Submitted by The Mahogany Coconut Think Tank/Watchdog Group
Vivian Anne Gittens: Publisher of the Nation Newspaper
Vivian Anne Gittens: Publisher of the Nation Newspaper

The publishing by the Nation Newspaper of Barbados, of two minors engaging in sexual activity, is a violent violation of the Convention of Rights of Children (CRC) as outlined by UNICEF of which the country of Barbados is a signatory. It is clearly pointed out within the CRC, that children have rights and privileges of adults. They are not the property of their parents or their schools but are equal to adults.

The photo carried on the back page of the Sunday Sun, was a very voracious grab at sensationalism and the public is correct in its outrage. Whether we condone under aged children having sex is irrelevant and the nation must know that in a small country such as Barbados, the children’s identities cannot be hidden.

The Mahogany Coconut Group calls on the greedy predators at the Nation Newspaper to desist from exploiting our Caribbean children with immediate effect .

We are convinced that this act of professional vulgarity will place the Barbadian journalist community in the trash heap of the profession. The Nation newspaper should be ashamed to exploit the images of Caribbean children. Its greed makes a mockery of its editorials calling for national morality. Once again we ask the simple question: Who will guard the guardians?

The top brass at the nation should be aware of the specific guidelines related to children in the document: Child Rights and The Media-Putting Children in the Right- Guidelines for Journalists and Media Professions by the International Federation of Journalists.

We quote from this document:

“Journalists need to be aware of the consequences of their reporting.

The co-operation of media organizations and journalists and their

Orientation towards safeguarding the rights and the dignity of children and

young adults is extremely important for all who strive for wider recognition

of children’s rights. Sensational coverage may distort and exploit a serious

problem, doing more harm than good. Some editors claim that

sensationalism permits serious social issues to capture the attention of

readers and viewers. However, such coverage rarely analyses the social and

economic causes of abuse of children: the dislocation of communities and

families, homelessness, corrupt employers, pimps, the drug culture or why

parents in poverty sell a child to support the rest of the family. The positive

story of children, their lives and their rights is not being told in full. To

examine how this can be changed requires examination of the professional

conditions in which media work, a review of the principles or guidelines

journalists and programme makers should follow, and the obstacles that

stand in the way of good journalism.”

166 responses to “Nation Newspaper Exploits Children in Need of Help”


  1. @ Crusoe

    Editors can over-rule lawyers when it comes to content. What is really needed is proper training for Barbadian journalists. Here is an opportunity for the community college or for Sir Hilary.


  2. I agree the Nation should not have published the photo.

    But we do have a worse problem. That of running the schools.

    Again, it comes down to ability or lack thereof and also improper management practices.

    Think this would have happened openly so in a school thirty years ago?

    Think again.


  3. Simply double standards. What about the young boy gyrating on a woman during this year’s Crop Over. Why no charges were brought against the woman, the video taker and who put it on YouTube. What about the lady who also beat kill her daughter in the public road infront nuff people and not a charge instituted by the police. Did we hear a comment from the AG? If the Nation didn’t highlight this incident. Would we be commenting. The answer is ‘no’ it would have been swept under the carpet like all other matters. Again we await to see what will happen with the police on video.


  4. Correction: “……lady who almost beat kill her daughter…..”


  5. @ Tell me why

    You are right. Whatever happened to that. Where is the DPP? Where is the attorney general? We must clean up public space and stop this vulgar behaviour which one doctor told me once was a Barbadian t’ing.
    It is vulgar and embarrassing.

  6. Polly wants a Pit Bull Avatar
    Polly wants a Pit Bull

    Where there is no vision the people perish. (or leadership)
    Where there is no reporting no one will know
    What is good for the goose is good for the gander.
    Soooooooooo Whatelse is new Bdos?


  7. Tell me Why | November 15, 2013 at 12:31 PM |
    ———

    Umpire hands swaying left to right, off the back foot and through the covers.

    Dang right!

  8. NationBLPnewspaper Avatar
    NationBLPnewspaper

    The falling standards at the Nation newspaper have been repeated by me consistently to the point where the blog master chastised me for “not adding anything new to the blog”.

    I am feeling very vindicated. As the old Bajan saying goes “Time longer than twine”.

    Sanka Price is a BLP mouthpiece and a national disgrace.

  9. NationBLPnewspaper Avatar
    NationBLPnewspaper

    Just when you thought that the Nation BLP Newspaper could sink no lower in the political gutter:
    Saturday Sun editor Sanka Price takes up half of the back page with defeated BLP candidate Ian Gooding – Edghill standing next to a government employee putting up signs with the caption “Gooding – Edghill answers cries” clearly suggesting that Googing – Edghill is responsible for the signs going up.
    Of course they will not tell you that the call from BLP headquarters in Roebuck street went out to the Nation BLP newspaper get there and arrange the photo shoot and that James Paul had been relentlessly contacting MTW on behalf of the same constituents. Gooding Edghill was told where to stand, how to hold the sign by the Nation BLP photographer.

    I told you before that the Nation newspaper is the BLP public relations prostitute.
    I will bet you a million dollars that you will never have seen a similar story about the good work of defeated candidates Patrick Todd and Patrick Tannis.

    The BLP is running the Nation newspaper – Ask One Caribbean chairman and former BLP senator Sir Fred Gollop.


  10. @Crusoe

    do u exspect that the matter relating to dottin be ventilated in pblic by his accsuser when he has the govt in corut> please think again.


  11. @Island Girl

    u fah real. Any man can pull a jerk and vidieo tape himslef doing it, that is private bsiness. The person who posted it shold be charged for invasion of his privacy and posting nude pictre. Fire him and the govt will pay out a huge amont. Emotionalism shold be taken ot of analyis.

    When i commented on the nation;s story, i pointed ot that it cold be charged.


  12. was trying to make sense of Assistant Commissioner Mark Thompson’s statement in the Friday Nation. Seems to me that he was offering an apology to the country and Nation Newspaper for arresting its personnel


  13. @balance
    Assistant Commissioner Mark Thompson’s statement in the Friday Nation made perfect sense to me.

    He was simply saying that freedom of the press must be defended but the rights of children must be protected as required by law.

    It seems to me the “Newspaper” Editor/reporter broke the law but I am not a lawyer so you should rely on the likes of Amused and Robert Ross.

  14. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Hants | November 16, 2013 at 7:10 PM |
    “He was simply saying that freedom of the press must be defended but the rights of children must be protected as required by law.”

    So too is a man’s right to life. How would you feel if your life was threatened by people who were overheard making those threats and no one was brought to justice?

    We can assume you are not interested in the morality of the principle involved. It is more politically appeasing to go after easy targets than people leveling threats on other people’s lives.

  15. are-we-there-yet? Avatar
    are-we-there-yet?

    Balance; fwlit, I agree with you.


  16. millertheanunnaki | November 16, 2013 at 7:34 PM |
    “We can assume you are not interested in the morality of the principle involved. It is more politically appeasing to go after easy targets than people leveling threats on other people’s lives.”

    Assistant Commissioner Mark Thompson’s statement in the Friday Nation made perfect sense to me.

    That is an apolitical statement.

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