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Subject: East Timor turns 7 but press freedom in peril
East Timor turns 7 but press freedom in peril
Manila Times
20 May 2009 | 12:40 AM
By Ed Lingao, Philippine Center For Investigative Journalis DILI, East
Timor: At the foot of a bridge guarding the east entrance to East Timor's
capital Dili, a small concrete marker proudly proclaims the name of the
street in Portuguese: Avenida Da Liberdade de Imprensa - the Avenue of
Press Freedom.
I think this is one of the longest avenues in the city, said Virgilio
Guterres, head of the Timor Lorosae Journalists Association (AJTL).
The street was so named to honor the foreign and local journalists who
fought and died during East Timors two-decade long struggle for
independence from Indonesia, which culminated in a 1999 United
Nations-sponsored plebiscite where the Timorese voted for self-rule.
Guterres said they plan to inscribe the names of those who died for press
freedom on the markers base. There are 14 names in all, a large number for
a small island with a population of roughly a million. <http://ads.teamyehey.com/ads/adclick.php?n=a703a20b>
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But the marker was damaged long before it could be finished. Its marble
face now shattered, and the marker is largely ignored by passersby who
wait for the ubiquitous Mikrolet, the public conveyance that is a cross
between a small bus and a smoke generator.
To many journalists here, the markers fate mirrors that of the promise
of press freedom in the world's youngest democracy. And as the country
marks the seventh anniversary of its independence from Indonesia today,
journalists here say they are up against yet another battle in the war for
their own freedom.
At issue is a set of draft media laws prepared by a United Nations
Development Program (UNDP) consultant for the Timorese Parliaments
consideration. If promulgated unrevised, the draft laws would require
state licensing for journalists, define the jobs and set the
qualifications for the hiring of journalists, and set up a media
regulatory council appointed in part by the government.
Although the drafts have not yet been officially submitted to the
legislature, journalists groups are raising a howl over their implications
on Timor's young media. Recently, the Southeast Asian Press Alliance (SEAPA)
even saw it fit to send to Dili a team of journalists from across the
region, among them this writer, to assess the possible impact of the draft
laws.
The alliance is a press freedom advocacy group founded by independent
media organizations in the Philippines, Indonesia and Thailand, including
the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism, Center for Media
Freedom and Responsibility, Alliance of Independent Journalists of
Indonesia and Thai Journalists Association.
No to licensing
"We object because we don't want to be licensed," Guterres
said. "Journalists are at the forefront of the freedom of expression.
When you license them it means you are limiting them [from doing their
job]."
For many Timorese journalists, the draft laws simply reek too much of
the not-so-pleasant past. Under Indonesian rule that lasted more than two
decades, East Timorese journalists had labored under the watchful eye of
the heavy-handed Indonesian military. Information was heavily regulated,
military censors screened video and audiotapes, and journalists were
regularly harassed. Freedom of the press was practically non-existent.
And now this: besides requiring state licensing of all journalists, the
draft laws also set the prerequisites for the hiring and accreditation of
a journalist, including minimum age (17 years), educational background
(secondary school), and work experience (five years minimum).
Curiously, the draft laws are unclear on how a prospective journalist
can acquire the minimum five years of journalism experience to qualify for
the license, if he was not allowed to work in the profession before he
could qualify.
"If this media law comes to implementation, then we will lose or
miss our honeymoon on press freedom," said Guterres. "If this
law comes to implementation we will revert to that era of when we were
under Indonesia where people are afraid to speak, afraid to go to jail,
and people are influenced to make self censorship."
"People could not understand [how this happened]," said Roby
Alampay, executive director of the press alliance.
"We are pleased that this [alliance] mission is coming out,"
countered Lars Bestle, UN Development Program regional policy specialist
on access to information, e-governance and media development. "We are
taking all these inputs and comments into account into these drafts."
UN officials stressed that the draft laws are zero-drafts, meaning they
are the first in a series of revisions before they are submitted to
Parliament. The UN agency also said that at least two consultative
workshops were held with Timorese journalists before the drafts were made.
