepts that the reporting reflects the seriousness of the womenâs actions and risk to the community and was not due to any personal characteristic of the women involved.â
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The Courier-Mail in response to complaints to the Press Council said it consistently published names and pictures of people who had breached COVID-19 rules and âit could not be held accountable for the actions of people on social mediaâ.
âThe publication noted that the criminality of their actions had seriously endangered the state of Queensland. Accordingly, it said naming them was necessary in the public interest,â the Press Council ruling said.
âIt said that the headline was entirely fair and appropriate given the severity of the crimes committed and the impact of the lockdown on business and the disruption to society.â
The two women, and a third who was involved, all aged in their early 20s, spent four nights in Melbourne where they attended a party before flying back to Brisbane via Sydney.
All three pleaded guilty to failing to comply with a public health direction.
They faced a maximum penalty of a $13,000 fine and six months in prison but were sentenced to community service orders ranging from four to eight months and were fined in Victoria for failing to comply with gathering restrictions.
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Mr Bol is due to give evidence on Friday to a Queensland parliament inquiry into reforming the stateâs 30-year-old vilification laws.
âItâs one of the typical examples that I incorporated into my submission," he said of the Courier-Mail's story.
"Itâs racist, clearly racist, and sends a strong message to the community that you donât belong here.â
âThere should never be a relationship or correlations between the crime and the actions of individuals and their racial background and weâve seen this again and again from particular media outlets."
âWe should stand up and call such behaviour out.â
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