BIG STORIES :
News Corp. | Phone Hacking Scandal | WikiLeaks | Barack Obama | Julian Assange | 2012 U.S. Election | Religion | See All
iMEDIAETHICS.org
Seperator
 
Tips Facebook Twitter Twitter Twitter RSS Feeds
 
Home | | Contact Us

International Media Ethics News :
Daily Media Pick
Comments (0)
Print Tweet Email

New Press Council in Burma to replace Censorship Board?

By: Sydney Smith
May 18, 2012 05:00 AM EST
 
New Press Council in Burma to replace Censorship Board?
 
(Credit: Mizzima, screenshot)
 

Myanmar will get a press council next month, Burmese "independent news media group" Irrawaddy reported.

According to Burmese news site Mizzima, the press council was announced by the government's Information Minister Kyaw Hsan and council members are to "include representatives from Myanmar Journalist Association (MJA), Myanmar Journalist Union (MJU) and the Myanmar Journalist Network (MJN). "

Myanmar Journalists Association Organizing Committee's Maung Wuntha said the council has to be independent of the government and that the council will serve as "complaints resolution."  However, the Committee to Protect Journalists' Shawn Crispin said the press council "looks disturbingly similar to the outgoing pre-publication censorship board" because the press council is supposed to regulate for censorship guidelines, according to Irrawaddy.

With the council and a new media law, prior censorship should also be ended although news outlets will still have to "submit articles after publication" to the government, according to Mizzima.  Also, Hsan said "Burma's censorship board, the Press Scrutiny and Registration Division," will end, Irrawaddy reported.

Further, the Myanmar Journalists Association, Journalists Network and Journalists Union have criticized the planned press council because the press council is supposed to "operate" under a governmental department, Myanmar Journalists Association's Ko Ko told Irrawaddy.

Eurasia Review and "independent Burmese media organisation" Democratic Voice of Burma noted that last month, the government restricted "weekly news journal" Myanmar Post Global for not giving censors its "two-page supplement" prior to publication.  Because the journal didn't get its content reviewed, the censors "punished" the journal by saying it can't "print its supplementary pages for two weeks."

Irrawaddy noted that earlier this month, the Committee to Protect Journalists placed Burma as "the seventh worst country in the world for press censorship."

We wrote in February about a proposed media law that would end prior censorship of Burmese media outlets but still have outlets be "reviewed" post-publication.  In 2011, Burma let 178 of its 358 media outlets publish without prior restraint (but still required the outlets to be reviewed after publication).

Line
Print   Print
Line
Twitter   Tweet
Report an Error Report an Error
Email   E-mail
Link Send a Tip
 
 
  RESOURCES FOR EDUCATORS
 
Checkout iMediaEthics Resources for Educators, a helpful section for colleges, institutions, students and teachers.
Ethics Codes Case Studies Sites We Like
Ethics Codes Case Studies Sites We Like
 
   DAVID MOORE ON POLLS [See All]   
9 in 10 Americans can be classified as Racist against Either Blacks or Whites?  What the AP Poll on Racial Attitudes really tells Us, Part 2.
PollSkeptic Report:   9 in 10 Americans can be classified as Racist...
What the AP Poll on Racial Attitudes Really Tells Us, Part 1
PollSkeptic Report:   What the AP Poll on Racial Attitudes Really Tells...
David Moore
PollTalk Blog:   3 in 10 Voters Believe Armed Revolution Might Be...
   MORE BY THIS AUTHOR [See All]   
   SIMILAR TOPIC
 
 Campus Police Intimidate Student Journalists, Lessons learned from Stony Brook Univ. fire
Campus Police Intimidate Student Journalists, Lessons learned from Stony Brook Univ. fire
There are journalists, and then there are...
 
Commentary Magazine Denies D.G. Myers Fired for Pro-Same Sex Marriage Blog
Commentary Magazine Denies D.G. Myers Fired for Pro-Same Sex Marriage Blog
 
Sri Lankan Newspaper Apologizes for Sexist Cartoon after Complaints
Sri Lankan Newspaper Apologizes for Sexist Cartoon after Complaints
Sri Lankan newspaper Lakbima News apologized Sept. 16...
 
Ecuadorean Journalist Found Guilty of Libeling Correa Given Asylum in U.S.
Ecuadorean Journalist Found Guilty of Libeling Correa Given Asylum in U.S.
Emilio Palacio, a reporter for Ecuador's El Universo...
 
   TWITTER
   FACEBOOK
   LATEST STORIES [See All]