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Ethical lapses in the media is one of the products of controlled environment. While the media itself has a lot of soul-searching to do, it should not be shunned from official functions because the public is at the receiving end.
By: Yip Wai Fong
While the 12th general election had opened up some democratic
space in the realms of media and freedom of expression, we are now
watching it quickly disappear. The government’s censorship of the name
of a certain murdered Mongolian looks absurd, as does the seizure of
DVDs produced by the opposition. The fact that politicians choose to
undermine media freedom and public expression reveals the negligible
standing of democratic freedom in this country.
As long as the government legislates control of the media and of
public expression, the situation will never change. At any time,
institutions that are supposed to function as public watchdogs can
instead be subverted to the will of the Federal Executive. The public
and the newsroom are beholden to the powers that be. In turn, the
Executive gets used to wielding its power in an authoritarian manner,
becomes accustomed to targeting the media when their feelings of
political insecurity are stoked.
The barring of online media from the UMNO General Assembly and the
suspension of two opposition party papers once again illustrate the
Executive's mindset. Their agenda of control is barely hidden, even as
the Executive uses the cover of the laws to justify the papers'
suspension. It is also not hard to see that, by stopping the online
media from covering the UMNO Assembly, the government is constraining
the public's access to information to the mainstream print media and
state-controlled agencies. The Umno secretary-general Datuk Seri Tengku
Adnan Tengku Mansor's complaint about ethical standards of the online
media is hardly convincing when the independence of the national media
is known to be vulnerable to laws and political ownership.
Media ethics and professionalism are also the purported reasons why
the Penang chief minister, Lim Guan Eng, is considering banning a
national daily, the New Straits Times (NST), from official state
functions. Lim claimed that the paper has been unfairly and falsely
reporting information about his administration, and that they are
refusing to print letters sent by his office attempting to clarify the
situation. Despite his purported grievances, the Centre for Independent
Journalism believes that banning any media outlet is a restriction on
press freedom and the plurality of views. Striking out at the media
betrays a controlling mindset, and sparks the worrying question of
whether Lim’s Pakatan Rakyat might just be as intolerant of scrutiny
and criticism as the ruling Federal government.
The press should be serving the public, and therefore, the burden
is on the media to report as ethically as possible. The media must
address the issues of professionalism and ethics that have raged
stronger than ever after the conclusion of 12th general election. Has
the NST considered Guan Eng's complaint? Why does Malay daily Utusan
Malaysia prefer to get embroiled in legal suits with Selangor state
Exco Teresa Kok, rather than explain their editorial decision to
publish the allegation that lead to Kok's detention under ISA? Where
the national media continue to shrug off objections about their ethical
standards and point to their fear of the laws, the public will
naturally look upon the online media as the better, more accurate, and
more informative alternative. Their choice—their right—should not be
stopped.
Attempts to control the media, to curb freedom of expression, are
undemocratic and politically risky. The structure of media control as
it exists now is responsible for entrenching authoritarian attitudes
and stifling ethical standards in newsroom. It is therefore imperative
that the new Prime Minister consider these issues carefully when be
begins to institute his promised “reforms.”
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