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Malaysia: Nude Squats Story Backfires on Press Freedom |
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Written by Baradan Kuppusamy
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Monday, 09 January 2006 |
(IPS) - News reports based on secret video grabs of
a woman forced to do 'nude squats' in police custody, which put the
Malaysian government in a spot over human rights, have backfired on
press freedom as it turned out that the victim's nationality had been
wrongly identified.
The widely-circulated, Chinese-language daily newspaper 'China Press'
which broke the story was, on Friday, obliged to publish its ''deepest
apology'' on the front page for having wrongly identified the victim as
a Chinese national when she turned out to be a local and ethnic Malay The widely-circulated, Chinese-language daily newspaper 'China Press'
which broke the story was, on Friday, obliged to publish its ''deepest
apology'' on the front page for having wrongly identified the victim as
a Chinese national when she turned out to be a local and ethnic Malay.
Worse, the newspaper had to sack its top two editors to stave off
suspension of its publishing license, leading to speculation that this
could be the beginning of tough measures against the press in this
country.
The China Press practiced a feisty, 'in-your- face' reporting style that
won it public accolades but constantly angered the internal security
ministry, that regulates publications.
On Nov 23, the newspaper published an exclusive story and photographs
lifted from the video clip showing police forcing a young, naked woman
to perform squats. But the paper also erroneously identified the victim
as a Chinese national, sparking off a diplomatic row with Beijing.
After Beijing lodged an official protest, Malaysia sent across a
mission, headed by home minister Datuk Seri Azmi Khalid, to apologise
for the mistreatment of its nationals. The reports of the video followed
complaints by Chinese women visitors, held for visa violations, that
they had been made to perform humilitating nude squats in custody.
While China Press rectified the error the next day, the damage had been
done and the Malaysian government was angered at being compelled to
apologise.
On Thursday, editor-in-chief Chong Choong Nam and executive editor-in-
chief Wang Zhao Ping were sacked and the paper made to eat humble pie.
In a statement, the editors took ''full responsibility for the glaring
mistake in the report''.
The alternative could have been far worse -- the Ministry has powers to
suspend or cancel the newspaper's publishing licence and the laws do not
permit judicial review.
"The two editors were sacrificed to satisfy the demand for blood and
injured ego," said James Wong, senior analyst for Malaysiakini, an
independent news website. "They are the scapegoats."
Wong said the action is a "menacing message" intended to frighten all
other editors into giving up their new found boldness to practice
limited press freedom. "They have been given notice to submit to the
official line," he told IPS. "As a Chinese proverb goes, they killed one
chicken to warn the rest of the monkeys.''
"The action also shows that systematic oppression continues and that all
the rhetoric of transparency and accountability are just a politician's
slogans," he said.
The paper, that sells about 300,000 copies a day and gives priority to
politics and violent crime in its reporting received two show-cause
letters from the internal security ministry, which is headed by Prime
Minister Abdullah Badawi himself, demanding explanations.
"It is too harsh a punishment for one small mistake," said Lim Guan Eng,
secretary general of the opposition Democratic Action party. "An apology
should have been sufficient."
The sacking has rallied democracy activists across the country into
protesting the lack of press freedom in the country.
Human rights movement 'ALIRAN' said in a statement that the punishment
meted out to China Press indicated that the outlook for media freedom is
not bright. "What is disturbing about this episode is that the state has
deliberately intervened in a journalistic matter that could have been
handled by the management of the newspaper concerned.''
China Press is owned by Nanyang Press Holdings Group, which is directly
linked to the Malaysian Chinese Association, the second biggest party in
the ruling National Front coalition.
Human rights activists and press freedom advocates argue that the
mistake was a genuine and consideration had to be given to the
circumstances under which China Press first broke the story.
"Tell me the truth," was Badawi's famous phrase on taking power in Nov.
2003, urging Malaysians to speak up against the injustice, corruption
and abuse of power that had marked the long rule of his dictatorial
predecessor, Mahathir Mohamad.
But human rights activists have been warning that despite Abdullah's new
rhetoric of transparency, accountability and freedom, the mailed fist
was lurking nearby. And now it has struck.
The New Straits Times, regarded as a pro-government paper, saw the move
as a signal that Abdullah is "prepared to wield the big stick as he
moves into his third year in office."
"The mistake was not malicious and an apology from the daily would have
been sufficientąthis is the normal thing to do," Lim told IPS. "There
was no need to force editors to resign.
"It does not bode well for press freedom in the country," said Sonia
Randhawa, executive director of the Center for Independent
Journalism. "We strongly condemn the political interference in the
newsroom that has resulted in these sackings and call for the repeal of
the licencing provisions in the Printing Presses and Publications Act,''
she told IPS.
Over a dozen laws curb press freedom but the most draconian is the
Printing Presses and Publications Act. This law requires all publishers
to apply for a new publishing permit every year forcing them to toe the
line or go out of business.
"Such laws have a chilling effect on media freedom and they deter
journalists from carrying out independent, investigative journalism,
while making editors exercise extra caution and frequently practice self-
censorship," said Wong.
On Saturday, deputy information minister Donald Lim Siang Chai told
presspersons that the government expected mass media to be responsible
and that dissemination of news had to consider the sensitivities of the
country's multi-racial society.
Malays who form 50 percent of Malaysia's 24 million population and
ethnic Chinese who make up another 25 percent are the two dominant
communities in the country. Relations between them are uneasy.
Does the sacking of the China Press editors signal the end of a brief
spring under Abdullah, coming after the heavy-handed rule by his
predecessor, Mahathir Mohammed over?
Not yet, says Wong. "The battle between the conservatives in government
who grew in strength under Mahathir Mohamad's long rule and the liberals
is still ragingą the liberals have suffered a defeat but the war is not
over yet." (END/IPS/AP/IP/IC/HD/CS/BK/RDR/06)
Source: IPS - Inter Press Service News Agency
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