Pseng-Pseng
Tiny But Deadly Media
“We've done so much for the country,
but we did not do a good job to provide information to the people.”
Minister of
Commerce Sun Chantol, 23 January 2014
“I can tell you, as a lawyer, these Cambodian media, if they
were in Singapore they would be sued and broke and financially ruined already—I
mean if they were in Singapore. In Cambodia, there is so much freedom it is
unbelievable, so we are all a victim of this fourth power.”
Government adviser Sok
Siphana, 21 February, 2014
“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.
Board
member of the Cambodian Club of Journalists Puy Kea, 12 February, 2014
After all these years, the
CPP wakes up to the fact that they have not told the public what they have been
up to, and that they now must. The admission is astonishing, given the fact
that a large chunk of the media is either under the CPP control or leaning
towards the party. At the last count, there are 19 TV stations, 75 radio
stations, and a dozen main newspapers throughout the country. Their reach is
enormous.
What has this large media
chunk been doing, though? Whatever it is, it has done enough to capture only
half of voters, assuming of course the July 2013 election outcome is valid and
reliable. The other half seems to tune in to a tiny chunk of the media that must
be doing something else quite different to attract it, like keeping their
audience well informed of what the CPP has done to the country.
This tiny media chunk has
been a constant source of annoyance to the CPP to the extent that some regard
it as a sole representative of the fourth power after legislative, executive, and
judiciary. The government adviser must be so impressed with the freedom
Cambodian reporters enjoy that he may not be aware the Reporters Without Border
ranks Cambodia 144 out of 180 in their world press freedom index 2014. It
appears a relief that the Cambodian reporters are not subject to lawsuits like
their counterparts in Singapore. However, some are indiscriminately beaten up
at recent public demonstrations. They have just to be careful when covering
issues the large media chunk deems sensitive. Eleven journalists have been
murdered since 1994, the latest one was in February this year in Kampong
Chhnang.
Nonetheless, now that the
CPP – according to Minister Sun Chanthol – is determined to make a full use of
the media, including Facebook and YouTube, one can look forward to the large
media chunk disclosing information that it has not done before to wipe out the
essence and relevance of the tiny media chunk. That would be a civilised
way for the CPP to extend their grip on all the four powers, without killing
off recalcitrant journalists or putting them under self-censorship.
Ung Bun Ang
28iii14
No comments:
Post a Comment