Myanmar gets Press Freedom after 50 years! Sinkies' turn?

Asterix

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Despite promises of a Swiss standard of living, we have remain mired in the Fourth World as far as press freedom is concerned. Now, even Myanmar has ended its state monopoly on newspapers:

YANGON (Reuters) - Four private dailies hit the newsstands for the first time in almost 50 years in Myanmar on Monday, but many others failed to appear, hamstrung by poor financing, archaic equipment and a dearth of reporters.

Sixteen dailies were granted licenses by authorities, but only four were published.

The government-affiliated Union Daily, one of three dailies available free of charge, used financial clout to beat out competitors like D-Wave, the paper of opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD), for which publication preparations are still underway.

"All four papers sold out quickly today," Kyi Kyi, a roadside book vendor, told Reuters.

"But it's very hard to predict their future sales since three of them were distributed free of charge today and the remaining one was sold at 150 kyat ($0.17) per copy,"

Myanmar's quasi-civilian government took power in early 2011 after the military dictatorship relinquished a half-century stranglehold on the former Burma. It embarked on media reforms as part of its democratization program in August 2012, when it relaxed draconian censorship.

The three other newspapers distributed were the Voice Daily, Golden Fresh Land and The Standard Time Daily, all Burmese-language publications.

Competitors were unwilling, or unable, to get their dailies into the hands of the public quite as quickly.

"Frankly it's quite early to say for sure when ours will come out. We are still making necessary preparations to publish the daily," said Han Tha Myint, a member of the NLD's Central Executive Committee, which publishes D-Wave Weekly.

STUMBLING BLOCKS

Distribution, poor infrastructure, outmoded printing equipment and staffing issues are some of the stumbling blocks for media organizations wanting to expand into dailies.

"To be frank, the government granted licenses much earlier than we expected and we were caught by surprise," said the editor of one private paper, who uses the pseudonym Ko Maung.

"There are a lot of things we have to prepare like printing facilities and training staff," he told Reuters, pegging well-funded state-owned dailies as the likely major competitors in a market that will become very crowded, very quickly.

The Ministry of Information has invited local and foreign partners to invest in a joint venture to publish the New Light of Myanmar, a former state propaganda newspaper and the only English-language daily in the country.

Other media groups are waiting for clarity on how Myanmar will treat publications benefitting from foreign investment.

"It's been an excruciating wait, a bit like a tree trying to grow through a crack in a rock, but we have now arrived at the starting line and no one seems at all in a hurry," Ross Dunkley, managing editor of The Myanmar Times, which is applying for licenses for both Burmese and English dailies, said last month.

Paris-based Reporters Without Borders (RSF) ranks Myanmar 151st out of 179 countries in its Press Freedom Index, up 18 places compared to the previous year.

RSF has warned that a media bill, presented to parliament in March, could threaten the "fragile" progress Myanmar has made since 2011.

It criticized provisions that could result in newspapers being declared illegal for publishing material liable to threaten national reconciliation, denigrate religions or disturb the rule of law.


http://www.nbcnews.com/id/51391189/ns/world_news/#.UVmtU1eunaI
 
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From AM730, one of many Chinese newspapers available in HK. 81 year old editor of one of the privately run newspapers allowed in Myanmar said: "I've waited 50 years for this". Sinkies willing to wait another 50 years? Happy to continue paying obscene salaries to Ministars who failed again and again to deliver Swiss standards of living, both tangible and intangible?

緬甸歷史性解除實施近半個世紀的報禁,正式開放民辦日報,16間私人機構早前獲當局批准發行日報,其中4份昨日率先出版,首日銷情理想,有辦報人感觸落淚。

緬甸昨日正式出版的4份緬文日報中,包括《Golden Fresh Land》,該報的81歲總編輯欽蒙來(Khin Maung Lay)表示,民眾反應相當熱烈,首批印發共8萬份,僅一個早上便賣清光,「我們等了這一刻逾半個世紀,這證明人們一直都渴求私營日報。這個早晨,我含著淚見證這一切。」欽氏是新聞界老行尊,見證國家報業起跌,由1948年脫英獨立後百花齊放,到1964年後一直遭政府打壓的黑暗時期,期間更曾因批評政府而遭受牢獄之災。他指深明前路障礙重重,「但我準備以新聞自由之名及專業精神辦報,這是我在舊日美好時代學會的。」

其餘3份還包括由執政黨聯邦團結發展黨(USDP)發行的《The Union》、由知名周刊《The Voice》轉型的《The Voice Daily》,以及新創立的《The Standard Time Daily》,售價介乎0.2至0.25美元(約1.56至1.95港元)。據報多個報攤昨早出現人龍購新日報。當地52歲的士司機Tun Win指,以往習慣每周買3份周刊,他認為開放報業是國家重要一步,「現在我們每日都能得到資訊,令無法上網的人也能看到新聞。」不過,他擔心在龐大競爭下,報紙要爭取銷量或有困難,未必每份報章都能存活下來。而反對派領袖昂山素姬領導的全國民主聯盟(NLD)刊物《民主浪潮》(D-Wave),亦在解禁名單內,預定於本月底轉以日報發行。

另外,海外新聞機構亦進駐緬甸,美聯社及日本放送協會(NHK)成為首批長駐緬甸的國際媒體,美聯社共派駐6名記者。

http://www.am730.com.hk/article.php?article=148711&d=2009
 
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you can get it after 2016.

if all those disunited oppositons who wanted to be their own indian chiefs quit their own party and join the only credible and practical opposition force in sinkafore.

GMS is leading by example. it is time to move their butts if you want to make something happen.
 
From AM730, one of many Chinese newspapers available in HK. 81 year old editor of one of the privately run newspapers allowed in Myanmar said: "I've waited 50 years for this". Sinkies willing to wait another 50 years? Happy to continue paying obscene salaries to Ministars who failed again and again to deliver Swiss standards of living, both tangible and intangible?

Singapore will see that in 2016, or 3 months after the death of smear of shit on sole of shoe LKY, whichever is earlier.
 
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