By U AC
ACCORDING to the News and Media Law of Myanmar, enacted in March 2014, the following objectives have been set for media development in the country:
(1) To develop media entities that
enjoy freedom of expression under the Constitution of 2008.
(2) The media industry stands tall as
the fourth pillar of the nation.
(3) To ensure the rights and freedom
of the media workers
(4) To define and set up
responsibilities, ethics, discipline and best practices of media personnel.
(5) To fulfil the rights of every
citizen for information access.
(6) To act as a mediator between the
complainant and media entity to peacefully resolve the dispute. We are here to
evaluate how many of these objectives are being met and assess what could be
the future of media going forward in the country.
Know Yourself Know the
Other Side
Based on how things stand right now,
freedom of expression could possibly be seen as the concept of the past. And it
is definitely not brought about by the government. False accusations, fake
news, fallacious allegations, fictitious accounts of stories and false-hearted
social punishments have propelled many into beliefs that press freedom is
secondary to peace, stability and development and that Myanmar people do not
deserve the freedom of expression at this very moment. Many countries have
prospered and stood tall, despite the apparent lack of freedom of the press;
Singapore, Vietnam, China, and Malaysia just to name a few.
Sun Tzu’s famous words of wisdom
started with, ‘Know yourself, know the other side and you will not be
defeated’. The strength of the country is embedded within but not appropriately
extracted; we have a relatively young population, but their youthfulness and
zeal are mainly being exploited in Thailand. We have lots of precious hardwood
trees, but revenues from their sale are heading towards the EAOs and smugglers
who ship the hardwood out of border areas or via the sea to buyers in Port
Klang, Malaysia. We are the third largest exporter of rare earth to China,
according to US intelligence, but the income from these is going to a country
within the country of the Wa Self-Administered Division, with no sharing with
the rest of the state. We have the famous jade and rubies but the lack of
enforcement of rules and corruption ensures that the majority of the proceeds
fall into the hands of regional commanders and coyotes. Our tribes are totally
disunited, each of them acting only for themselves.
In addition to the above (dis)
advantages, due to the lack of governance over social media and tough
enforcement against felonious actions, we have fallen into an abyss at this
moment in time. In the epitaph of history, this could be the case study of how
instrumental social media, specifically Facebook, is in the destruction of the
country, especially when the government is a kakistocracy as the people are
uneducated and unread.
The lack of emphasis by successive
media councils on digital media ensured the downfall of press freedom too. Let
the results speak for themselves. The Press Council’s performance was so
brilliant that the Ministry of Information decided to form a brand-new Media
Development Department, when the task of media development falls under the
purview of the Press Council, as distinctly obvious under the Media Law. The
priority given to digital media was also so spot-on that another superfluous
association came into existence: the Digital Media Association. That all
happened in the past three years. The Council has had a chance to make its mark
on history and clearly it did (Not), based on these dazzling results. With the
priorities all wrong, how could it possibly act as the preserver of the fourth
estate in the nation’s building?
How do we give press freedom when
there are no accompanying responsibilities, ethics and discipline do not exist
in news and media personnel, especially those who hang out pushing falsehoods
online. How can these actions go unpunished ever? When these perpetrators hide
behind anonymous servers and overseas sets up, funded by foreign countries, how
do we go for peaceful resolution of disputes?
Know the Weather and the
Terrain
Sun Tzu continued, “Know the weather
and the terrain and your victory is assured”. The sage is referring to the
circumstances and environment under which we wage our battles. The legal
environment is in shatters as the lawand-order situation is heading south
compared to a decade ago, including increased corruption in the judiciary
branch. Climate change and environmental upheavals are making it difficult for
the country to upgrade the software of its people, including the media
development as resources get diverted to rescue, rehabilitation and
reconstruction efforts.
Political circumstances are such that
any hint of limitless press freedom could result in political instability and
possible disruption to the upcoming 2025 general election timetable. The
economic situation is not helping either. As the President of UMFCCI would say,
‘If you remove the issue of imports and exchange rates, Myanmar is still a good
country to invest in’. Yet the statistics have proven on the contrary. Even
these two circumstances present the media with challenges. Reporting the
factual economic news becomes a predicament. How do we express the truth and
facts, without being caught in an awkward situation with the government? If the
facts were not disclosed and the truth was concealed, how would the government
get the national development strategy right?
Socially, the country is divided.
Some persons believed in almost everything the fake news agencies posted. At
least half of the population doubt whatever the government say. The reactive
approach to fake news is not helping either. Mark Twain famously said in 1924,
“A lie can travel around the world and back again, while the truth is lacing up
its boots”. Another thumbs down for us is the lack of civility and courtesy on
online platforms. There is no self-policing among ourselves. Those who try to
inject an ounce of truth and politeness were singled out and fired upon by
trolls, causing many of them to stay away from social media for health and
psychological reasons. Technologically, we are already at the back end of
ASEAN. While our IT talents are breaking their backs on Thai, Malaysian and
Singapore companies, we are still struggling to decide when to turn on our
VPNs, when to shut them off and when to get a free VPN app. More than 90 per
cent of our population do not know how to use basic applications other than
Facebook. For example, a significant portion of the corporate staff do not know
how to use Google Maps and how to share locations.
With the headwinds going so strong in
the upstream journey, what could be our media strategy for the company years?
We can all start with the six actionable steps to bring us closer to the
original six objectives.
(1) Stop forming duplicate entities,
departments and associations. Focus all the resources on one Press Council,
which should be renamed as the ‘Media Council’ to encompass all, especially the
digital media.
(2) Let the young people with
brilliant minds, who would be willing to take risks for the nation’s media
development, take the lead in this evolution.
(3) Together with all the
stakeholders, we need to develop a mission and a strategy to defeat fake news.
The current approaches definitely need a step up.
(4) Law and order and effective
enforcement. Needless to say, without tough enforcement actions that follow,
the agencies that act for the government would remain like lame ducks.
(5) There are many reasons to delay,
postpone and put off actions. But none of these help in bringing the nation
forward. Even having a small or online event is undoubtedly better than holding
no events at all.
(6) Finally, stop rewarding people
for doing nothing and just wasting government budgets.
The future is bright! The future is
orange! The future is ours to make.
#TheGlobalNewLightOfMyanmar

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