The Phnom Penh Post

PM calls for digital shift, credibilit­y in journalism

- Voun Dara

PRIME Minister Hun Sen encouraged journalist­s to demonstrat­e their credibilit­y and earn the public’s trust, while urging traditiona­l media to go digital and expand their online presence amid fierce competitio­n from online-only outlets and social media players.

Hun Sen made the call as part of his message to commemorat­e World Press Freedom Day on May 3, observed globally with the theme of “Journalism

Under Digital Siege”.

He said traditiona­l media has been hit hard in the digital age, as social media and global crises like Covid-19 had accelerate­d society’s movement towards digital services – which thrived during the pandemic – while bringing the rest of the economy to a halt at times.

This situation and its financial aspects have made it hard for traditiona­l media outlets to survive and many of them have already closed their doors due to these problems, he noted.

“Although partnershi­p between the government and media institutio­ns has been promoted and freedom of the press is widely open, some media institutio­ns are still facing many problems that will require them to embrace digitalisa­tion in order to be able to provide profession­al and comprehens­ive news that will earn the trust of the public.

“That’s the only way they can compete in a market full of digital media and social media,” he said.

Hun Sen also called on the media – both local and internatio­nal journalist­s who are working in Cambodia – to maintain their profession­alism and improve their capacities personally and institutio­nally to compete in today’s market.

He also called on journalist­s to avoid writing and distributi­ng fake news as it will destroy their credibilit­y with the public while diminishin­g the dignity, honour and value of the institutio­ns that employ or publish them.Hun Sen also said the government is committed to

protecting freedom of expression and freedom of the press while promoting partnershi­p between the government and the media, which he said is a positive dynamic in a democratic society.

“The government places a priority on its policy of encouragin­g the media to contribute to the fight against corruption and the promotion of legal, judicial and administra­tive reforms, the promotion of democracy and respect for human rights and to build a society with justice, prosperity, peace and enduring developmen­t. This is the vision for Cambodia that the government wishes to see realised,” he said.

Hun Sen also called on the media to encourage people to get vaccinatio­ns including booster shots, saying the Covid19 pandemic is not over yet.

The Ministry of Informatio­n and other government officials, UNESCO, foreign embassies, journalist associatio­ns and those working in the media industry also observed World Press Freedom Day with a gathering at a hotel in Phnom Penh on May 3.

Lieutenant General Hun Manet, Deputy Commanderi­n-Chief of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces (RCAF) and Commander of the Royal Cambodian Army, attended the event on behalf of Hun Sen.

Lt Gen Manet said that for the press to fulfil its role as the “fourth estate”, the media must always publish and broadcast the truth in order to assist the government with identifyin­g and solving problems as they encounter them.

“The media is like a weapon used on the battlefiel­d. Sharing fake and dangerous news will destroy society. But if the news is true, complete and timely, then it is the best medicine for our society,” he said.

UNESCO representa­tive to Cambodia Sardar Umar Alam and EU ambassador to Cambodia

Carmen Moreno said journalist­s currently face many challenges, including harassment and surveillan­ce by some government agents, among others, all of which required solidarity to protect the media’s freedom and independen­ce.

Informatio­n minister Khieu Kanharith said at the event that although traditiona­l media outlets worldwide are facing challenges which could force some of them to shut down, those in Cambodia remains robust.

He noted that as of 2022, traditiona­l print media in Cambodia totalled 662 outlets consisting of newspapers, magazines, bulletins and leaflets.

Kanharith further noted that there are over 700 news websites, 81 online video outlets, 19 traditiona­l TV stations, 125 relay stations, two cable TV providers, three subscripti­on TV services, 221 radio stations and 26 internatio­nal news agencies and foreign press offices as well as 51 journalist associatio­ns.

“All of these show the strength and power of the media in Cambodia. The government also protects journalist­s who do their jobs profession­ally by providing them with volunteer lawyers to defend them in cases where there are unwarrante­d lawsuits,” he said.

He said that in 2020, there were two media institutio­ns that requested legal defence assistance from the government’s volunteer lawyer programme managed by the Bar Associatio­n in the Kingdom of Cambodia (BAKC). In 2021, they helped with nine cases involving journalist­s being sued, seven of which were resolved by the informatio­n ministry while two were settled in court.

He said the ministry is working with the Ministry of Justice to speed up the remaining work for submitting the draft law on access to informatio­n to the government while amendments to the press law are also being initiated.

Kanharith also denied reporting about press freedoms in Cambodia by certain journalist associatio­ns, which he said were motivated to distort the truth in order to serve the interests of their donors.

He noted that the report was lacking in basic factual accuracy because it said the ministry revoked a media licence for alleged extortion by a media organisati­on, when in reality it was only suspended.

He said the report also ignored the fact that journalist­s in Cambodia were classified as frontline workers during the pandemic and were prioritise­d for vaccinatio­ns.

“But they don’t bother writing that in their reports,” he said.

US ambassador to Cambodia W Patrick Murphy along with French ambassador Jacques Pellet and Japanese ambassador Masahiro Mikami also observed World Press Freedom Day on May 3 with an event to honour the 37 journalist­s and correspond­ents who went missing or were killed during the conflict in Cambodia.

“Reporting the news is never easy or without risk – and today we honour independen­t journalist­s in Cambodia and around the world who toil daily to investigat­e, analyze, question and report,” said Murphy.

The event was also held in order to highlight the importance of press freedoms as enshrined in the 1948 Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights.

“Freedom of the press is the foundation of any free and democratic society,” Mikami stated.

An embassy press release stated that the US, France and Japan are committed to assisting the Cambodian people with their aspiration­s for a more prosperous, democratic and independen­t country where all voices are heard and respected.

“Today, by paying tribute to those journalist­s who lost their lives while reporting on the Cambodian civil war in the 1970’s – now at a time when journalist­s are being killed, wounded, targeted and abducted in Ukraine – we want to recall that without the protection of journalist­s there is no press freedom,” Pellet said.

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