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Nauru officials back down, return media accreditation for 1 NEWS' Barbara Dreaver at Pacific Island Forum

September 5, 2018

The I NEWS Pacific correspondent was detained by police on Nauru on September 4 during the Pacific Island Forum.

1 NEWS Pacific correspondent Barbara Dreaver, who was detained for several hours yesterday by police in Nauru, has been allowed to continue doing her job. 

Government officials had revoked her media accreditation for the Pacific Island Forum after she was spotted interviewing a refugee. But today her media credentials were returned. 

Nauru authorities sparked an international incident yesterday when they targeted Dreaver, prompting tongue lashings from human rights groups and New Zealand politicians – some of whom suggested that we should consider stopping the flow of millions of dollars in foreign aid to the small island nation.

1 NEWS Pacific correspondent Barbara Dreaver, detained by Nauru police yesterday and stripped of her press accreditation for the Pacific Island Forum, shows her renewed press badge.

The Nauru Government later issued a press release taking issue with the word "detained" and suggesting that the reporter voluntarily accompanied police while they made further inquiries.

Dreaver, who said this morning she's "just pleased to not be in a cell at this stage", credited the police for being professional but said she didn’t have a choice in the matter.

"I've been covering forums for nearly three decades now, and this is the first time I've experienced this sort of restriction to this degree," she told TVNZ1's Breakfast today. "It’s important that news of the forum gets out."

Detention centres and challenges to democracy means there is an edge to this regional forum.

Nauru is home to an Australian detention centre with more than 900 refugees and asylum seekers on the island - about 100 of them children.

The increasingly authoritarian Government in Nauru has targeted opposition MPs, the judiciary and freedom of speech. Before the Forum started, Australia's ABC was told not to bother applying for a visa as the Nauru administration felt its coverage was biased.

Yesterday wasn't the first time Dreaver has been detained while reporting on the Pacific Islands for TVNZ. She was banned from Fiji for eight years over a 2008 story that highlighted poverty in a Fijian village, spending time in a Fijian detention centre before being allowed to return home.

Barbara Dreaver talks to Breakfast live from Fiji, having been allowed back into the country.

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