Sada-e-Watan
Sydney ™
sadaewatan@gmail.com

| About this Item | |
| Speaker: | The Hon ShaoquettMoselmane |
| Business | Adjournment, ADJ |

Friday, 22 June 2012
The Hon. SHAOQUETT MOSELMANE [2.24
p.m.]: I inform the House of progress I have made on establishing the first
Multicultural Media Awards in New South Wales. Multicultural community media
outlets and their journalists have never been properly recognised.
Disappointingly, neither governments nor non-government departments have
ever, as far as I can tell, endeavoured to establish a system to recognise
multicultural media outlets and the journalists that run and operate these
important media outlets. Since the first multicultural newspaper in
Australia, Die Deutsche Post, was published in Adelaide in 1848,
there has never been a State award recognising ethnic media; or since the
launch of the first Italian language newspaper, the weekly Uniamoci,
which started in 1903; or the first Greek-Language newspaper, Australis,
which started in 1914; the first Chinese-owned newspaper, the Chinese
Australian Herald, or Guangyi Huabao, which was launched in 1894;
or the Arabic Sout-el-Moughtareb, the Voice of the Emigre, which was
founded 1969 and the El-Telegraph, which started in 1970.
Today there are many language print and electronic mediums including
Vietnamese, Indian, Macedonian, Nepalese, Maltese, Greek, Iranian, Japanese,
African, Arabic, Armenian, Bangladeshi, Bengali, Italian, Korean, Chinese,
Croatian, Filipino, Polish, Tamil, Sri Lankan, Turkish and others. Many of
them have been established for years, yet received neither assistance nor
recognition. I name most language media to emphasise the point that there
are so many languages and so many people who work in media institutions as
well as many others who rely on the information they disseminate. I
therefore now have the pleasure to inform the House that, with the support
of a panel of distinguished members of our multicultural community, I have
commenced the process instituting the first Multicultural Media Awards to
ever take place in New South Wales and in Australia. Ethnic community media
in Australia are valuable institutions that contribute to our vibrant
multicultural society. They ought to be given the respect that they and
their respective communities deserve.
Multicultural community media have the capacity to raise awareness of
community issues that are not immediately accessed by mainstream media. I
use by way of illustration the most example of the Daily Telegraph's
coverage of the recent murder case of an Australian Pakistani, Shanaz Qidwai,
which was first reported by a Pakistani News
website Sada-E-Watan, which means Echoes of a Nation.
Media organisations in Australian, Asian, European and African communities
as well as in the Indian Subcontinent and Arabic communities are booming.
The recent Australian Middle-East media launch of the EI-Telegraph
newspaper on a daily basis is an example in point. The proprietors certainly
are brave taking the decision to print an ethnic broadsheet newspaper on a
daily basis in a competitive world when these days sizeable institutions,
such as Fairfax Media and News limited are downsizing and changing their
business orientations.
Multicultural, non-English and Aboriginal and community media have grown in
significance and in stature, but unfortunately the silence on their worth
has been deafening. That silence must now be broken and due recognition of
migrant and Aboriginal media must now be formalised. Non-English language
journalists should now be recognised and their contributions commended. For
instance, Simon Ko from Sing Tao gave 30 years of service. He has never
received proper recognition for the service he has given to many of the one
million Australians of Chinese heritage in our community. People like the
late Peter Indari and others who contributed so much to Arabic media in
Australia ought to be recognised. I am sure there are many, like Theo
Skalcos in the Greek media, and many other distinguished journalists or
media owners in Indian, African, Asian, Arabic, European and other media
outlets who are waiting to be recognised for their hard work and commitment
to journalism and journalistic ethics.
The Multicultural Media Awards are intended to recognise excellence among
journalists, photographers, graphic artists, editors and publishers from the
ethnic community and Indigenous media. The Award categories will include the
Best Investigative/In-depth Story; the Best Article On Immigration Or Social
Justice Issues and Promotion of Social Harmony; the Best Editorial
Commentary; the Best Overall Design Of Print Publication; the Best Overall
Design of an Online Portal; the Best Photograph; the Best Video; the Best
Audio; and the Best Multimedia Package. I commend the Multicultural Media
Awards to the House. I look forward to the support of all political
parties—Government, Opposition and crossbench—at the upcoming inaugural
Multicultural Media Awards that will be presented at the New South Wales
Parliament.