Traumatized by violence
For now, it looks like the journalists have the country's top leaders
on their side.
"This is a poor country traumatized by the violence of the
past," East Timor President Jose Ramos-Horta told the visiting
journalists from the Southeast Asian Press Alliance. "If we
traumatize journalists with legal restraints, [what will happen
then?]"
Ramos-Horta himself was a journalist who was forced into exile in East
Africa by Portuguese authorities during East Timor's colonial period. He
told the visiting alliance members that he would rather deal with a rowdy
press than a media muzzled by the same kinds of laws he had fought
against.
"Let them write what they want, even irresponsibly," he said.
"But [no matter] how irresponsible it is, it is no reason for those
in power to say that to prevent this, lets do this now. I dont agree with
that."
"The media often make mistakes in their report, that is
true," Ramos-Horta added. "But how many more mistakes, more
serious, has government made? When government makes mistakes, we can lose
millions of dollars, and yet no one holds us responsible."
Its also not as if this young country's press does not already have
enough challenges. For almost a decade now, there has been a tug of war
between officials who want to decriminalize defamation, and those who want
to retain it under a new Timorese Penal Code.
Shield vs. free press
Defamation had always been a crime in East Timor under the Indonesians,
and in the absence of new Timorese laws, the old order remains.
Several journalists have already been convicted of the crime of
defamation. In 2004, for example, a Timorese court found journalist
Antonio Aitahan Matak guilty of damaging the good name of the East Timor
Police Force, and sentenced Matak to eight months of house arrest.
The administration of former Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri, ousted in
2006, pushed to have defamation criminalized under Timorese law. Some
Timorese officials still want it to stay in the statutes, as a shield
against a critical press.
Both Ramos-Horta and East Timor Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao, however,
have expressed their strong opposition to criminalizing defamation. Ramos-Horta
said he was confident that the new Penal Code decriminalizes the act of
damaging someone's reputation. But that remains to be seen, as the new
Penal Code, drafted by the justice ministry, will be published and
promulgated only later this year. Until then, Timor's journalists will
have to watch their backs.
"It is important to decriminalize defamation in East Timor,"
Alampay said. "Everyone has assured us that East Timor is heading in
that direction, but everyone reminded us that the new revised penal code
is yet to be printed, so we would like to see the final product."
The courts are certainly not the Timor media's only problem. Violent
incidents against journalists rose dramatically in 2006, as rivalries
within the national police and defense forces threatened to tear the
nation apart and eventually led to Alkatiri's resignation. Journalists
were beaten up; some even had their homes torched, but no one has ever
been charged or officially accused in connection with these.
Serious threats
While these incidents have not been repeated since, the violence casts
a long shadow over Timor's media community. These days, every time a
politician or a group makes a threat, even a veiled one, it is taken
seriously.
"If we go to make a report . . . they [sources] say that is not
enough. They want all [the airtime]," Nelio Isaac Sarmento, news
chief of Televisao de Timor-Leste, the state-owned TV station, said of
some news sources. "They say, Tomorrow, I see you on the road, and I
will hit you."
"Some government officials still don't know the role of the
media," said radio journalist Rosario Martins. "They [say], If
you put that, I will sue you or I have my supporters find you."
This goes back to the 2006 crisis, Martins explained. "Other
officials of government think that media should contribute to the peace.
But they [think] that peace [means] no critics."
But the longest shadow of all is cast by history. Before Indonesia
occupied it in 1975, East Timor was a Portuguese colony, during which
Timor's media were heavily regulated and undeveloped. In fact, critics of
the draft laws point out that the UN Development Program consultant who
drew them up is a Portuguese media expert who appears to have used her
country's media laws as model. Portuguese media laws also provide for a
media council, and state licensing for journalists.
And while the younger Timorese journalists bristle at the very idea of
state control, some of their older colleagues seem to find nothing wrong
with being required to have licenses from the state.
