A+ | A- | Reset
Home

Journalism, sacred to democracy PDF Print
Saturday, 24 January 2009 11:35
The Center for Independent Journalism has just launched a much needed campaign to protect journalists on our land. The "Hands-off Journalists @ Work" badges that every journalists worth his or her salt should proudly wear tells a sad and painful story of the marginalization of journalism and the daylight raping of press freedom in Malaysia.

As clearly pointed out by Ms V. Gayathry the Executive Director of the Centre for Independent Journalism, it is shocking to witness how the law has failed to not only protect independent journalism but dealt a brutal blow to the press's duty to inform.

Inflicting any form of coercion and worse, bodily harm on journalists at work or even bribing is a crime against democracy. As indicated at the campaign launch, Malaysians - be it government, corporations or any individual, who restrains the many efforts to report truthfully in the interest of ethical behavior is guilty of murdering humanity.

The fact that journalists have been beaten and some even left in a coma is totally unacceptable. And the fact that prosecution according to the Rule of Law is not seeing urgency is a clear affirmation that media justice is near-dead in this land that proclaims to be a moderate state.

The violation of the fundamental rights of media freedom must stop immediately if we are to earn the respect and honor of the developed world. How else can we be admitted into the foray of the developed global community of progressive people if we have those in power vigilantly resorting to gangsterism and patronization to muffle the media?

How can we earn the respect of honorable humanity on earth if we continue to coerce and threaten in muffled tones thereby preventing the lone journalist to live up to this vocation of reporting the truth within the confines of ethical principles and moral behavior?

Ask any main stream media journalist and they will readily whisper that between reporting the truth and keeping their job, the latter is the preferred option. Seemingly, idealism and principles these days do not guarantee keeping a well paying job in Malaysia. 

Putting food on the table and keeping the family takes precedence over upholding the fundamental rights of journalism. That, in essence is the sad but harsh truth is so far as a free press goes in Malaysia.

The system reeks of injustice, fear and intimidation. And all in the name of power and control. All in the name of protecting vested and personal interest.

Today we see in Malaysia the obligations of the media as contained in the Hutchins Commission of 1947 completely castrated owing to political interference and a derailed libertarian economics at work.

And who will be responsible for this sordid state of affairs if not the politicians who proclaim incessantly that they are the guardians of the rakyat? And would the law enforcers too not take the blame either?

The often heard song that the media cannot have a field day because we have to be sensitive of the racial and religious sitz-im-laben in the country is increasingly suspect of withholding the truth to cover up tracks of those with vested interests.

Fortunately for democracy, the man in the street has far more religious and racial tolerance than the politicians proclaiming otherwise.

Likewise too, corporations and individuals who resort to lining the pockets of journalists on the beat with 'red packets' are equally guilty of robbing this nation of the fundamental right to know and the imperative duty to inform.

A nation that has compromised the age-old and sacred duty to tell and the right to know is an enemy of democracy and a detriment to the advancement of humanity.

As such, the campaign by the Centre for Independent Journalism must be given an impetus to right what has gone wrong for far too long on this sacred land. 

 

 

- J. D. Lovrenciear, Semenyih


Comments (3)Add Comment
...
written by onnetline, January 24, 2009 11:54:20
Does this apply to the Barisan Najis media "toilet papers"?
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 5
...
written by ahmadneil, January 24, 2009 12:50:47
The problem for the media business in 2008 was that the economy caught pneumonia.When the economy gets pneumonia, the media business gets it too-then someone knocks it across the back of the head with a shovel.
While the media business(the exchange of information for money) was lousy,the media(the conduits of information) were multiplying.
In another words, the media business needs to see that the shovel it got whacked with-the change in the way people communicate and the spreading of that power-is not necessarily a weapon or a means to make our graves.It's just a tool.Time to start digging.
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 5
...
written by batsman, January 24, 2009 15:47:11
The people must also be prepared to act and vote out corrupt political parties. Good journalism is useless if the people are not prepared to use their vote meaningfully and try to appease corrupt politicians in power. If this happens, journalists just put their lives on the line.
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 3

Write comment
This content has been locked. You can no longer post any comment.
You must be logged in to a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
 
< Prev   Next >
 
The Silent Roar
 BUY THE BOOK HERE
 **STOCKS NOW AVAILABLE**
 
** SPONSORED LINKS **
Will NATO become a global army? More..
Some Images Hosted With
Thank You ImageShack!
 BLOGGERS AGAINST ISA
People's Declaration

Powered and Optimized for:
Malaysia Today by MT-TEAM