'Murdoch tried to oust me'

Papua New Guinea's acting prime minister has blasted one of Rupert Murdoch's newspapers for trying to force him from office.

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Rupert Murdoch has come under fire from one of the furthest flung corners of his empire, with Papua New Guinea's acting prime minister accusing one of the media baron's papers of trying to oust him.

Sam Abal on Tuesday said he was closely watching developments on the far side of the globe in London, where Murdoch's British arm, News International, is under intense scrutiny over phone voicemail hacking by the now-defunct News of the World.

The scandal forced Murdoch to close the tabloid and prompted the resignation of several close executives while two of Britain's most senior police have quit over their handling of investigations into the matter.

Abal said the Post-Courier, which is 46 per cent owned by Murdoch's Australian division News Limited, was only a tiny element in the global organisation, but accused it of pushing for regime change in Port Moresby.

He said he had observed "the appalling conduct of journalists in manufacturing stories and demonstrating clear leanings towards determining political outcomes", in comments carried by rival paper The National.

"Their reporting has been lacking objectivity, fairness, balance and responsibility to a point where the behaviour of the paper seems akin to the behaviour and editorial attitude of the overseas tabloid," Abal said.

"If the editorial behaviour and attitude of the paper is instructed out of London and the empire headquarters, then I have real reason to be wary of the way my government, its readers and shareholders of the paper stand to be treated."

The publisher of the Post-Courier, the Port Moresby-based South Pacific Post, rejected Abal's comments, saying the paper was being attacked because it dared to report without fear.

Managing director Kevin Smith dismissed suggestions that Murdoch controlled the editorial content in the oldest and largest selling national newspaper in the impoverished Pacific country.

"I, in fact as managing director, have no say in what makes the paper daily," he said in a statement.

Smith said the paper, which was founded in 1969 and has a daily circulation of some 26,262, was not involved in any illegal or questionable news gathering.

Abal has been the subject of news stories in recent weeks after his adopted son was arrested over the murder of a young woman at one of his Port Moresby residences.

He was appointed acting prime minister in April in place of Sir Michael Somare, who underwent major heart surgery.






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Published 19 July 2011 8:21pm
Updated 25 February 2015 1:01pm
Source: AAP


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