Press Freedom: Screenshots & Others help save Malaysia's world ranking
I am not bragging, but Malaysia could have suffered far worse press freedom ranking if not for the existence of blogs like Screenshots and the late MGG Pillai, online media like Malaysiakini, and media watchdogs like Aliran and CIJ.
This is an excerpt from Freedom House, a non-profit advocate of democracy founded in 1941 and now HQ-ed in Washington DC
Highly critical blogs by Malaysian standards, such as Screenshots and Sangkancil, online news sites like Malaysiakini, and media watchdogs such as Aliran and the Center for Independent Journalism have been able to operate since Abdullah took over as prime minister in 2003, although they are subject to repeated instances of harassment at the hands of authorities.
In the ‘Global Survey of Media Independence' 2006, Freedom House gave Malaysia a score of 68 points out of 100 -- where the higher points denote a worse threat to Press Freedom -- putting us in the basket of Not Free (NF) vis-a-vis freedom of the press.

The aggregate was derived from an analysis of the legal, political, and economic environment surrounding and influencing the media.
Among the 194 countries surveyed, Malaysia ranked 141st, putting us the same league as obscure democracies like Angola, Bhutan, Cameroon, Cote d'Ivoire, Moldova and United Arab Emirates.
For the ranking among the Asia-Pacific countries, Malaysia is 28th out of 40 countries, trailing behind Cambodia and Pakistan.
In 2005, Malaysia ranked 152nd globally, 33rd regionally, or three notches better than China.
In other words, we are getting worse. In the region, Malaysia trailed behind Cambodia and Pakistan (global ranking 128), Indonesia and Sri Lanka (121), Thailand (107), The Philippines (89), East Timor (85), Samoa and Papua New Guinea (65).
At this rate we go, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi may be justified for his Mission 2057 in seeing Malaysia as a First-Class country.
Finland and Iceland shared the top ranking for having the freest press. North Korea occupied the last placing at 194th.
This is the Freedom House assessment of Malaysia in the 2006 Global Press Freedom Ranking:
Malaysian media continue to be constrained by significant legal restrictions and other forms of intimidation. The constitution permits limitations on freedom of expression, and the government imposes them in practice, ostensibly to protect national security and public order. The Printing Presses and Publications Act (PPPA) requires all publishers and printing firms to obtain an annual operations permit, which can be withdrawn without judicial review. Authorities have shut down or otherwise circumscribed the distribution of some pro-opposition media outlets under the PPPA. With respect to electronic media, the information minister decides who can own a broadcast station and the type of television service suitable for the Malaysian public via the 1988 Broadcasting Act. The Official Secrets Act, Sedition Act, and harsh criminal defamation legislation continue to impose restrictions on the press and other critics. Local media watchdog groups such as Charter 2000 continue to campaign for the repeal of these and other laws that repress freedom of expression, including the Internal Security Act, the Emergency (Public Order and Prevention of Crime) Ordinance, the Essential (Security Cases) Regulations, and the Universities and University Colleges Act. The latter law was invoked in December to punish journalism student Ali Bukhari Amir, whose stories on campus politics were published in the Islamic opposition party's newspaper, Harakah.Self-censorship in the Malaysian media is entrenched through a history of political interference in media coverage of issues considered by the government to be "sensitive" and against the national interest. Thus the real threat for journalists does not come so much from professional sanctions as from a learned caution against expensive defamation suits, sackings, media closures, media bans, and unannounced interrogation by the Ministry of Internal Security for any "mishandling" of information. Two editors from China Press, the second-highest circulated Chinese daily in the country, were forced to resign after publishing a leaked video clip of police abuse of a woman, alleged to be a Chinese national, who was forced to squat in the nude. The woman was later ascertained to be a Malaysian. The story compelled Malaysia to apologize to China, and in December the new Ministry of Internal Security, which has powers to issue, revoke, or change the terms of printing and publishing licenses, ordered China Press to show cause for its false reporting. The U.S.-based Epoch Times, a pro-Falun Gong Chinese-language weekly printed in Indonesia, was banned in June and July for what the National Security Bureau said presented a negative view of China at a time when Malaysia was improving bilateral ties with China. The case of Screenshots blogger Jeff Ooi, who was threatened with prosecution in 2004 for allowing a reader's post on his website that was critical of the moderate vision of Islam promoted by the ruling party, remains under investigation, and Ooi was questioned again by police in February.
Political parties and businesspeople or companies close to the ruling coalition own or control all eight major daily newspapers. This type of patronage of the media via editors' affiliation with government and corporate leaders continues to hamper investigative reporting of public affairs and also contributes to self-censorship. Both the print and broadcast media's news coverage and editorials generally support the government line, although there has been somewhat greater criticism of official policy in the mainstream print press in recent years. Foreign publications are subject to censorship, and the distribution of issues containing critical articles is frequently delayed. The internet has minimized the government's monopoly of information and bolstered the average Malaysian's access to alternative information sources. Highly critical blogs by Malaysian standards, such as Screenshots and Sangkancil, online news sites like Malaysiakini, and media watchdogs such as Aliran and the Center for Independent Journalism have so far been able to operate since Abdullah Badawi took over as prime minister in 2003, although they are subject to repeated instances of harassment at the hands of authorities.
Comments
The insinuation in "have been able to operate since Abdullah took over as prime minister in 2003" is unfair. All these websites started and florished when Mahathir was Prime Minister. Indeed all of them were rather pleased to see Badawi take over and even supported his premiership. Only now all of them, save Sangkanchil, ofcourse, for obvious reasons, are not exactly writing praises of Badawi's administration. Only thing is after his honeymoon with bloggers it would seem like bloggers have suddenly become bad boys, liars, jobless, nothing to do vermins. I comment too.....in blogs and letters...but never felt as intimidated when I used to comment during Mahathir's era.
Posted by: Observer
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May 5, 2007 09:57 AM