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THE CENSORSHIP

DIRECTOR ASKS FOR PROOF OF MISUSE (P.A.) WELLINGTON, Oct. 16. The question of the censorship again came up in the House of Representatives to-day. but was not discussed. The Prime Minister, Mr Fraser, read a letter written to the Newspaper Proprietors’ Association by the Director of Publicity, Mr J. T. Paul, and the reply by the manager of the association, Mr L. J. Berry. The director’s letter was as follows:—

“With referepce to the statement issued to the Press by the New Zealand Newspaper Proprietors’ Association, I have to request that you be good enough to -supply me with specific instances of the misuse of the war-time censorship. For instance, . one paragraph in a statement alleges that ‘ the censorship in New Zealand has made a steady accumulation of restrictions on news of matters such as sabotage of production, shortcomings in the control of the necessaries of life, administrative mistakes and extravagances that the war cannot condone, and a number of minor but by no means unimportant matters that have their intimate bearing on the war. Will you therefore please state where any order issued by me has prohibited the publication of news relating to,: (1) Sabotage of production; (2) shortcomings in the control of the necessaries of life; (3) administrative mistakes; (4) extravagances that even the war cannot condone ; (5) any other of the number of minor but by no means unimportant matters that have their intimate bearing on the war? ” The following reply was received: — “ We have your letter in which you ask for details of the orders issued by you, prohibiting the publication of news. There would, of course, be no difficulty in furnishing such details by the quotation in full of the official instructions and prohibitions issued by you, but in our opinion no good purpose would be served by doing so. The purpose of the association’s statement was not to promote a public investigation of the administration of the Censorship Regulations, but to direct attention to the need for a clear definition of the limits within which the censorship of news would be confined. Tins purpose -null not be advanced by a discussion of past events; it would be realised by a precise definition of the news which, in the interests of national security, may not be published, and an authoritative undertaking that no prohibitions would bo imposed on news or comment outside those definitions ” Mr Fraser said be tvould make no comment. He would leave that to the public and the House.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19421017.2.38

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Evening Star, Issue 24328, 17 October 1942, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
419

THE CENSORSHIP Evening Star, Issue 24328, 17 October 1942, Page 4

THE CENSORSHIP Evening Star, Issue 24328, 17 October 1942, Page 4

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