Restrictions on Nargis anniversary coverage

Restrictions on Nargis anniversary coverage
by -
Phanida
The Burmese military junta’s censorship board has imposed restrictions in the coverage of the anniversary of the deadly Cyclone Nargis, sources in local journals in Rangoon said...

Chiang Mai (Mizzima) – The Burmese military junta’s censorship board has imposed restrictions in the coverage of the anniversary of the deadly Cyclone Nargis, sources in local journals in Rangoon said.

While local papers are being allowed to carry reports and pictures of the situation a year after the cyclone, the censorship board has imposed restrictions.

"We can report on the Nargis anniversary. There have been many news reports appearing in the media this week. But the censorship board has rejected some news based on the content of the story,” an editor of a local Weekly Journal told Mizzima.

“The censorship board mainly rejected stories and pictures that show the severity of destruction and people still struggling for recovery after a year," he said.

"We have to be careful while writing the stories. We cannot be critical of the government’s efforts on recovery. If our stories say that victims are still suffering it gets rejected. We must report that the situation is progressing from an optimistic viewpoint," he added.

Cyclone Nargis which lashed Burma on May 2 last year left about 140,000 dead or missing and left 2.4 million people devastated resulting in many orphans.

The censorship board has also restricted and banned stories that speak of the relief efforts being carried out by international and local non-governmental organizations.

However news reporting on rehabilitation work in the cyclone-hit region in Irrawaddy Division, Laputta, Bogale and Pyinsalu are being allowed to be published.

But an editor of another local weekly journal said that their journal was allowed to report on the rehabilitation work.

"We had a special issue on the Nargis anniversary. Not many stories and articles are censored. They censored only a few. We reported on the rehabilitation work being conducted in Laputta and Pyinsalu", he said.

Meanwhile, though local journals wanted to break the news of fish paste products containing chemical substances, which are unfit for consumption, the censorship board kept it pending until the state-run newspaper could report the matter.

The editor said most of the stories run in the local journals are filled with the government’s efforts on recovery written in an optimistic manner, because only such stories are passed by the censorship board.

The censorship board, reportedly instructed editors of local journals not to criticize the government on its work in cyclone-hit regions and regarding the victims of cyclone Nargis.

After Cyclone Nargis, the junta arrested a total of 21 journalists and aid volunteers who provided voluntary services to victims. They were charged and handed out prison terms.

The US-based 'Committee to Protect Journalists' in its statement released on April 30, ranked Burma as one of the worst countries for journalists, bloggers, and for internet users.

But the Myanmar Fishery Federation, during its regular meeting on May 5 decided that journalists would be allowed to ask them whatever information they wanted freely.

But the executive officer of the fishery also said that the organization would check and scrutinize the news and facts regarding the fishery sector.