New Zealand / Te Ao Māori

Stuff apologises for its coverage of Māori issues

11:02 am on 30 November 2020

The media company Stuff is issuing a public apology for the way it has portrayed Māori, from its first editions until now.

None Photo: 123RF

In an editorial published today editorial director Mark Stevens admitted the monoculture nature of Stuff's journalism had not served Aotearoa well in the past.

"Our coverage of Māori issues over the last 160 years ranged from racist to blinkered. Seldom was it fair or balanced in terms of representing Māori," he said.

"We are sorry. But apologies are hollow without a commitment to do better in the future.

"The distance left to travel on our journey includes ongoing consultation and engagement, ensuring our journalism is for all New Zealanders and trying to repair our relationship with Māori.

"That will take time and effort, and from time to time we might stumble. We will, though, continue to hold ourselves to account."

Stuff, formerly Fairfax New Zealand, is the most-read news website in the country and owns many daily and weekly newspapers, including The Dominion Post, The Press and Sunday Star Times.

The apology follows Stuff's own investigation into itself - Tā Mātou Pono, Our Truth - which has examined all digital and print publications, sections from business to sport, as well as letters to the editor.

Sinead Boucher Photo: supplied

Stuff chief executive Sinead Boucher said it was one of the most significant investigations the company had undertaken.

Also published today is the media organisation's new charter, which acknowledges the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi, commits to redress wrongs to Māori and pledges to do better in future.

"When the ownership of Stuff changed earlier this year we had the chance to reset and reposition the business," Boucher said.

"Our people advocated for the Treaty principles of partnership, participation and protection to be embedded into our new strategy and I felt strongly they should be widely adopted into the ethics and practice of our business alongside the principles of equity and editorial independence."

"We've continued with that very singular Pākehā monocultural lens" - Carmen Parahi

Stuff's Pou Tiaki editor Carmen Parahi told Morning Report most of the company's publications were started by settlers, for settlers.

She said the initial colonial lens had not changed much in that time.

"What we started to realise, as we tracked from those early beginnings all the way until now, was that that lens hadn't changed very much and so what we were seeing is when you look through a single lens at something, everything else falls to the side of that lens.

"Instead of having a multicultural lens that better reflects how New Zealand looks today, we've continued with that very singular Pākehā monocultural lens and it's done a disservice to Māori."

Parahi said during the New Zealand Land Wars the newspapers generally sided with the government and took the Crown's position against Māori, despite newspapers saying they would hold the government to account.

She said the report was just the start.

"We're putting the pou into the ground to let New Zealand know that we will do better, we will hold the powerful to account, but at the same time that pou there is there for us, to look at it and remind ourselves that we need to continue to hold ourselves to account in the way we do our journalism and the way we represent and how we represent everyone."

She said the apology is made to Māori but it is also an apology to anyone else who may have been marginalised by such a singular way of looking at and reporting on the world, such as Pasifika, Muslims or refugees.