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Authoritarian’ media regulation bill almost ready for the NRSA


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Authoritarian’ media regulation bill almost ready for the NRSA
By THE NATION

 

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Kanit

 

BANGKOK: -- THE HEAD of the media reform committee has confirmed that the latest revision of the media regulation bill would not include more major changes and that it could enter the whips’ office of the National Reform Steering Assembly (NRSA) late this month or early May.

 

Chakkrish Permpool, adviser to the Thai Journalists Association (TJA) and a member of its media ethics panel, said on Tuesday it was “regrettable” that the media reform committee had opted for “authoritarianism” in regulating the media industry. 

 

Air Chief Marshal Kanit Suwannet, head of the media reform committee under the NRSA, said that despite the panel’s resolution on the central issues in the bill, it could not be submitted to the NRSA whip immediately because the revision also affected other articles in the draft.

 

His committee had to review it and ensure that the order of articles and all the references were correct, he added.

 

Kanit continued to insist it was necessary to establish a media professional council. He said the new constitution ensured freedom of the press, so the new media professional council would not curb media freedom but would oversee ethical issues. Police Maj-General Pisit Pao-in, the committee’s vice chairperson, said earlier that in the latest revision, media personnel would be licensed – and a failure to register would result in penalties of up to two years in jail or a fine of up to Bt60,000, which was a new component proposed in the draft bill.

 

The panel also insisted on having two permanent secretaries sitting on the proposed media professional council, despite strong opposition by media groups, which said this could lead to interference by the state.

 

Veteran journalist Chakkrish said it was regrettable that the committee was paying no heed to media professionals who had raised concerns over the draft bill, arguing that no other country in the world would do such a thing.

 

The new penalties proposed by the NRSA panel are “unprecedentedly peculiar”, he added, referring to the proposal of a two-year jail term and a fine of up to Bt60,000 for those failing to register with the media council.

 

Chakkrish said that even during authoritarian eras, such penalties had not been imposed against the media.

 

“Reporting is not a crime,” he said. “It is performing a duty as a watchdog. In fact, there are a number of criminal laws that already keep media performance in check, without the necessity to have such a direct criminal offence waiting for them like this.”

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/news/national/30312166

 
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-- © Copyright The Nation 2017-04-13
Posted

The army has always been afraid of the written word.   They have no capacity for debate as that would take reasoning and critical thinking.  The army's mindset is pathetically ignorant.   

Posted
The army has always been afraid of the written word.   They have no capacity for debate as that would take reasoning and critical thinking.  The army's mindset is pathetically ignorant.   

Command and control, it's the splendid military way of doing things. Anything opposing this will be countered and quashed. Democracy and free speech not found in any military training manual or operating principles.
Posted
2 hours ago, jerojero said:


Command and control, it's the splendid military way of doing things. Anything opposing this will be countered and quashed. Democracy and free speech not found in any military training manual or operating principles.

Thai society is ruled by the elite and the generals. Neither one wants free speech, much less a free press, because it threatens their control. 

 

And neither cares about human rights under the law because both are above the law. 

 

Great little racket if you can get in on it... 

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