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| People watch TV in Phnom Penh's White Building earlier this year. Pha Lina |
TV newscasts no place for murder, says gov’t
The Phnom Penh Post | 25 July 2016
A day before the funeral procession of slain political
analyst Kem Ley, Cambodia’s television outlets were ordered by the
government not to broadcast “images and content related to murder”.
In a group messaging app, Council of Ministers Secretary of
State Svay Sitha wrote: “Please all state and private TV stations stop, from
now on, [broadcasting] both images and content related to murder [in
Cambodia]”. The directive demanded “all stations cooperate and implement this
regulation thoroughly”.
Television journalist Thai Sothea yesterday criticised the order
on Facebook. “How do you want to impress your audience when you do very little
or not do anything at all about [yesterday’s] funeral procession of a man well
respected and beloved by millions of people across the country?”
The procession – which
attracted thousands of mourners – was widely covered by local and
international media.
But Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan said the message
was simply intended to stop media outlets from publishing pictures of gruesome
deaths, though the text made no mention of traffic accidents or suicides.
“We should learn from the past killings . . . and if we don’t show those violent images, all the killing shall be away from Cambodian minds.”
Siphan claimed it was a long-term mission of the Ministry of
Information and the proximity to Kem Ley’s funeral was a coincidence.
He said while the media had the right to disseminate information,
public taste should dictate which images were shown and that the media should
“promote peace”, not “polarise the public”.
Huy Vannak, news editor at Cambodian News Channel, said he
welcomed the directive and had already opted to broadcast photographs of victims
taken while they were still alive, not their dead bodies.
“It means you kill them twice if you don’t abide by the morals
in the code of ethics,” he said.
While Moeun Chhean Naridh, director of the Cambodia Institute
for Media Studies, agreed that the code of ethics bound journalists not to
violate victims’ dignity, he yesterday questioned the timing.
“I don’t know why they issued this directive now. I think it
must be related to the popularity of Kem Ley,” he said. “The murder of Kem Ley
is a high-profile murder; it is in the public interest, so even though the
media ethics forbid journalists from showing gruesome images of victims of
murder or rape . . . we sometimes can cross the line
to serve the public interest.”

Ah Phay Siphoam, you know that of yourself you do a lip service by talking flip-flop by twisting the story. We know you survive to work for your Communist boss Hun Sen (Ah Yong Yuon) and CPP under Ah Kork Hun Sen. How much do you make to make a false statement for your Communist CPP media to fool Cambodian people. You can't fool Cambodian people because you have already know, but you don't want the gullible and dumb CPP voters to see the facts of murder of Khmer hero Dr. Kem Ley.
ReplyDeleteWe see you well, Ah Phay Siphoam, you are scared and you started losing your hairs one by one making you look very ugly and shitty. Your wife will not find you very sexy anymore. LOL