A man looks at Fresh News stories on Facebook in a coffeeshop in Phnom Penh yesterday. Hong Menea |
PM heaps praise on Fresh News
Phnom Penh Post | 7 September 2017
Prime Minister Hun Sen made glowing overtures to government
mouthpiece Fresh News yesterday, claiming it was a news service on par
with 150-year-old stalwarts Reuters and the Associated Press.
The premier used a speech to garment workers at the Canadia
Industrial Complex to highlight that students in Japan and Cambodians in
Vientiane relied on Fresh News – which boasts 2 million Facebook
followers – as their key source of information.
“Fresh News now is not only being watched in the country but also
abroad, and we also have a quick information system that is no worse
than AFP, UPI, AP or Reuters,” Hun Sen said, also referring to Agence
France-Presse and United Press International, both about half a century
old.
In recent weeks, Fresh News has published unsubstantiated and seemingly fantastical conspiracy theories
pulled directly from anonymous Facebook pages that foreshadowed the
expulsion of pro-democracy NGO National Democratic Institute and the
arrest of opposition leader Kem Sokha on treason charges.
The online outlet enjoys a cosy relationship with the ruling
Cambodian People’s Party, often getting first access to information and
circulating government documents, as well as scoring rare exclusives
with Hun Sen himself.
The prime ministerial accolades for the outlet, meanwhile, come in the wake of the recent government shutdown of the hard-hitting Cambodia Daily newspaper and over a dozen independent radio stations.
Reporters Without Borders Asia-Pacific head Daniel Bastard said
“Fresh News cannot be compared to professional and independent press
agencies” due to its obvious bias, which deprives its articles of
credibility.
“Although Fresh News can deliver quick information, it cannot be seen
as a reliable source of information, since it spreads unsubstantiated
conspiracy theories,” he said via email.
“Fresh News recently published several articles accusing NGOs,
journalists and members of the US Embassy of being part of a conspiracy
to overthrow the government. One journalist, Geoffrey Cain, was deemed a
‘foreign spy’, alongside [jailed filmmaker] James Ricketson. No
evidence or credible source has been produced.”
Fresh News CEO Lim Cheavutha, however, welcomed Hun Sen’s praise with pride and defended publishing the conspiracies.
“Such articles have attracted huge interest from people, and it is
not different from WikiLeaks, which leaked important documents of the
USA, and big media in the world like CNN, BBC, Reuters, AP, etc,” he
said. “Fresh News is an independent institution and does not have senior
officials behind it, and the institution is not a mouthpiece for the
government.”
Huy Vannak, undersecretary of state at the Ministry of Interior and
president of the Union of Journalist Federations of Cambodia – where
Cheavutha is a deputy general secretary – said he was “sure” Fresh News
verified the allegations before publishing them.
“To be honest, it is the role of authorities or court if there is a
complaint or the need to verify” the identity of a Facebook user, he
said, suggesting the routine journalistic procedure was in fact “beyond
the scope” of a journalist.
Vannak said Cheavutha was “like a brother” to him, and while the
premier made a point about the speed of pro-government Fresh News, it
still needed to develop its content in order to be in the same ballpark
as the international wire services.
Reuters did not respond to requests for comment by press time, but
their Handbook for Journalists demands accurate and unbiased reporting.
“For a single source story, the informant must be an actual
policymaker or participant involved in the action or negotiation with
first-hand knowledge, or an official representative or spokesperson
speaking on background. Such information should be subject to particular
scrutiny to ensure we are not being manipulated,” it reads.
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