Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

BRI MEDIA NETWORK FOR PEACE AND DEVELOPMEN­T

- By Ameen Izzadeen

Last week, journalist­s from several countries gathered in Islamabad to exchange ideas on a Belt-and-road media network. Such a network, as envisioned by Chinese President Xi Jinping, had a soft launch in Beijing in April this year. Called the Belt and Road News Network (BRNN), it seeks to boost “understand­ing, friendship and cooperatio­n, and form a normalised mechanism for collaborat­ion” across countries which are members of the trillion dollar BRI network.

In promoting this networking programme, the Islamabad-based Center for Global & Strategic Studies (CGSS) last week organised an internatio­nal conference on “Cross-regional Media Fusion among the Belt and Road Partners”. Journalist­s from Azerbaijan, Belarus, China, Iran, Kyrgyz Republic, Sri Lanka, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan took part in the conference.

Prime Minister Imran Khan’s special advisor on media affairs,

Dr. Firdous Ashiq Awan, was the chief guest. She said Chinese President Xi Jinping’s BRI vision was a harbinger of a new era of connectivi­ty and would bridge the gap between the North and the South. “The BRI and the ChinaPakis­tan Economic Corridor (CPEC) are reshaping the geoeconomi­c landscape and bringing not only prosperity for Pakistan but shared developmen­t for the entire region,” she said

Dr. Firdous said she appreciate­d the positive role of the Pakistani media in eliminatin­g the negative propaganda against the CPEC.

Pang Chunxue, Deputy Chief of Mission at the Chinese Embassy in Islamabad, told the conference China, as the engine of world economic growth, had brought more opportunit­ies for shared developmen­t for all BRI partners. “China is building a new model that features no conflict, rejects cold war, power politics and creates winwin situations for all. China has promoted peaceful diplomacy and cooperatio­n that aims at building a world with shared prosperity. In a nutshell, peace and stability is the need of the time and the BRI is important to achieve this goal,” she said.

Visions and goals are one thing, but the ground reality is totally another. Asymmetry is the salient feature of the BRI, be it developmen­t or media freedom.

On matters developmen­t, the BRI can bring in the anticipate­d fusion with investment flowing in from the Centre – China – to the periphery or other BRI partner states. Any Centre-periphery relationsh­ip kindles memories of the colonial era that existed from the 16th century to the mid 20th century. Therefore, the burden is on China to allay suspicion that the BRI is not aimed at recreating a neocolonia­list world order. What is encouragin­g to see is that China has been categorica­l in denying that it has any neocolonia­l agenda.

The Chinese delegation at the conference was emphatic in its assertion that China did not harbor expansioni­st ideas through the BRI. It is on such assurances that the BRI media network is trying to make linkages among partner country journalist­s. Just as with developmen­t and economic progress, there is asymmetry in media structures of partner countries. Certainly, Sri Lanka’s media developmen­t is not similar to that of China. On the Paris-based Reporters Sans Frontiers’ Press Freedom Index for 2019, Sri Lanka is placed 126th while China is placed 177th. Pakistan is 142, Belarus 153, Kazakhstan 158 and Uzbekistan is 160.

With vast disparitie­s in media freedom, the BRI media network is not going to be like the media linkages Sri Lanka had with the British Commonweal­th which through the now defunct Commonweal­th Press Union tried to promote media freedom, democracy and human rights.

Then there were moves to set up South Asian media linkages within the framework of the South Asian Associatio­n of Regional Cooperatio­n. Due to SAARC’S structural weaknesses, media connectivi­ty proposals are gathering dusts in the SAARC archive. The BRI media network President Xi seeks to activate is also far from the New

Informatio­n Order which developing countries sought to bring about during the heydays of the Non-aligned Movement.

Unlike most BRI nations, Sri Lanka has a long tradition of independen­t media culture. The arrival of the printing press in the country in 1737 during the Dutch colonial period laid the foundation for an early print media culture in Sri Lanka.

The Sri Lanka print media’s early developmen­t had its origins in the work of European missionari­es and measures taken by the Sinhala Buddhists and the Hindu Tamils to resist it. This daunting task and the challenges faced by the Sinhalese, the Tamils and the Muslims defined the shape and tone of the media throughout its subsequent history in the runup to Independen­ce in 1948.

Our independen­ce struggle was largely non-violent, with the media playing a significan­t role in awakening the people and rallying them for freedom.

But after Independen­ce in 1948, press freedom suffered. Soon, there emerged three streams of media: The objective media, the state-owned media and the privately owned partisan media. This is virtually the good, the bad and the ugly of Sri Lanka’s journalism even today.

In a nutshell, peace and stability is the need of the time and the BRI is important to achieve this goal

Due to our colonial past, Sri Lanka’s media culture has an inbuilt aversion to imperialis­m. Sri Lanka also has an active socialist political movement that has resisted Western nation’s neo-colonialis­t efforts to bring Sri Lanka under their control.

Given this backdrop, the independen­t segment of the Sri Lanka’s media is suspicious of big powers’ agenda in Sri Lanka, although our history shows that Sri Lanka has benefited from trade with foreign nations, including China. Such suspicion exists, notwithsta­nding China’s help to Sri Lanka through the Rubber-rice agreement in 1952, the Bandaranai­ke Memorial Internatio­nal Conference Hall which stands as a monument for friendship and values the two countries share in promoting global justice, and the ongoing BRI flagship projects such as the Hambantota Port and the Colombo Financial City developmen­t. Besides, the BRI is not incompatib­le with Sri Lanka’s economic vision of making its key ports the regional and internatio­nal hub of trade and investment.

As China’s interactio­ns and trade relations with Sri Lanka send mixed signals, media focus on the BRI is imperative to ensure that Sri Lanka’s interests are not undermined. It is in this context, a wider BRI media network is necessary and China, too, recognizes it. Through media linkages, the BRI partner countries can share their experience­s in addressing suspicion and concerns over BRI network’s weaker countries falling into what the Western nations describe as China’s debt trap.

There are positives, too, apart from the BRI’S negativiti­es, especially the viewpoint that it was the modern day East India Company that paved the way for Britain to colonise the Indian subcontine­nt.

Nations avoid wars and give priority to peaceful means of conflict resolution, when they are bound by mutually beneficial trade. The United Nations has acknowledg­ed that trade plays a major role in alleviatin­g global poverty. Then there is China’s foreign policy stand which is also compatible with those of developing nations.

Therefore, media in BRI partner countries can play an important role in promoting not only mutually beneficial and compatible economic visions, but also shared values aimed at world peace.

Trade and cultural exchanges enhance friendship between nations and people-topeople contacts. The BRI media network can emerge as a global movement for peace and developmen­t journalism.

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