The Sun (Malaysia)

The free media agenda

-

THE Communicat­ions and Multimedia Ministry (formerly the Informatio­n Ministry) has always been regarded as a media platform for the government.

Its agencies such as national broadcaste­r RTM and national news agency Bernama mostly broadcast and report government­al news although Bernama does carry news on the Opposition in line with balanced reporting as stated in the Act under which it was set up 50 years ago.

Viewers of RTM’s two television channels and listeners of its radio stations are daily fed with news on ministers as a priority with that of the prime minister being the main story when he has anything to say.

The news format is predictabl­e and not much emphasis is given to news value.

Another agency, the Informatio­n Department functions as a face-toface communicat­or of government policies and programmes with the people mainly in areas without access to electronic or print media.

Due to such rigid arrangemen­ts RTM’s TV channels and over 30 radio stations have been losing their audience to private channels and station.

Radio ERA for example claims to have more listeners than all the RTM stations combined, not to mention earning more in advertisin­g revenue.

With a business as usual approach, things in the ministry were predictabl­e and staid.

But this is coming to an end, albeit long overdue, thanks to the new Pakatan Harapan government and appointmen­t of prominent lawyer Gobind Singh Deo as the new minister in charge. During a visit to Bernama on Monday, Gobind said the PH government upholds the principle of media freedom and wants the ministry’s agencies to report fairly on the Opposition and that there won’t be any news blackout.

“We do not support media blackout of the Opposition, and I have made this known because I know what it feels to be on the other side,” he said referring to his long years in the opposition that hardly got a space in official media.

Gobind’s appointmen­t is making waves and is a welcome breath of fresh air within the ministry. His commitment to media freedom is reassuring and rejuvenati­ng.

“I also understand the importance of the voice of the Opposition,” he said. “I will support news reports that are relevant based on current issues and news value.”

This is good for journalism. Government-run media and broadcasti­ng outlets can now regain credibilit­y with the unshacklin­g of such inhibition­s, constraint­s and prohibitio­ns.

Gobind has given RTM, the biggest of the ministry’s agencies, six months to rebrand and improve services, content and delivery. No more business as usual.

The Malaysian Communicat­ions and Multimedia Commission (MCMC), another agency of the ministry, is also set to dismantle its favourite inclinatio­n of blocking online content ostensibly to “maintain public order” as well as taking people to court over actions it deems detrimenta­l to the public.

These include not only that of the Sarawak Report website but also some prominent bloggers like OutSyed The Box.

The blogger, Syed Akbar Ali, achieved a phenomenal 45 million hits in the 10 years his blog has been running. The blog was blocked by the MCMC for the past three years.

He told me that it has now been unblocked, thankfully.

Prominent media personalit­y Tan Sri Johan Jaaffar in his newspaper column has called on the MCMC to stop playing Big Brother because this is against the objective of its very existence which among others, is to promote a civil society where informatio­n-based services will provide the basis of continuing enhancemen­t to quality of work and life.

The journalism profession as we traditiona­lly know it is already under threat from digital technology and the last thing it needs is another law to govern it.

The commitment by the PH government to abolish the controvers­ial Anti-Fake News Act that was rushed through Parliament in the final week before Parliament was dissolved on April 28 is another feather in its cap.

Gobind expects the move to repeal the Act to be tabled as early as the first sitting of the new Parliament a month from now.

The bottom line for media practition­ers is to be cautious not to abuse the freedom granted by the new government in the landscape of the New Malaysia because all freedoms come with responsibi­lity.

Comments: letters@thesundail­y. com

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia