A foreign news  organisation has yet again been forced to apologise to you and your  father and pay you a large sum of money for publishing an article you  did not like. This time it is the New York Times Co. that is a victim of  this double punishment because of a compliant judicial system that  always rules in favour of you and your family in all the lawsuits you  bring against foreign news media. 
Before the New York  Times Co., you succeeded in punishing the Far Eastern Economic Review  (FEER), FinanceAsia.com, The Economist, International Herald Tribune and  Asian Wall Street Journal for their coverage of the political and  economic situation in your country. 
Threatened by a trial,  the New York Times Co. apologised to you and your father, Lee Kuan Yew,  for the article “All in the Family,” written by Philip Bowring and  published in the 15 February issue of the International Herald Tribune.  As well as an apology, this US media company had to pay 114,000 US  dollars in damages. 
Your lawyer, Davinder  Singh, said Bowring’s article violated an “agreement” between your  family and the International Herald Tribune, which was sentenced in 1994  to pay a large sum in damages for an article entitled “The claims about  Asian values don’t usually bear scrutiny.” 
The now defunct Far  Eastern Economic Review agreed last November, after a long legal  wrangle, to pay you and your father 290,000 US dollars in damages.  Despite a lack of evidence, Singaporean judges ruled in favour of your  family both in the original trial and on appeal without a thought for  media freedom. 
Reporters Without Borders condemns the judicial  harassment which you and your father have practiced for years in order  to prevent foreign news media from taking too close an interest in how  you run your country. It does serious and lasting harm to press freedom  in Singapore. 
Your government has repeatedly displayed a  disturbing inability to tolerate foreign journalists. Last October, for  example, Ben Bland, a British freelancer who strings for The Economist  and The Daily Telegraph, was denied a visa and permission to cover an  APEC summit in Singapore. “I was forced to leave Singapore after the  government refused to renew my work visa without any explanation,” Bland  told Reporters Without Borders. 
But the censorship has  above all affected local media and local artistic production. In October  2009, for example, the ministry of information, communication and arts  upheld a ban on a documentary by Singaporean filmmaker Martyn See about  government opponent Said Zahari.
In response to the  publication of the Reporters Without Borders 2009 press freedom index,  in which Singapore was ranked 133rd out of 175 countries, your law  minister, K. Shanmugam, described it as “absurd” and “disconnected from  reality.” 
Unfortunately, the facts show that we are right. 
In the six years since  you became prime minister and said you favoured an “open” society, we  have seen very few improvements in the situation of free speech. 
We therefore think  your government should take the following measures as a matter of  urgency:
- Put a stop to the  libel actions which you and your relatives have been bringing against  Singaporean and foreign media that cover Singaporean developments in an  independent manner. As the UN special rapporteur for freedom of  expression recently said, the prime minister, his minister and high  officials must refrain from suing journalists over their articles and  comments.
 
- Amend the  criminal code so as to abolish prison sentences for press offences.
 
- Amend the  press law, especially the articles concerning the granting of  publication licences. The current restrictions are preventing the  emergence of independent media. The film law should also be relaxed.
 
- Reform the  national security law so as to abolish administrative detention, which  allows the authorities to imprison people because of what they think.
 
- Reform the  Media Development Authority so that it is no longer able to censor and  can solely make recommendations about TV programmes and films.
 
- Allow  government opponents and civil society representatives unrestricted  access to the public media.
 
- Guarantee the  editorial independence of all the media owned by Singapore Press  Holdings (SPH) and Media Corporation of Singapore (Mediacorp).
 
- Transfer the money that your family has obtained in damages from foreign and Singaporean news media to a support fund for imprisoned journalists that Reporters Without Borders proposes to set up.
We regret that you, the members of your government  and your father keep citing the need to guarantee Singapore’s stability  as grounds for controlling the media and maintaining its draconian laws.  Countries that show the most respect for press freedom, such as Finland  and Norway, are peaceful and prosperous democracies. Freedom of  expression is not a source of political unrest. Quite the contrary. 
You have perpetuated  your father’s legacy by continuing to harass and intimidate news media.  As a result, aside from a few websites specialising in Singapore, no  news outlet can publish independent news and information about issues  affecting the political situation in your country. 
We would be very  honoured to be able to meet with you in order to talk about our  observations and our proposals for guaranteeing press freedom in  Singapore in person. 
Respectfully,
Jean-François Julliard
 Secretary-General
Paris 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment