However,
he said, the decision to outlaw this has to be decided by the government.
He
was speaking at the opening of the ‘Think Media Malaysia 2018 with Google’ in
Kuala Lumpur today, which was also attended by Sajith Sivanandan, managing
director – Malaysia, Vietnam, the Philippines and New Emerging Markets at
Google.
Gobind
Singh said the ministry was always open to engaging with relevant stakeholders
in order to find the best way forward for this country and its people.
“We
are pleased to support and cooperate with all parties to ensure a more
conducive environment for media practitioners.
“As a government that respects freedom of
information and expression, we not only expect high standards from all
vested-interest stakeholders but that it must come with a heavy responsibility
to propagate credible news and information,” he said.
Gobind
Singh said his ministry was in the process of proposing amendments to some of
the provisions relating to the fake news that had been used by the previous BN
government.
“For
example, under Section 233, it is a crime to disseminate material that is
deemed offensive but what is ‘offensive’ and to which parties is it debatable
and ambiguous?” he said.
As
for the Anti-Fake News Act which was repealed last week in Parliament, Gobind
Singh said the act was hastily passed in early April a few weeks before the
14th General Election on May 9.
“The
timing and haste of the passing of the bill (Anti-Fake News Act) was highly
suspicious and led to speculation that it was a tool meant to be used against
the Pakatan Harapan as the latter was trying to garner support in a hotly-contested
election and one that could result in a change of government.
“This
is, of course, now fact,” he said.
Gobind
Singh also cited the example of how the 1MDB issue, which he described as the
world’s biggest financial scandal, was something that was repeatedly played
down by the then government.
“Lawsuits
were also levelled against parliamentarians for speaking up,” he said and added
that websites and Facebook pages were set up to propagate pro-BN propaganda and
to incite hatred and ill-will against the opposition.
He
drove home the point that everyone cannot deny that the existence and
proliferation of fake news and information were very real and it must be
addressed.
“What
constitutes ‘fake news’ has to be looked at with specific references and
context,” he said.
Gobind
Singh said that the government, therefore, intended to have exhaustive dialogue
and engagement with all stakeholders in order to combat the fake news problem
more effectively.
—
BERNAMA
No comments:
Post a Comment