By Nor Hamzeela Md Hambali
LONDON, July 12 (NNN-BERNAMA) – Minister of Communications and Multimedia Gobind Singh Deo says Malaysia will be looking into better laws and a media council soon for Malaysian journalists as part of its move to encourage more media freedom in the country.
“We have to recognise that we need to do more to push ahead with our reform agenda when it comes to press and media freedom. Two of the main areas that I am looking at is to ensure that all those laws that are required to be amended and abolished are acted on as soon as possible, and also the setting up of the media council,” he said when speaking to the Malaysian media here Thursday.
Gobind had earlier addressed a plenary session of the two-day Global Conference for Media Freedom, the first of its kind, that kicked off here Wednesday.
The minister said the new Malaysian government had promised more transparency and accountability, and to repeal oppressive laws which had previously been used to silence the media and dissenting views.
“One of the first pledges that we fulfilled was to repeal the controversial Anti-Fake News Act, an Act which we found to be a piece of legislation hastily enacted by the previous government to clamp down on the press, the opposition and civil society. And even though that bill was defeated in the Senate, the law itself is no longer in use in Malaysia today,” he said.
On the media council, he said the government is in the process of holding consultations and getting feedback through discussions with media owners, journalists, media organisations, unions as well as civil society groups.
The self-regulatory media council, to be helmed by the industry itself, is expected to govern media conduct as well as uphold the quality of news reporting while ensuring a responsible, free and vibrant media in Malaysia.
The plenary session panel included Amal Clooney, the UK Foreign Office’s Special Envoy on Media Freedom and Director-General of UNESCO Audrey Azoulay.
The minister also participated in another session that discussed the landscape of media freedom in South East Asia.
Panel members included Indonesian Minister for Communications and Information, Rudiantara and Maria Ressa, the chief executive officer and executive editor of online news organisation, Rappler.
Organised by the governments of Canada and the UK, the conference is hosted by Chrystia Freeland, Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs, and Jeremy Hunt, the UK Foreign Secretary.
The conference is part of an international campaign to shine a global spotlight on media freedom.
This event brought together over 1,000 guests, including government ministers and officials, the diplomatic community, international agencies, journalists, civil society, and academics.
Among others, it examined the challenges facing media freedom and the opportunities to be created for a safer environment for journalists.
–NNN-BERNAMA