Five Burmese mediamen sentenced to hard labor

irrawaddy

FROM HARD NEWS to hard labor.

Regional media groups have condemned what they called the “inhumane sentence” by a Burmese court of four journalists and their boss to ten years of hard labor for violating Burma’s State Secrets Act.

On Thursday, the Pakokku Township Court in Mandalay, Burma (also known as Myanmar) sentenced Unity Journal’s CEO, Tin Hsan, 52, and journalists Lu Maw Naing, 28; Sithu Soe, 22; The Yazar Oo, 28, and Aung Thura, 25, to 10 years imprisonment with hard labor for reporting allegations that a Burmese military facility was being used to manufacture chemical weapons.

The Southeast Asian Press Alliance (SEAPA), a regional network of media groups advocating press freedom, said it was disturbed both by the verdict and the heavy verdict imposed on the mediamen.

“The charges and the outcome are disproportionate to the problem at hand. We condemn the criminalization of media work, and in this case, the cruel punishment of hard labour,” SEAPA said in a statement released to the press.

“No journalist should have to face this kind of action for their work, and in the case of the Unity Journal, the issue covered clearly had immense public interest,” SEAPA said.

The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) called the decision “an outrage,” saying it shows that the Burmese government is still to undertake real reforms with regard to press freedom.

“These developments make it all to clear that democracy and respect for basic rights, including freedom of the press and of expression, remain furthest from the minds of Myanmar’s leaders,” the NUJP said in a statement,

SEAPA Executive Director Gayathry Venkiteswaran said the sentencing comes just three months after the passage of Burma’s Press Law, which she said had given “a glimmer of hope” that the five journalists would be given a measure of protection as media workers.

The new law was supposed to guarantee “that no journalist may be jailed for doing her or his work.”

However, the Burmese government chose to apply a 90-year old law against the five men.

“Using the 1920 State Secrets law demonstrates that the Burmese military is not even willing to respond to, ?and come clean regarding the regime’s potential violation of the an international ban against the manufacture of chemical weapons,” Venkiteswaran said in the SEAPA statement. “The use of this law indicates that the regime may really have something to hide in relation to the serious allegations of the expose. Invoking the matter as a state secret meant that there will be no need to confirm or deny the veracity of the claims of Unity Journal.”

While the sentence was handed down by a local court, the charges were filed by the Office of the Myanmar President Thein Sein, “the poster boy of the transition.”

“This is a signal to use laws other than those related to media as a new means to restrict journalists,” Venkiteswaran added.

“The arbitrary detention and unjust sentencing of the Unity journalists represents the country’s most drastic reversals of media freedom,” she said.

The international community had earlier lauded what appeared to be the loosening of restrictions against the Burmese press and the improvement of civil liberties in Burma in the last few years. Recently, however, the Burmese government had resumed cracking down on critical reporting by the growing local media community.

The five were arrested by the Burmese military in January after the Unity Journal published the report on the military facility, including photographs of the alleged chemical weapons factory.

“We didn’t expect they would get sentences with hard labor. How could they sentence 10 years with hard labor for reporting news? This is inhumane and we are now worrying for their health,” said Lwin Lwin Myint, wife of Lu Maw Naing, in a report published by Burmese news agency The Irrawady.

The Irrawady also published an editorial expressing alarm over what it called the use of draconian restrictions on media even after the government claimed to have lifted press censorship two years ago.

“Clearly, real press freedom remains a distant dream for Burma, where the government still gets to decide what is fit to print, and who has the right to inform (or misinform) the public,” The Irrawaddy editorials reads.

“We stand by our Burmese colleagues and urge media organizations in Southeast Asia and all over the world to raise our voices in collective protest against this outrage,” the NUJP statement reads. Cong B. Corrales

 

Finding connections: What is FOI to you?

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THERE ARE those who say that Freedom of Information (FOI) is not a “sexy” topic, and that many people would rather talk about issues of food and shelter than issues about information.

Not so, say veteran and award-winning photojournalists who have taken up the challenge of grounding the FOI issue on something more basic – corruption, poverty, and the lack of basic services.

FOI advocates have created a special Facebook album where any photographer, amateur or professional, can share images that illustrate the connections between the lack of transparency and the lack of basic services.

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The first eight photos uploaded into the album strike a clear message for all: Without the transparency and accountability that Freedom of Information can bring, corruption will go unchecked, basic services will not be delivered, and poverty will continue to haunt us like a persistent shadow on the pavement.

So far, the uploaded photographs share a common theme: FOI! Saan napunta ang pera? or FOI: Where did our money go? However, photographs and images do not necessarily have to be limited to this theme. Contributors are encouraged to be creative too and see how they can visualize other connections between the FOI and the concerns of Filipinos.

