Media freedom rank drops
Cambodia's press freedom ranking has slipped one place to 144th
out of 179 countries, according to the 2014 World Press Freedom Index,
released yesterday by Paris-based Reporters Without Borders.
While the Kingdom finished ahead of such ASEAN partners as the
Philippines, Singapore and Vietnam, Benjamin Ismail, head of the
Asia-Pacific desk at Reporters Without Borders, said the situation
remained “very worrying”.
“Not only has the government policy regarding press freedom, freedom
of information and freedom of expression in general become stricter, but
the government also shows complete disregard to the situation and
security of journalists,” he said.
The ranking’s methodology takes into account the number of
journalists and netizens who were jailed, killed, arrested and attacked
last year, along with issues such as self-censorship, government
interference, transparency and media pluralism.
No journalists were killed in the Kingdom last year, but a number of incidents highlighted restrictions on the press.
Ahead of the July election, the Ministry of Information issued a ban
on foreign Khmer-language radio broadcasts during the 31-day campaign
period that was quickly rescinded following widespread condemnation,
though a five-day ban remained in place.
In September, at least seven foreign and local journalists were
attacked with slingshots, batons and electric cattle prods by masked men
allegedly supervised by police while covering peaceful protests at Wat
Phnom.
During opposition party protests at Freedom Park in December, a state
TV cameraman was attacked by irate demonstrators who allegedly accused
his network of being biased towards the ruling party. A recent report
from the Cambodian Center for Human Rights also found that
self-censorship was rife among journalists and bloggers due to fear of
threats or legal action.
Ouk Kimseng, an adviser at the Ministry of Information and deputy
director general at state news agency AKP, said that while Cambodia’s
press freedom was “not perfect”, the ranking did not reflect the reality on the ground.
“For now, all journalists enjoy freedom of expression, however, we
need to do more, and work more to get more professional.… They just look
at one or two angles, but overall it’s all right and better,” he said.
But Puy Kea, a board member of the Cambodian Club of Journalists,
said violence against journalists at protests was a significant
development in 2013 and had escalated in the first months of this year.
“Cambodian reporters going to cover any event now, they are very
careful, especially at demonstrations.… There are no clear instructions
from politicians, leaders, authorities and political parties, [so]
sometimes journalists get hurt,” he said.
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