|
Government to target blogosphere next |
|
|
|
|
Tuesday, 26 August 2008 01:50pm |
|
©The
Malaysian Insider (Used by permission)
KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 26 Next up: a crackdown on bloggers. This possibility looms
large after the government reached a sober assessment that it could all end in
tears for the Barisan Nasional at the next general election if tough action is
not taken to counter allegations on the Net and hold owners of blogs
accountable.
This conclusion was reached during a meeting last week involving several Cabinet
ministers and senior government officials, including Deputy Prime Minister Datuk
Seri Najib Razak.
Government officials noted that some 400,000 new voters are registered each
year. Assuming that the next polls are in five years, there would be two million
new voters the next time the BN seeks a fresh mandate. A large chunk of these
two million voters are likely to obtain their news and information from websites
and blogs, and not from the mainstream media.
Several ministers noted that if the government followed its current policy of
allowing allegations by bloggers to go unchallenged, this would create the
perception that the information being posted is accurate.
"There is a growing consensus in government that those who run websites and
blogs should be held accountable and this means that laws should be used to take
action against those who defame and spread disinformation.
"If not, we are going to have a situation where everyone will be free to make
all sorts of allegations with no downside at all. There is a fear that the trust
level with BN would be very low if nothing is done, '' said a senior government
official familiar with details of the meeting.
The prevailing mood in the government against the alternative media is one of
frustration. After decades of being able to control newspapers and television
stations through a raft of legislation, government officials and politicians are
finding that their tools are useless in setting boundaries for new media.
At last week's meeting, an official of the Malaysian Communications and
Multimedia Commission (MCMC) explained that the authorities have not come down
hard on websites and bloggers because Section 3 of the Communications and
Multimedia Act prohibits any form of censorship.
But government officials corrected him and said that the guarantee that the
Internet would not be censored did not preclude legal action from being taken
against bloggers for defamation and sedition.
They pointed out that the Singapore government had hauled several bloggers to
court for a series of offences and suggested that the Malaysian government
should follow suit. In the aftermath of Election 2008, Prime Minister Datuk Seri
Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said that the government paid a heavy price by allowing
accusations and reports on the Internet to go unchallenged.
He said that the BN underestimated the power of the Internet and committed a
serious misjudgment by relying on the mainstream media in the run-up to the
general election. His comments resulted in the Information Ministry reaching out
to some prominent bloggers and giving them some air-time on television but by
and large the relationship between the alternative media and the government has
remained testy.
In recent months, Raja Petra Kamaruddin, the country's best-known political
blogger, has had a running battle with Najib and his wife, implicating both of
them in the October 2006 murder of Mongolian model Altantuya Shariibuu. The DPM
has also been on the receiving end of other damaging allegations.
His supporters in Umno have been pushing for a more hardnosed approach in
dealing with bloggers and operators of news portals, arguing that the softer
touch by the Abdullah administration has resulted in daily attacks on ministers
and BN politicians.
Critics of the government said that instead of focusing on bloggers and the
alternative media, they should strive for more accountability and transparency,
and remove the shackles on the mainstream media.
|