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Wednesday, 20 September 2017
Anti-Adani protest censored by operators of Melbourne's Federation Square
Exclusive: Operators demand images of newspaper headlines and politicians, and ‘explicitly negative’ environmental messages be removed
Anti-Adani protesters at the screening of Guarding the Galilee. The
operators of Melbourne’s Federation Square demanded changes to the
slideshow before the screening.
Photograph: Julian Meehan
The operators of Melbourne’s Federation Square have censored the
content of an anti-Adani slideshow presented there, demanding that all
images of newspaper headlines and politicians, as well as “explicitly
negative” environmental messages be removed.
On Saturday, a coalition of environmental groups held a screening of the documentary Guarding the Galilee
at Federation Square, attended by about 300 people. The film is about
the fight to stop Adani’s Carmichael coalmine, which would be the
biggest coalmine ever built in Australia and one of the biggest in the
world.
In the week before the event, Federation Square demanded to see the
slideshow that would be presented before the screening and then demanded
much of it be removed.
In email correspondence a Federation Square representative told the
event organisers they “cannot permit any slides with protest messaging,
slogans or memes together with slides that show pictures of politicians,
newspaper headlines or any explicitly political messaging”.
The operators objected to any content that was “negative and
inflammatory” and demanded the majority of the slides be removed or
significantly altered.
That included removing all pictures of newspaper headlines, politicians, political memes, protests or pictures of the Great Barrier Reef with “inflammatory messaging”.
Federation square also demanded that the “stop Adani” logo be changed to black and white, and that it not take up a whole slide.
The original slideshow that the organisers forwarded to Federation
Square’s operators. Slides crossed out were censored from the final
presentation.
“I would recommend putting together a slideshow that focuses more on
the environmental aspect of the reef without the protest messaging,” the
Federation Square representative said.
The
demands surprised the organisers, since Federation Square had approved
the screening of the Guarding the Galilee, which included footage of
protests, criticisms of the federal government, images of politicians
presented in a negative light as well as explicit protest messaging.
As part of the agreement for hiring the venue, the organisers were
told the material must be “G or PG rated” and the written agreement
stated: “The hirer understands that Fed Square reserves the right to
reject material that is deemed unacceptable or inappropriate for public
exhibition in terms of quality, format type or content.”
Federation Square had told the organisers over the phone that
“politically partisan” slides would not be allowed but the organisers
said they were told that related to messaging related to political
parties.
When challenged by the organisers over email, Federation
Square said: “Although not associated specifically with a political
party, the content is certainly political in nature and partisan in its
opposition/protest to the current governments and their policies.”
In order to ensure the meeting went ahead, the organisers removed more than half the slides.
Odette Joannidis, a Stop Adani volunteer and co-organiser of the
event, said the debacle revealed Federation Square was not “a friend of
the people”.
“The management had us over a barrel, threatening to pull the plug on
our event unless we obeyed their crazy request to cut the most benign
of images from being shown,” she said. “It felt like being in an
Orwellian nightmare, not Melbourne.
“It’s disturbing that in 2017, in an era of climate change,
executives at Fed Square would actively censor photos of mums, dads and
grandparents engaged in peaceful actions and suggest they were
‘inflammatory’ images.”
Because Federation Square refused to tell the organisers exactly
which slides were causing the problem, and discussion was occurring just
days before the event, the organisers removed anything they thought
might be considered partisan, negative or inflammatory.
“We asked for guidance from Fed Square on a slide-by-slide basis so
we could better understand what exactly it was they objected to,” said
Pablo Brait from Market Forces, who also organised the event. “However,
Fed Square refused to give us this guidance and instead issued an
ultimatum that the next version of the slideshow had to be acceptable to
them, or else there would be no slideshow at all.”
Federation Square refused to answer a series of questions from the
Guardian asking which sort of material was and wasn’t allowed and why.
Instead, a spokeswoman sent through the following statement.
Fed Square was delighted to approve the screening of an important
environmental documentary, Guarding the Galilee. The event organiser
subsequently requested to present a large PowerPoint presentation, which
Fed Square did not approve. Fed Square’s venue hire agreement states
that Fed Square can refuse the right to play or remove from display any
screen content considered offensive or inappropriate for any reason
whatsoever. This was communicated to the event organiser and a mutual
agreement was reached.
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