National Indigenous Times

The National Indigenous Times (NIT) is an Indigenous Australian affairs newspaper first published on 27 February 2002. It was set up by Owen Carriage, the founder of the Koori Mail, and a group of other Australians, both Indigenous and non-Indigenous. The newspaper was financed and is owned by John Rowsthorne and Beverley Wyner. Currently the ownership of the newspaper is being divested to Indigenous Australians. New owners include Kamilaraoy academic Dr Marcus Woolombi Waters, Narrunga man, Tauto Sansbury, Nyikina academic, Dr Anne Poelina, Kimberley man Ian Pedrisat and other Indigenous leaders, academics and advocates.

The newspaper seeks to:

There is a belief that Indigenous media tends to "go soft" on Indigenous people or organisations in response to the history of discrimination as a protective response. There is also the perception that the mainstream Australian media tends to misreport Indigenous affairs, whether through intent or ignorance, and regularly sensationalises Indigenous issues.

In NIT '​s first two years, the vast majority of stories reflected positively on Indigenous people and organisations. But NIT has also broken major news stories on the corruption, bullying and fraud within Aboriginal organisations. Subsequently, NIT has carried on through the years with stories on the injustices and disproportionate poverty faced by Indigenous Australians today.

Major news stories broken by the NIT include:

In 2014, all three of the NIT '​s major writers, Georgatos, Marcus Woolombi Waters and Geoff Bagnall were award recipients at MIMA.[7]

Controversies

On 27 February 2012, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's program Media Watch aired a segment that detailed how the newspaper had been taking repeatedly a substantial amount of material from other media sources without giving any citations.[8] This was addressed by editor Stephen Hagan who promised to deliver more original material and use citations when using external references. Hagan is no longer with the newspaper, departing in February 2013.

In January and February 2015 the NIT was placed in administration because of outstanding legal bills against it due in part to a defamation case against the newspaper that is yet resolved and an unfair dismissal claim by a previous editor. NIT has survived administration with a mix of the longstanding owners/founders and a number new part owners.[9][10] Just before Georgatos announced in February he was no longer with the newspaper, he went in to bat for the newspaper on National Indigenous Television.[11]

References

  1. Finalists and Judges 2004 Walkley Awards for "Stolen Wages Payback Shame"
  2. "OIPC's 'Baby-faced Assassin': Senior public servant adopts bogus identity; backs minister's claims", NIT Issue 109, 13 July 2006. Accessed 22 October 2006
  3. "MMC Awards sponsored by NSW Government"
  4. "996 lost to suicide"
  5. "Suicide crisis"
  6. ABC's Media Watch transcript
  7. "Push for National Indigenous Times" by Andrew Burrell, The Australian, 13 February 2015
  8. "Administrators put award-winning National Indigenous Times newspaper up for sale" by Emilia Terzon, ABC News, 19 January 2015
  9. "Gerry Georgatos on the Future of the National Indigenous Times" on YouTube, NITV News

External links