KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 27 — British newspaper The Guardian has
terminated the services of conservative American columnist Joshua
Trevino as its United States correspondent over his alleged relationship
with a company implicated in a news-fixing campaign financed by the
Malaysian government and for running a website that attacked Datuk Seri
Anwar Ibrahim and other opposition interests here.
In a short statement issued over the weekend, the newspaper said it had
recent learned that Trevino “was a consultant for an agency that had
Malaysian business interests and that he ran a website called Malaysia
Matters. In keeping with the Guardian’s editorial code this should have been disclosed.”
Trevino had recently been hired by The Guardian to
be its conservative columnist in the United States. His appointment
drew a firestorm of protests from liberal activists after it emerged he
had urged Israel to shoot at the humanitarian flotilla in 2011 that was
seeking to break its naval blockade of Gaza.
When boats carrying unarmed civilian activists attempted in June 2011 to
break the blockade of Gaza, TreviƱo tweeted out a message to the
Israeli army: “Dear IDF: If you end up shooting any Americans on the new
Gaza flotilla — well, most Americans are cool with that. Including
me.”
Trevino also reportedly called the flotilla a “Nazi convoy.”
The Guardian made
no mention of the criticisms, but instead pointed to Trevino’s previous
ties with an “agency” it did not name but is alleged to be FBC Media,
the now-defunct company at the centre of the Malaysia news-fixing
scandal involving broadcasters BBC and CNBC last year.
“Under our guidelines, the relationship between Joshua and the agency
should have been disclosed before the piece was published in order to
give full clarity to our readers,” said Janine Gibson, editor-in-chief, Guardian US.
In response Trevino said: “I vigorously affirm that nothing unethical was done and I have been open with the Guardian in this matter. Nevertheless, the Guardian’s guidelines are necessarily broad, and I agree that they must be respected as such.”
Trevino is a well-known conservative commentator and a former speechwriter in the President George W. Bush administration.
He has reported extensively in the past few years on Anwar’s Sodomy II
trial on his Malaysia Matters website, which is now defunct.
Trevino had also frequently criticised Anwar in his other columns in other publications such as the Huffington Post.
FBC Media, the company alleged to have been referred to by The Guardian,
made eight programmes for the BBC about Malaysia while failing to
declare it was paid £17 million (RM85 million) by the Malaysian
government for “global strategic communications” which included positive
coverage of Malaysia’s controversial palm oil industry.
The BBC also used FBC to make a documentary about the spring uprising in
Egypt without knowing the firm was paid to do PR work for the regime of
former dictator Hosni Mubarak.
The BBC was forced to make a public apology over the matter.
FBC had also been exposed to have doubled up as a publicity firm for the
Najib government and was paid millions of pounds to conduct a “Global
Strategic Communications Campaign”.
But Putrajaya last year ended its RM94 million contract with FBC, which
started in 2007, after it was revealed Malaysian government leaders
regularly appeared in paid-for-TV programmes.
The Malaysian Insider has
reported of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak contracting a series
of public relations strategists, including APCO Worldwide, to polish his
personal image and his government’s locally and worldwide.
Late last year the government said image consultants FBC Media helped
raise the standing of Malaysia as a tourism and investment destination
during the RM94 million three-year deal that began in 2007.
Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz told
Parliament that the London-based media company, which is facing
bankruptcy, “supported the efforts of government leaders and ministers”
to burnish the country’s image overseas.
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