Add Your Photos and Video to This Story

Growing intolerance towards journalism in South East Asia

by rahul | July 5, 2008 at 08:40 pm | 188 views | 3 comments | 7 recommendations

According to this Hindu article, there is a growing intolerance towards press freedom in South East Asia. Sadly, the largest Democracy in the workd -India- does not seem to escape such trend. But there must by a way to counteract it though. I keep my fingers crossed. 

Growing intolerance

SEVANTI NINAN

Keeping up with trends in South Asia, assaults on the press have been on the increase in India too.
 
India is succumbing to what has been a malaise all around her: frequent assaults on the press. Sri Lanka has had a rough year so far, so has Nepal, which averages an incident a week. Last week, a district court there ordered a compensation of Rs. 10, 000 for a journalist beaten up two-and-a-half years ago, while deciding that his assailant, a police inspector, did not merit any punishment. Pakistan saw 11 incidents in June of attacks on CD shops and media persons, mostly the former. There have been a total of 61 incidents there this year, recorded by the Pakistan Press Foundation, most of them expressions of fundamentalist ire at television and video. Such attacks as are there on journalists are violent: seven have died in the first six months of this year, several have been injured.

So seven developments relating to press freedom in India in June may be outrageously high by India standards, but par for the course if you compare with our neighbours. South Asia has helped to keep press freedom organisations in the West in business for some time now, it is regarded as one of the most dangerous parts of the world to work in. Now, with a little help from some of our Chief Ministers, the world’s largest democracy is contributing its bit to those dismal statistics.

Last month’s tally saw two threats to journalists or writers emanating from Gujarat, two from Maharashtra, one incident each in Andhra Pradesh and Kerala and one development from UP which indicated that there had been pressure from the State Government on two newspapers there, both from the same group.

A new morality

Each incident asserts that freedom of speech, extended to writing, is not to be tolerated. If you write exposes against a police chief, he will slap various charges against you — defamation, criminal conspiracy, sedition. If you criticise a section of the population for its politics of hate in an edit page article, the police register a charge of criminal offence against you. If you speculate that all the problems in a State must have been solved since it has chosen to embark on a mammoth statue building project in mid-ocean, your home is attacked. If you criticise another leader for dynamiting structures and statues that were built at a cost to the exchequer, you risk her wrath with all that entails. If you write of a dalit political organisation that it has “hired leaders” and “hired agitations”, your office is set upon by goons. If you retaliate by beating an effigy and burning it, you are arrested by the police. And most ironic of all, if you so much as land up to cover political groups attacking each other in a public place, they turn on you and beat you up.

recommend Add a comment
armstrong vaz
armstrong vaz
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 03:10 on July 6th, 2008

rahul, I like this story. It's good stuff.

iboncimino
iboncimino
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 08:00 on July 6th, 2008

I live in Malaysia (a distinctive NON-democracy, if there is such a word) and the freedom of the press is nonexistent in the physical world. If I'm not mistaken, Malaysia has promised to leave the internet alone (much harder to control, I suppose) but it's truly astounding to see the difference that journalism and freedom of speech has even in this limited form. They must hear this a lot, but I don't think many citizens of democratic societies know how much of their freedom is tied to uninhibited and effective media!

0
rahul

Iboncimino, Thanks for your good stuff mark and contribution to this story. Your thoughts and information on Malaysia hava improved it.  

Add a comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

July 5, 2008 at 08:40 pm by rahul, 188 views, 3 comments

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from