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| An Asia Foundation report released yesterday says more Cambodians are accessing news from their smartphones, with the medium overtaking television as Cambodia’s main source of news. Pha Lina |
Facebook trumps TV
Phnom Penh Post | 16 December 2016
Facebook has, for the first time, overtaken television as the main
source of news for Cambodian people – a trend that analysts say could
threaten the ruling party’s grip on the Kingdom’s media coverage.
In an annual report focused on mobile phone use in Cambodia released
by the Asia Foundation and Open Institute yesterday, the most important
source of news for 30 percent of Cambodians was found to be Facebook and
the internet, followed closely by television (29 percent), word of
mouth (23 percent) and radio (15 percent).
The trend comes alongside a marked increase in smartphone ownership,
with 48 percent of Cambodians owning one this year – more than doubling
the percentage of just three years ago – and the fact that 76 percent of
phones owned are now Khmer script-enabled.
The Asia Foundation’s country director Silas Everett said the study showed some “really significant trends for Cambodia”.
“The increase in reading and writing, coupled with going actively on
Facebook and getting information and news, suggests a more engaged
citizenry in Cambodia, though I wouldn’t necessarily say more informed,”
Everett said.
Ou Virak, head of independent [ha! ha! because one of his foreign friends has said so and it has been thoughtlessly repeated? Virak doesn't owe Kem Sokha anything -- of course not!?! ;)] think tank [really? what has it published? who are the staff besides the one-man show?] Future Forum, said the trend
would come as no surprise to the CPP – which continues to dominate
broadcast media – but he predicted the party would still exert
considerable pressure on Khmer independent news outlets as their stories
reached an ever-increasing audience online.
“I think Hun Sen does see the internet and Facebook as a threat, for
two reasons. First, I think that the opposition could potentially
benefit from a higher number of people having access to these mediums,”
Virak said.
“[Another] thing on Hun Sen’s mind is colour revolution, so even if
the opposition might be seen as neutralised and the CPP thinks it can
still win the election comfortably, they might continue to see the
medium as a threat and a potential tool to mobilise a grassroots
movement.”
He added that television would become less relevant for news and more
of a realm for entertainment. “It will not be as powerful [a form of]
propaganda that influences public opinion”, he said.
Moeun Chhean Narridh, director of the Cambodian Institute for Media
Studies, yesterday described the growth of social media as a
“democratisation” of news and said more people were able to voice their
criticism of social issues in Khmer online.
“We have to encourage the government to be patient and let people express themselves in any way,” he said.
He said that while there has recently been a global outcry over “fake
news”, the tilt towards social media mirrored Cambodia’s first days of
press freedom in the 1990s.
“People were previously denied access to free media news, whether it
was false or not, so over the years, they have had to build their media
literacy and learned to distinguish between the real news and the fake
news,” he said.
But if Prime Minister Hun Sen, who has previously declared himself
the “e-premier”, felt threatened by social media’s potential to disrupt
his party’s media message, he didn’t seem to show it yesterday when he
publicly celebrated the fact that more than 19 million SIM cards are
used by Cambodian people – a figure significantly higher than the
population.
“That means that our people in very rural areas are using mobile
phones,” he said, at an inauguration for a new Posts and
Telecommunications Ministry building yesterday.
Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Tram Iv Tek said internet
use had spiked dramatically, from 2.7 million in 2012 to 7.1 million in
2016.
The Asia Foundation study also found the gender gap between access to
phones and information was decreasing, and that the most common app
used on smartphones was not Facebook or even the camera, but the
flashlight.

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