Dear All,

Pls. find below a very interesting remark about Sacrava website. Again, Lok
Sacrava, thank you for a job well done: it looks like the pencil wins over
the gun after all.

Best regards,

MP
---------

January 15, 2009
 Internet exempt from libel law:
govt<http://ki-media.blogspot.com/2009/01/internet-exempt-from-libel-law-govt.html>

Thursday, 15 January 2009
Written by Brendan Brady and Sam Rith
The Phnom Penh Post

Information Ministry denies legislation extending libel to audovisual media
will limit internet

The Ministry of Information has denied that new libel legislation it is
drafting for audiovisual media will bear on the internet, despite previous
claims by its minister, Khieu Kanharith, that the recent explosion of
websites was an impetus for the measure.

In a statement released Tuesday, the ministry said the law would target
"audiovisual content in radio, television and print only", adding that
public criticism of it levelled by local journalists earlier in the day was
"absolutely untruthful".

But Sam Rithy Doung Hak, a monitor for the Cambodian Association for the
Protection of Journalists, the group that condemned the proposed legislation
as unwarranted censorship, said the ministry was simply "backtracking ...
probably because of pressure from international groups based here".

Despite the ministry's claims, he said popular websites and cartoons
critical of the government would be susceptible to censorship if the law
were introduced. He singled out the online materials of news aggregator
Khmer Intelligence and Australian-based Khmer cartoonist Sacrava as
potential targets.

Khieu Kanharith was not available for comment Wednesday.

Don't regulate criticism

Local leaders of Cambodia's online community remain deeply cynical of any
government efforts to regulate media content given its shaky track record.
Cambodia is currently ranked 128th - or "partially free" - on the US-based
Freedom House organisation's 2008 press freedom list

Keo Kounila, a local blogger and journalist, said vibrant opposition voices
were essential to the fabric of a democracy, and saw the proposed bill as
counterproductive to growth of the country's nascent political environment.

"The government should try to understand criticism [directed at it], not
regulate it. This is similar to what China is trying to do," she said,
referring to the vigorous online censorship conducted by the communist
state.

Norbert Klein, a Phnom Penh-based German who is credited with having
introduced, internet to Cambodia in 1994, called the proposed legislation
"very problematic".

"If there is legislation, it should be technically enforceable and legal.
Neither is the case."
The demands of the law were unrealistic and unprecedented, he added.

"When the law says every ISP will need a license from the Information
Ministry and Communication Ministry, no other country in the world has
that," said Klein, who is also a policy adviser for ICANN, an international
non-profit group that deliberates on a wide range of internet protocol
issues. He said media censorship was susceptible to "escalation" in times of
political turmoil and questioned the government's ability to regulate
content using standards accepted by the population.

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