LEGAL ACTION AGAINST MEDIA 'ONLY LAST RESORT'
LEGAL ACTION AGAINST MEDIA 'ONLY LAST RESORT'
By Muninggar Sri Saraswati
JAKARTA (Jakarta Post Online/Pacific Media Watch): President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has reiterated his support for press freedom, promising that the government would settle disputes with the media out of court.
Communications and information minister Sofyan Djalil said on Thursday that the President was committed to supporting the development of a free and professional media as it was a major part of democracy.
"We will continue to
use hak jawab (the right to respond) as we know
that
media reports are not always accurate," Sofyan said
at a press briefing after
accompanying the President at a
meeting with the Indonesian Journalists
Association
(PWI).
However, the President recently sent a team led by Sofyan to visit the offices of Kompas, the country's leading newspaper, and Rakyat Merdeka newspaper to convey displeasure at articles on post-tsunami issues, which the government deemed opinionated.
"We exercised our right to object to the articles carried by the two dailies, and the case is closed," Sofyan said, explaining the visits.
However, he said the government would not hesitate
to bring a dispute with
print or electronic media to the
Indonesia Press Council if its right to
respond was
ignored.
"We will only use the legal approach as a last resort," Sofyan asserted.
Susilo acknowledged that a
number of articles on the media in the Criminal
Code were
products of Dutch colonial rulers and were unsuited to
current
conditions, Sofyan said.
"However, we need to
develop a benchmark for the Indonesian media. Even
in
countries with well established democracy, the press
must abide by regulations
and code of ethics," he
said.
Last year, Tempo magazine chief editor Bambang
Harymurti was found guilty in
a defamation case against
businessman Tomy Winata. Tempo also lost a civil
lawsuit
in connection with the case and was ordered to pay US$1
million in
compensation. The magazine has appealed the
verdicts.
Rakyat Merdeka, a newspaper known for its
sensational headlines, lost
separate libel cases last
year against president Megawati Soekarnoputri and
House
of Representatives speaker Akbar Tandjung. Two of its
editors are appealing their
six-to-eight-month prison
terms.
During Thursday's media conference after the
meeting with the President, PWI
chairman Tarman Azzam
said Susilo would attend the celebration of
National
Press Day on Feb. 9 in the Riau capital
Pekanbaru.
"The President is set to hold talks with people at the event," he said.
The PWI commemoration of the day
has drawn public criticism because the Rp 6
billion
(US$666,600) event, which features a national sports
competition, will
reportedly be financed by the Riau
budget.
Riau Governor Rusli Zainal, who accompanied Tarman
at the press conference,
did not deny the reports, saying
his administration often disbursed funds from
the
provincial budget for social events.
Critics have lashed
out at the Riau administration for spending so much
money
for the PWI event.
They also accused the PWI of
being insensitive to the suffering of tsunami
victims in
Aceh and North Sumatra, including fellow
journalists.
Tarman said the PWI got funding from other
sources apart from the Riau
government to finance the
event.
Responding to the criticism, Tarman said there was
no need to draw out
compassion for Aceh.
"We don't need
to be sad for a long time. We should support Aceh to
rise
again. The event is a part of our attention toward
the Acehnese," he said,
arguing
that the PWI had
raised funds for its members in Aceh.
Tarman said the
committee would cover travel and accommodation costs
of
delegates participating in the National Press Day
celebration.
The PWI will also present awards for
exceptional reports on post-tsunami
Aceh, he added.