National Union of Journalists of the Philippines Chairperson Rowena Paraan said the first eight images were contributed for free by various award-winning photojournalists, including Jes Aznar, who recently won the Excellence in News Photography Award from the Society of Publishers in Asia for his coverage of Supertyphoon Yolanda; Raymund Villanueva of Bulatlat; Interaksyon’s Nonoy Espina; and Julius Mariveles of the PCIJ, “to help the public learn and understand the impact of FOI to every Filipino.”

More than ensuring greater and genuine transparency and accountability in government, an FOI law may also lead to higher and more substantive citizen engagement in governance – the very essence of a democratic government.

Paraan encouraged other photographers and visual artists to contribute to the Facebook album with their own interpretation of FOI and its connection to the many issues that are now topmost on Filipinos’ minds. Everyone is also encouraged to share these photos on other social media sites.

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The Facebook album is part of a bigger campaign to push the passage of the FOI bill that remains stalled in the 16th Congress, four years into the term of President Benigno S. Aquino III. The President has indicated that he supports the principle of the bill, but has hedged his endorsement of the measure for the last four years. Many legislators have said that all it takes for the bill to get through the congressional wringer is a simple endorsement by the President.

The Right to Know, Right Now! Coalition, a network of 160 media, civil society, and lawyers groups, is already collecting online signatures in support of the FOI through Change.org. The petition has already gathered 15,353 signatures as of Wednesday, July 9. The coalition plans to hand-deliver the gathered signatures to President Aquino before he delivers his State of the Nation Address on July 28.

In the recently concluded FOI Youth Congress at the University of the Philippines, PCIJ Executive Director Malou Mangahas stressed that access to public information is not the exclusive concern of journalists; rather, this access is grounded on a more basic human right guaranteed by the United Nations. The PCIJ is one of the convenors of the Right to Know, Right Now! Coalition. Cong B. Corrales

PeoplesFOInow

Finding connections: What is FOI to you?

10492307_634032323360437_2774729608000682138_n

THERE ARE those who say that Freedom of Information (FOI) is not a “sexy” topic, and that many people would rather talk about issues of food and shelter than issues about information.

Not so, say veteran and award-winning photojournalists who have taken up the challenge of grounding the FOI issue on something more basic – corruption, poverty, and the lack of basic services.

FOI advocates have created a special Facebook album where any photographer, amateur or professional, can share images that illustrate the connections between the lack of transparency and the lack of basic services.

10478223_634032283360441_2163381753177722154_n 10516730_634123343351335_967834356128717490_n 10530676_634032313360438_6514554308140809769_n 10494813_634032356693767_6101618471607367586_n 10513422_634032376693765_5418434305916448540_n

The first eight photos uploaded into the album strike a clear message for all: Without the transparency and accountability that Freedom of Information can bring, corruption will go unchecked, basic services will not be delivered, and poverty will continue to haunt us like a persistent shadow on the pavement.

So far, the uploaded photographs share a common theme: FOI! Saan napunta ang pera? or FOI: Where did our money go? However, photographs and images do not necessarily have to be limited to this theme. Contributors are encouraged to be creative too and see how they can visualize other connections between the FOI and the concerns of Filipinos.

National Union of Journalists of the Philippines Chairperson Rowena Paraan said the first eight images were contributed for free by various award-winning photojournalists, including Jes Aznar, who recently won the Excellence in News Photography Award from the Society of Publishers in Asia for his coverage of Supertyphoon Yolanda; Raymund Villanueva of Bulatlat; and Julius Mariveles of the PCIJ, “to help the public learn and understand the impact of FOI to every Filipino.”

More than ensuring greater and genuine transparency and accountability in government, an FOI law may also lead to higher and more substantive citizen engagement in governance – the very essence of a democratic government.

Paraan encouraged other photographers and visual artists to contribute to the Facebook album with their own interpretation of FOI and its connection to the many issues that are now topmost on Filipinos’ minds. Everyone is also encouraged to share these photos on other social media sites.

10534264_634123360018000_9151051789493842822_n10424241_634123336684669_3462335853667604684_n

The Facebook album is part of a bigger campaign to push the passage of the FOI bill that remains stalled in the 16th Congress, four years into the term of President Benigno S. Aquino III. The President has indicated that he supports the principle of the bill, but has hedged his endorsement of the measure for the last four years. Many legislators have said that all it takes for the bill to get through the congressional wringer is a simple endorsement by the President.