No middle ground
This may be because during the Indonesian rule, Timorese reporters
either surrendered their own independence to the security forces, or they
worked or sympathized quietly with revolutionary groups such as the
pro-independence Fretilin. There was hardly any room for a middle ground.
These days, Fretilin is one of the dominant political parties in
parliament, a development noted in a 2006 United States Agency for
International Development (USAID) media assessment report on East Timor.
Said the report: "Many observers pointed out that many journalists
may have participated in the resistance movement [against Indonesia] and
as a result are somewhat reluctant to criticize certain members of
Fretilin, now the ruling party."
But other issues were more basic. A common complaint is that newspapers
tend to reprint press releases verbatim, or with just one or two changes,
the report said. The government communications officer noted that he tends
to give press releases to reporters on a flash drive or floppy disk, since
reporters were complaining about having to retype them.
Alarming enough on the surface, these issues would have long-term
effects if left unaddressed, the USAID media assessment team wrote. If
government communication skills keep improving while progress in media
professionalization does not keep apace, a serious imbalance could develop
between the governments ability to tell its side of the story and the
medias ability to critically analyze government spin.
Fewer journalists
All these have already taken their toll on local media. In the span of
nine years, the number of local journalists has halved. Guterres recalled
that there were some 300 local journalists in 2000, just a year after
Indonesia was forced to give up East Timor. Now there are only around 150.
"Why? I think it is because the development of media here is not
like in other countries," Guterres said. "The media is started
not by big businessmen or rich people but by small groups of journalists
who want to reach more people. Most of them rely on international funding.
That's why when the international funding dried out, they changed their
direction to Afghanistan or Iraq, these media groups that rely on that,
stop or die."
"There is no large market of journalists here, because
economically, young people here are not interested to be journalists
because they are underpaid," Martins said. "A reporter is not
paid periodically. Sometimes they get $50 for three months, sometimes they
don't."
There's also the reality of having a population that is too poor to buy
newspapers, much less television sets.
While the government boasts of a 12.5-percent economic growth last
year, East Timor basically still has a dual economy: one geared toward
servicing a massive yet temporary international donor community; and the
other that is 90-percent agriculture based, and nearly immobile.
Prior to finding oil deposits in the Timor Sea, East Timor's only
exports were sandalwood and coffee. Until now, there is no industry to
speak of, no manufacturing. Unemployment in the countryside is at 20
percent. In the urban areas, it runs as high as 40 percent.
Telecommunications infrastructure, the backbone of media
communications, is also far behind. In 2006, there were only 2,400
telephones in East Timor, and 1,200 Internet users. By comparison, Somalia
has 100,000 phone lines, and Afghanistan has 280,000 lines. Cellular-phone
users in Timor now number 69,000, but a unit is still too expensive for
reporters to use regularly.
Trying to help, the government has been buying up copies of the daily
Suara Timor Lorosae (STL) and the weekly Tempo Semanal, and then
distributing these to the public for free. But the only other daily, the
Timor Post, refused the governments hand and is now barely breathing.
Free newspapers
While the arrangement looks very comfortable for at least two
publications, journalists here know it will eventually cause problems.
Guterres said, "It's not a better way to teach people to get
information, because in the future, when people get used to getting
[newspapers] for free, they don't want to buy anymore. "
The USAID report said as well, "Donors dumped funds into the
sector in order to ensure the continued existence of specific media
outlets. Despite best intentions, this may have inadvertently distorted
the natural development of the media market, with the end result being
that there are now many more media outlets than the advertising market can
naturally sustain."
Besides, some say that if a newspaper survives only because of
government handouts, it has surrendered more than its economic
independence.
"This cooperation can influence the media, because [the
journalists] don't want to be critical of government because government
will stop buying their newspaper," said Guterres.
In the end, all the stakeholders in East Timor's media agreed that what
they had was not a right, but an obligation to ensure that the Timorese
press remains free and independent.
"We have a strong commitment [to press freedom], not because we
want to, but because our history obliges us to do so," Guterres said.
"We reached independence because of the freedom of the press that we
enjoy."
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