IFJ: Eleventh Annual South Asia Press Freedom Report
Building Resistance, Organising For Change: IFJ
Launches Eleventh Annual Press Freedom Report For South
Asia
On World Press Freedom Day, 2013, the
International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) with UNESCO
support launches a report on South Asia, the eleventh in an
annual series that reviews all developments that have a
bearing on media freedom and quality journalism in the
region.
IFJ’s South Asia Press Freedom Report
for 2013, titled “Building Resistance, Organising for
Change”, seeks to bring into sharp focus the diverse
experiences of media practitioners in the South Asian
region. Over the year under review, these have ranged from
the continuing threat of legal action and the growing menace
of physical violence, to the challenges posed by new forms
of inter-personal communication and engagement with the
media and the defence of the traditional values of the
craft.
Looming over all these is the issue of
financial viability, which has emerged with a renewed force
in the currently unsettled economic times. In some of the
smaller South Asian countries, with weakly institutionalised
media industries, financial viability has always been a
constant challenge. But even in countries with well
established industries and long settled traditions, such as
India, developments over the year have unsettled some of the
optimism of the last decade of rapid growth in the media.
The issue of transparency in ownership and editorial
functioning has been brought to the foreground.
Accountability and credible modes of regulation still remain
relevant.
Physical safety was sharply in focus as a
priority in a region which remains one of the most dangerous
for journalists to operate in. In Nepal and Sri Lanka,
violence against journalists and the media has been a
disturbingly recurrent phenomenon over the past twelve
months. Prolonged internal warfare, now formally declared at
an end in both countries, presented serious challenges for
independent journalism while a blanket of impunity for
violent acts committed during the war continues and
political settlement remains elusive.
Pakistan’s
status as a frontline state in a global conflict continues
to deepen ethnic and sectarian fractures. The past twelve
months have seen a further deterioration in the safety
environment for journalists. Pakistan has had its impunity
rating increasing rapidly and without break for the last
four years.
The growth of social media has over
the year, added a new dimension to both the opportunities
and challenges facing journalism. In India, a cartoonist had
his website shut down and then faced arrest on sedition
charges, for satirising corruption using depictions of the
national flag. In another context, noxious rumours
circulating through the internet and the mobile phone
network led to a mass panic and the flight of people of a
certain ethnicity from some of India’s most cosmopolitan
cities.
In Bangladesh, young activists campaigning
for the trial of war-crimes accused from the country’s
1971 war of national liberation, were arrested for posting
putatively “atheistic” material on their blogs. In the
Maldives, a campaigner for religious tolerance, suffered a
near fatal attack, provoked by material he had posted on his
blog.
The year saw a growth in instances where
national laws were applied to suppress freedom of
expression. Legal actions and inconsistent judicial
practices contributed to a culture of censorship. In India,
heightened concern over terrorism led to a number of
journalists being criminally charged and in certain cases,
arrested under special security laws.
Governments
continue to block access to information, for example when
Afghanistan’s parliament convened in 2012, the main halls
and the press galleries were declared out of bounds for
journalists.
At a more general level, journalists
face a situation of having to fight for the credibility of
their profession as the region witnesses the growing
integration of the media with other, unrelated business
interests. None of the countries in South Asia has yet
worked out a credible means of regulating this intrusion of
commercialism into the media.
In the Maldives, the
government continues to stand by the ill-advised decision to
reserve all official advertisements for a special gazette,
denying independent media this important financial
sustenance and making them dependent on a variety of
commercial and political actors. In Bhutan, an arbitrary
change of rules by the electoral authorities, since
rescinded, meant that most independent media platforms would
be denied political advertising during the ongoing election
campaign.
In India, the year under review saw the
prospect of employment and livelihood anxieties multiplying
for journalists who had taken what seemed like lucrative
opportunities in a number of new media platforms promoted by
finance, real estate and other companies through the boom
years of the last decade.
Journalists still
struggle for fair wages and decent working conditions. In
India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal principally,
established laws on the protection of living standards are
being breached with little consequence. In other countries
such as Sri Lanka, the Maldives and Afghanistan, the
struggle is underway for securing protections under the law
for the wages and working conditions of the media
community.
Countries in South Asia call out for
sensible regulatory frameworks that do not impede the public
right to freedom of expression and access to information,
and safeguard the media from the commercial intrusions that
have deeply eroded its credibility.
Like the ten
that have preceded, this year’s report is part of the
continuing effort of the South Asia Media Solidarity Network
(SAMSN) for sharing experiences and building foundations for
united action across frontiers.
The continuing
financial support from UNESCO for this annual report is
gratefully acknowledged.
ENDS