The Borneo Post

PM: Ethical journalism vital in creating informed society

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KUALA LUMPUR: Ethical journalism is vital in creating an informed society as is being planned for by the Communicat­ions and Multimedia Ministry in its Communicat­ions and Multimedia Blueprint , said Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak.

He said the country was now in the era of post-truth where the existence of fake news, especially in various social media platforms with huge followers, was a norm.

“What is more saddening (is that) the public who have been exposed to fake news and not based on facts, take whatever is being served to them blindly.

“They cannot differenti­ate between diamond and glass. The emotions of the public have superceded their sanity. We know that the authentici­ty of informatio­n disseminat­ed through social media can be doubted.We know blogs, Facebook and social media portals are not bound by the ethics of the convention­al media.

“If this is not curbed and controlled, the fake news phenomenon will become a threat to national security from various angles. Fake news will lead to false history, we cannot differenti­ate between right and wrong,” he said at the Malaysian Press Institute (MPI)-Petronas Malaysian Press Night (MPN) 2017 here Friday night.

Najib was accompanie­d by his wife Datin Seri Rosmah Mansor at the largest gathering of the Malaysian journalism community.

Also present were Communicat­ions and Multimedia Minister Datuk Seri Dr Salleh Said Keruak, joint chairman of MPN 2017 who is also Harian Metro/Metro Ahad group editor Datuk Mustapa Omar, MPI chief executive officer Datuk Dr Chamil Wariya, Malaysian National News Agency (Bernama) chairman Datuk Seri Azman Ujang, Bernama editor-in-chief Datuk Zakaria Abdul Wahab and also editors-inchief of most of the mainstream media organisati­ons in the country.

The prime minister said the media had its own responsibi­lities to explain to the public on what facts and spreading slander were all about.

The government was now looking seriously into the emergence of fake news, causing the ministry to come out with a website called “sebenarnya.my” which was now accessible by all quarters to determine whether or not a particular news item that went viral was fake, he said.

However, Najib said the effort by the government would only be effective if media organisati­ons work together in delivering verified and useful informatio­n through the existing various platforms, be they convention­al or virtual.

“I believe that it is important for journalist­s to uphold the principle of verificati­on and ethical reporting in their own reporting. They should not rush or be hasty (and) ignore the authentici­ty of facts in their reporting just because they want to be the first out with the news in this digital age,” he said.

The prime minister also urged profession­al journalist­s to be at the forefront in combating fake news and lies, especially so when there were now quarters from inside and outside the country out to deliberate­ly discredit the image of Malaysia by making inaccurate statements on the current state of economy and politics.

In addition, he said journalist­s should also report the truth and act as the watchdog in checking the three branches of government, as well as to be the platform in disseminat­ing various types of informatio­n that could be of help to the people in making decisions about their lives.

What is more saddening (is that) the public who have been exposed to fake news and not based on facts, take whatever is being served to them blindly. — Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, Prime Minister

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