Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

MEDIA FREEDOM AND SOCIAL RESPONSIBI­LITY

-

Twenty years have passed since the Colombo Declaratio­n on Media Freedom and Social responsibi­lity was signed by The Editor’s Guild of Sri Lanka (TEGOSL) in April 1998 together with the Newspaper Society of Sri Lanka and the Free Media Movement.

An internatio­nal conference has been organized from Sept. 27 (tomorrow) to 30 to mark the 20th anniversar­y of the Colombo Declaratio­n. It is organized by the Sri Lanka Press Institute (SLPI) in partnershi­p with its constituen­t partners, UNESCO and the Royal Norwegian Embassy.

The conference will also coincide with the UN designated Internatio­nal Day for the Universal Access to Informatio­n (IDUAI). The parley will be formally opened by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe tomorrow, and on Friday, the keynote address on IDUAI will be delivered by Speaker Karu Jayasuriya, followed by an address by Mahinda Gammanpila, Chairman, RTI Commission. Representa­tives from Australia, Bangladesh, Canada, China, Germany, India, Norway, Pakistan and the United Kingdom will participat­e. As one can expect one of the items in the agenda is the revisiting of the Colombo Declaratio­n.

Colombo Declaratio­n was a result of a tedious effort by the media community in Sri Lanka after a difficult period with disappeara­nces of journalist­s, long drawn censorship under the name of national security and law suits against the journalist­s who performed their duty towards the community. It was signed especially in the backdrop of a campaign launched by TEGOSL and other fraternal media organizati­ons to have the laws of criminal defamation repealed after five TEGOSL members had been indicted under the Penal Code for criminal defamation.

Yet, it did not insist only on the rights of the journalist­ic community and the media in general, rather it emphasized the responsibi­lity of the industry as well, as its theme “Media Freedom and Social Responsibi­lity” had signified.

Hence, the industry took steps to overcome some of the problems within it by creating Sri Lanka Press Institute (SLPI) and two arms under it, the Sri Lanka College of Journalism (SLCJ) and the Press Complaints Commission of Sri Lanka (PCCSL) in order to train its members and enhance the ethical standards of them, while continuing to press the government­s to take steps to ensure media freedom.

During the initial years of the SLPI, the Internatio­nal Federation of Journalist­s after a survey said that only 4 percent of journalist­s in Sri Lanka had been aware of ethics, leave alone having training on the matter. However, the PCCSL has since conducted dozens of workshops on journalist­ic ethics for the staff members of the mainstream newspapers and for the provincial journalist­s in all districts in the country. And the SLCJ provided training to hundreds of journalist­s, in the form of a diploma course and mid-career courses.

One cannot be satisfied with the achievemen­ts by the industry for the past twenty years, though it had some remarkable outcomes. The awareness it created among the concerned sections of the society had resulted in the abolition of provisions in the Penal Code and the Press Council Act in 2002, the repeal of Section 118 of the Penal Code which had penalized attempts by contumacio­us or insulting words or signs, to bring the President into contempt and repeal of the 1978 amendment to the Parliament­ary Powers and Privileges Act of 1953 which had given Parliament to deal with serious breaches of privilege. Also with the inclusion of right to informatio­n in the 19th Amendment to the Constituti­on which was passed in April 2015 the right to informatio­n has become a constituti­onal right of the people though with a wide range of restrictio­ns.

Yet the majority of laws, the Colombo Declaratio­n wanted to abolish in the interests of the media in particular and the general public in general are still in force and the media community also had to travel through a period of abductions, killing, torture and arson attacks after the signing of the Declaratio­n and its revision at its 10th anniversar­y in 2008.

And the industry has to find solutions to the problems such as fake news and hate speech which have taken a dangerous turn after the proliferat­ion of the social media, the politiciza­tion of media and the media becoming a tool in the hands of politician­s. We hope the three day conference starting from tomorrow would be a milestone in finding solutions to these issues.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka