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Centre for Independent Journalism Malaysia Alarmed at Media Blackout of Bersih 3.0; Website Hacked

The Centre for Independent Journalism (CIJ) Malaysia released the results of a 2 week media monitoring study on mainstream Malaysian press coverage of the Bersih 3.0 rally to be held in Dataran Merdeka this Saturday 28th April. This evening, 26th April, after uploading the press release to their website, CIJ realised that the site had been defaced by a crew of Indonesian hackers, rendering this important press release unavailable.

The Centre for the Study of Communications and Culture (CSCC) is working with CIJ to undertake a large-scale media monitoring project of the upcoming media coverage of the 13th Malaysian General Election. The smaller Bersih-coverage study's results underline the need for such research, with an apparent blackout being imposed upon any coverage of the planned rally by the mainstream Malaysian media. The CSCC is pleased to be able to support CIJ in this important academic project, as it has enormous civil society implications, and have therefore reproduced the press release in full below, to allow for its continued distribution while CIJ get their website up and running again.

[PRESS RELEASE BEGINS]

"The Centre for Independent Journalism (CIJ) wishes to draw attention to the fact that there has been significantly less print media coverage of the Bersih 3.0 rally and its aims, compared to last year's event.

CIJ began monitoring articles on Bersih 3.0 on 14 April 2012, two weeks before the scheduled 28 April rally. This matched an identical study conducted last year which began two weeks before the 9 July 2011 rally. CIJ monitored articles in four newspapers – Utusan Malaysia, New Straits Times, The Star and theSun.

In the corresponding period last year, Utusan Malaysia published 316 articles on Bersih compared with only 10 this year. This represents a fall of 97%. The New Straits Times had a similarly drastic drop of 92%, with only eight articles published this year compared to 97 in 2011. The Star had a 91% drop with only nine articles this year compared to 104 in the same period last year. theSun performed relatively better with a drop of 62%; it published 10 articles for Bersih 3.0 rally compared to 26 for last year's rally.

Coverage by Utusan Malaysia and the New Straits Times remains largely negative. There was an increase in neutral articles published in The Star, with six out of the nine articles on Bersih so far recorded as neutral. Of the four, theSun tops the list of most balanced coverage with eight of the 10 articles recorded as neutral, one as positive, and one as negative.

CIJ would also like to highlight that only theSun and Utusan Malaysia published both online and in their print editions the order from Justice Rohana Yusuf for Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein to clarify his statement that Bersih 3.0 was not a security threat. This was related to Bersih 2.0’s judicial review application of the minister’s decision to ban the coalition last year. The Star only published this news in its online version while New Straits Times did not publish it at all.

Given the significance of the Bersih 3.0 rally and the issues it raises, it is alarming that a matter of such great public interest has received a near-blackout by the print media. This can only fuel speculation that Utusan Malaysia, the New Straits Times and The Star are deliberately toning down their Bersih coverage -- at best, of their own accord, or at worst, due to interference from the government or the political parties which own them.

CIJ views these statistics on the media coverage of Bersih 3.0 rally as a clear example of how the print media is still not free to report fairly and accurately in Malaysia. Print media's poor performance as provider of accurate information contradicts Malaysia's rise in global indices on media freedom and the liberalisation promise behind the recent amendments to the Printing Presses and Publications Act (PPPA).

CIJ calls for a complete repeal of the PPPA and a review of the ownership of the print media by political parties."

[PRESS RELEASE ENDS]

For further information on this study, please contact cijmalaysia@gmail.com

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Posted on 26th April 2012

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