The Right to Know, Right Now! Coalition, a network of 160 media, civil society, and lawyers groups, is already collecting online signatures in support of the FOI through Change.org. The petition has already gathered 15,353 signatures as of Wednesday, July 9. The coalition plans to hand-deliver the gathered signatures to President Aquino before he delivers his State of the Nation Address on July 28.

In the recently concluded FOI Youth Congress at the University of the Philippines, PCIJ Executive Director Malou Mangahas stressed that access to public information is not the exclusive concern of journalists; rather, this access is grounded on a more basic human right guaranteed by the United Nations. The PCIJ is one of the convenors of the Right to Know, Right Now! Coalition.

PeoplesFOInow

Fun, selfies, and a pitch for FOI

They came, they had fun, they had selfies. Over the weekend, however, concerned members of the country’s youth came together to take a serious position that had nothing to do with having their best angles to the camera.

Participants in the First National FOI Youth Congress called on lawmakers to hasten the passage of the Freedom of Information bill during a three-day gathering at the University of the Philippines National College of Public Administration and Governance.

Some 300 members of the FOI Youth Initiative (FYI) also called on their fellow youth to join in the fight to transform the government “into an institution that is worthy of the trust of the people that it serves”.

Youth leaders noted how the older generation tends to brand today’s youth as self-absorbed an apathetic. But in this particular issue, FYI leaders said, the youth are really taking the initiative.

“Apathetic and selfish – that is how some older people view our generation…(but the) youth of today can actually be passionate about something socially relevant”, Allan Pangilinan, lead convenor of the FOI Youth Initiative said.

The three-day event gathered youth and student organizations that supported calls for the immediate passage of a Freedom of Information Law that they hope would institute more transparency and accountability in government. The bill has is still mouldering at the House committee on public information even though as Senate version has already been passed on third reading.

Jeff Crisostomo, one of the founders of the network, pointed out that the FYI has grown today into a national network of more than 200 youth and student groups, four time larger since its founding at least three years ago when it only had 50 member-organizations.

Crisostomo, who is now the legislative and media officer of Rep. Kaka J. Bag-ao, called on members of the FYI to come up with “creative means” in pushing for the passage of the FOI as he pointed out that it is necessary in ensuring more transparency in public services especially education.

He also said that the push should include encouraging local government officials to come up with their own local Freedom of Information ordinances.

“Let us show (President Aquino) that we mean business”, he added.

Lawyer Nepomuceno Malaluan, lead convenor of the Right To Know, Right Now! Coalition said the FYI is a “testament to the power and essence of FOI” because it “bridges generations” who want to hold their governments “accountable and to be informed to enable the effective exercise of rights”.

PCIJ Executive Director Malou Mangahas, who delivered a talk on the practice of accessing information, said the push for an FOI is not only based on whims by its advocates but is grounded on declarations by the United Nations that the right to information is the foundation of all rights.

She also underscored the fact that this is not a special law for journalists, and accessing information is being done by reporters acting as trustees of public interest. If there is no right to information, for example, it is impossible for the public to know about contracts being entered into by the government that would impact on their lives.

With the absence of an FOI, persistence is important in getting information or documents from the government. “Whoever blinks first loses; it is the coping mechanisms that make a difference in the Philippines, not because of the FOI”, she said.

Mangahas also pointed out the difference between the open government policy and a rights-based freedom of information regime.

The open government policy means that agencies and offices would be putting out their information on the Worldwide Web but this would depend on the terms of the government and not on the demand of people for information.

“Government’s voluntary disclosure is not good enough; if it is really, then why did the (Disbursement Acceleration Program) happen? Open data is not a bypass solution for an FOI Law.”

Among the organizers of the activity are the University Student Council of the University of the Philippines, the College of Social Sciences and Philosophy Student Council, and the UP Economics Towards Consciousness.

Senator Grace Poe, main author of the Senate version of the FOI and chair of the Committee on People’s Public Information and Mass Media, lauded the FYI as she pointed out the urgent need for an FOI.

“The attainment of a just, progressive, and lasting peace greatly depends upon the free flow of information to the public”, she said. Julius D. Mariveles

Students produce primer on FOI

LEAVE IT to the youth to produce a catchy and easy-to-understand primer on the Freedom of Information (FOI) bill, that controversial measure whose importance some government officials apparently still can not or will not comprehend.

The 7-minute video was produced by the University of the Philippines student group Economics Towards Consciousness (UP-ETC), a university-wide student organization based in the UP School of Economics.

The video was first made public during the FOI Youth Congress at the University of the Philippines National College of Public Administration and Governance (NCPAG).

Feel free to share the YouTube video with your friends and colleagues.