Help
Fund Independent Reporter Nicky Hager's Legal Defense
Nicky Hager, July 2008
On
October 6th, New Zealand police raided the house of one of the
country’s best independent investigative journalists, Nicky
Hager,
seizing many of his family’s belongings and his reporting
equipment—all in the search for one of his sources. This is a
flagrant violation of basic press freedom rights, and today we are
announcing a campaign to assist Hager in raising money for his legal
defense.
Please go
here to donate.
Hager
recently wrote an explosive book entitled Dirty
Politics
based on an anonymous source in the lead-up to New Zealand’s most
recent election. The book showed how Prime Minister John Key’s
administration was feeding information to a far right-wing blog in an
attempt to smear its opponents. The New Zealand Herald called
the book
“an election bombshell” and its revelations led to the
resignation of New Zealand’s Justice Minister at the end of August.
But
just days after recent Key’s re-election, Hager’s home was raided
by New Zealand police for ten hours. "Soon after the police
arrived, the lead detective stated that I was not a suspect in their
case, merely a witness," Hager said in a statement on October
6th. Yet the police “seized a large collection of papers and
electronic equipment belonging to my family, including computers,
drives, phones, CDs, an IPOD and a camera."
The
Intercept
reported
today
that for months before his house was raided, Hager had also been
working with Glenn Greenwald and The
Intercept,
preparing to report stories based on the Snowden documents.
Hager
doesn’t know if this contributed to the decision to raid his house,
but the fact that the raid happened so shortly afterwards is
disturbing to say the least. According to Hager, the New Zealand
government has been nervous about the publication of New
Zealand-related Snowden revelations and has made various moves,
publicly and privately, to prepare for their eventual publication.
We
do know, however, the New Zealand intelligence services have a
notoriously close relationship with the NSA via the ‘Five Eyes’
alliance, and two other Five Eyes partners—Australia and the United
Kingdom—have both moved to aggressively censor and criminalize
journalism
in the wake of Snowden. UK has forced the Guardian to destroy a copy
of the Snowden files, has a criminal investigation open into their
newsroom, and detained Glenn Greenwald's partner under a terrorism
statute. Australia recently passed a law that could land journalists
in jail for ten years.
New
Zealand's treatment of Nicky Hager is a classic case of intimidation
and is exactly the type of government behavior meant to chill
journalism and prevent reporting from doing their job.
Glenn
Greenwald issued this statement in support of Hager:
The
10-hour raid on Nicky Hager's home is a grave threat to press
freedoms, but unfortunately is part of a broader campaign by the Five
Eyes alliance to attack whatever journalism they dislike.
Fortunately, Nicky has a long history of brave journalism and will
not let any of this remotely deter the reporting we have been working
on together. But he still needs, and deserves, public support to
ensure that he can fight without concern or hesitation against these
oppressive measures."
Hager
is a freelancer and has no news organization to rely on for support
or to help pay his legal bills. His case is expected to drag on for
many months.
Hager
said this two weeks ago following the raid that occurred on October
6:
I
believe the police actions are dangerous for journalism in New
Zealand. It matters to all people working in the media who could
similarly have their property searched and seized to look for
sources. People are less likely to help the media if the police act
in this way. The police want people to respect their role in society;
they should in turn respect other people's roles in society.
We
couldn’t agree more.
Please go
here to donate to Hager’s legal defense and send a message that
the New Zealand government has no right to raid reporters’ homes
for doing their job.
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