The next few tweets in this thread replicates what you’ll find on that page
(1) *Back to harassment, intimidation and censorship*
When Malaysia experienced its first-ever transfer of power through elections in May 2018, the environment for journalists became much more favourable and the country rose dramatically in RSF’s Press Freedom Index. (cont.)
(2) But all this has gone into reverse since the former ruling coalition was restored to power after 22 months in March 2020. The measures taken by Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin’s government have included (cont.)
(3) … reviving the Special Affairs Department, known by the Malay acronym of JASA, which pumps out political propaganda and was awarded the vast sum of 85 million ringgits (17.4 million euros) in funding in the 2021 budget.
(cont.)
(4) The government can rely on a draconian legislative arsenal with which to suppress media freedom, an arsenal that includes the 1948 Sedition Act, the 1972 Official Secrets Act and the 1998 Communications and Multimedia Act.
(cont.)
(5) Under these laws, which deserve a complete overhaul, the authorities have a strict control over publication licences and journalists can be sentenced to 20 years in prison on sedition charges.
(cont.)
(6) For the media, the restoration of more authoritarian rule in 2020 has led to prosecutions, police searches, expulsions (of journalists and a whistleblower) and flagrant violations of the confidentiality of journalists’ sources.
(cont.)
(7) To protect themselves against the government’s offensive, many journalists have had to censor themselves.
(END)
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If you’re a Muslim in Malaysia, especially if you’re “born" into the religion, Article 11 of the Federal Constitution is a myth, at best. And at worst, a blatant lie.
Effectively if you’re Muslim, there is NO freedom of religion. In addition to many other NO FREEDOMS you enjoy
The first clause in Article 11 reads as thus:
“Every person has the right to profess and practise his religion and, subject to Clause (4), to propagate it”
Note that ‘every person’ in literary terms means there is no distinction between which person.
In practice, however, a Muslim in Malaysia practically doesn’t enjoy this right. Let’s not even talk about religions other than Islam - a Muslim may ONLY practice what the state allows one to practice, or more accurately, seen to practice.
The Malay Mail hari ini melaporkan tentang pengakuan Hadi Awang bahawa Langkah Sheraton telah dirancang sebaik sahaja GE14 tamat. Penulisan asal beliau boleh dibaca di laman FBnya: facebook.com/abdulhadiawang…
Bebenang ini adalah komentar peribadi saya.
1/ Selepas membaca rencana asal tersebut, ternyata betapa angkuh dan takburnya si Hadi ini. Juga ternyata yang kepentingan paling utama partinya adalah parti itu sendiri. Tapi tak apa… agama sentiasa boleh ditunggang untuk mengkaburkan mata rakyat
2/ "Perubahan kerajaan PH kepada kerajaan PN dilakukan secara demokratik dan mengikut proses Perlembagaan Persekutuan dengan langkah paling tepat, tanpa menebuk atap dan masuk dari pintu belakang.”
Inil terang2 adalah percanggahan kognitif (Cognitive Dissonance)
So today, we once again reinforce the culture of “Don’t like it, Ban it”. No thanks to pressure from the Malaysian Ultra-Conservatives whose wet dream is nothing less than making EVERY-DAMNED-THING-THEY-DON’T-LIKE illegal.
These are the people who have clout because most Malays who don’t agree with them do not dare speak up and speak out. The reality is that in Malaysia, turning 18 means nothing more than being liable for prosecution and persecution.
FYI I am not a fan of Sugarbook, but as I understand it’s a willing-party kinda deal. Adulthood is about making choices, and taking responsibility for the consequences of your choices. But no… these conservatives wanting to “protect the younger generation” is about CONTROL.
0/ You can thank @yoongkhean for this. Here’s my “How to NOT Get Lost In Publika” guide, over a short thread. FYI I operated our gallery from Publika for the better part of 9 years.
The guide begins in the next tweet...
@yoongkhean 1/ The first thing to know is that there are FOUR (4) blocks: A,B,C, and D in Solaris Dutamas overall. Publika occupies blocks B & C, and part of A - these are the OFFICIAL parts of Publika. But for the sake of simplicity, we’ll just call it all Publika (actually Solaris Dutamas)
@yoongkhean 2/ Each of the four parallel blocks are sub-divided into 4 or 5 sections. Hence, A1-A4 (A5 is where White Box / Black Box are), B1-B4, C1-C5 and D1 to D5. Blocks A & B / C & D hv foot bridges that link btw them. A & B linked on Level G3 (2 bridges), while C & D on G4 (3 bridges)
As someone involved in one sector of the creative industry, the biggest problem I see impeding its growth - even bigger than funding - is the lack of appreciation for the arts, and how little value the arts and things creative.
I know it’s an unpleasant truth, but...
… until and unless we accept this as a root cause, simply throwing money at the problem is NOT going to advance the creative industry.
It’s not an impossible problem to solve, but neither is this problem solvable in the short term.
If there’s a silver lining to Saifuddin Abdullah’s #FINASFUBAR it’s the general public’s realization that the FINAS Act is as relevant to the 21st century as a 56K dialup modem is relevant to today's Internet experience.
The act was enacted and gazetted in 1981. For those of you not born yet then, in 1981 there was no Astro and all you had was RTM TV1 & TV2 to entertain you on television.
The act was drafted to facilitate the development of Malaysia’s film industry (let’s not go there)
[Cont.]
So yeah, the act is archaic, to put it mildly. But it’s still an active law.
It defines “film” to include "feature films, short films, short subject films, trailers, documentaries, advertising filmlets and any recording on material of any kind…”