Movements.org
Join Us
  • Home
  • Blog
  • How To
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Mobile
    • Email
    • Video
    • See More »
  • Case Studies
    • Build Awareness For Your Cause
    • Plan and Strategize Your Campaign Or Movement
    • Mobilize Your Supporters
    • Use Social Media And Mobile To Fundraise
    • See More »
  • The Summit
  • Additional Resources
  • About

Home > Blog > Myanmar Eliminates Most Forms Of Media Censorship

August 21, 2012 Posted in | Share

Myanmar Eliminates Most Forms Of Media Censorship

Myanmar Eliminates Most Forms Of Media Censorship

The following excerpt was taken from the International Business Times online.

 

The government of Myanmar (also known as Burma) has abolished censorship of the press, in yet another reform measure taken by President Thein Sein’s nominally civilian government.

"Any publication inside the country will not have to get prior permission from us before they are published," Tint Swe, the chief of the government's Press Scrutiny and Registration Department, or PSRD, told the Agence France Presse agency. "From now on, our department will just carry out registering publications for keeping them at the national archives and issuing a license to printers and publishers.”

Some Burmese journalists hailed the decision.

Mizzima, an Indian-based news agency run by Burmese exiles, said the removal of press controls was met by “jubilation” and "a sense of shock and disbelief after decades of harsh censorship."

The exiled news service indicated that censorship was introduced in Burma in 1964 and applied to “everything from newspapers to song lyrics, fiction, poems and even fairy tales.” An estimated 30,000 Burmese Internet sites will now be relieved of censorship rules.

“There will be accountability, along with freedom of the press," Ko Ko, the general secretary of the Myanmar Journalists Association, told Mizzima. "Under the freedom of press, if a story is written indiscriminately [not factually], there will be many problems. [If a story harms] people or organizations, they will file lawsuits. In the countries that have freedom of press, that is common. So, [media persons] will have more accountability.”

Other Burmese journalists greeted the news with some caution.

"If I speak superficially, I can congratulate the government for lifting censorship," said pro-democracy activist Win Tin, according to the Daily Telegraph newspaper of Britain.

"But on the ground, censorship is still there. There is a danger to the press -- they may be prosecuted after they've published. There's also a danger of self-censorship, because journalists are afraid."

In addition, Tin Htar Shwe, the head of the BBC's Burmese Service, cautioned that journalists in Burma could still be punished for writing anything that angers the government.

Moreover, films will remain under the government’s censorship watch.

Still, the move to ease media censorship raises hopes that Thein Sein’s government will continue to make further reforms in order to put Burma on a firm path toward democracy.

 

To read the full article, click here.

Share |

blog comments powered by Disqus

Popular Topics

Access to Information Advocacy Building Awareness Censorship Citizen Media Civil Resistance Tactics civil society Digital Activism Daily Digital Security Facebook Activism How To Human Rights Middle East and North Africa Mobile Protest Social Media Sustaining Protest Movements Technology and Social Movements Twitter Activism Youth

Blog roll

Tangled Web

IRevolution

Digital Democracy

Global Voices Advocacy

Kiwanja

Meta-Activism Project

Waging Nonviolence

Witness

TechPresident

TechChange Blog

Small World News

Friends and Partners

Khudi Pakistan

Gawaahi

Universities for Ushahidi

Digital Democracy

Small World News

Contributors

#iWeiwei Campaign Instructions
Twitter Lists
Country Profiles
  • Became a Facebook Fan
  • Follow us on Twitter

More Tweets | Follow us on Twitter

A division of:
Movements.org - Alliance for Youth Movements
  • Home
  • Blog
  • How To
  • Case Studies
  • Free Resources
  • The Summit
  • About AYM
  • DONATE

copyright ©2010 - 2013 by the Alliance for Youth Movements. Some rights reserved | privacy | contact