Confronting Risk at the Crossroads of Media Freedom in Burma

Patricia W. Elliott
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Abstract

En.  Throughout over fifty years of stringent censorship, Burma’s ethnic media, exiled news agencies, citizen journalists, bloggers and even state-sanctioned periodicals revealed a surprising level of diversity and dialogue coursing beneath the surface of state control. Today, under the promise of legislative reform, this diverse media activity stands at a historical crossroads, with underground and exiled prac- titioners returning to above-ground production inside Burma. This article describes percep- tions of risk during the years of the dictatorship from the journalists’ points of view, and why they continued their work under threat of incarceration, exile, and death. The article then examines the historical context that led to journalists’ prominent place in Burma’s demo- cratic struggles. Finally, it contemplates the future risks they and their work may face in the new environment, and proffers some aspects for the international community to consider. After decades of struggle, a move to civilian government has created an opening for media organizations to surface above ground and/or to return from exile. However, the position of journalism is far from secure. Journalists are still subject to arrest and harassment, and still face danger in areas where armed conflict continues and Burma Army soldiers operate far from central control. Amid an uncertain transition to civilian rule, there are no tidy endings to the story. As well, the landscape has opened up for Western powers to export their own vision of commercial/corporate media practice in the name of ‘democratic development,’ without regard to already-successful indigenous journalism structures and methods. Within this overall context, I will argue that without a complete grasp of the diversity and strength of existing grassroots media, there is a danger that international media development assis- tance may blunt the edge of a style of risk-taking journalism that unabashedly holds power to account, and that seeks social justice, not profit.
在缅甸媒体自由的十字路口直面风险
En。经过50多年的严格审查,缅甸的少数民族媒体、流亡新闻机构、公民记者、博客,甚至国家认可的期刊,都显示出在国家控制之下令人惊讶的多样性和对话。今天,在立法改革的承诺下,这种多样化的媒体活动站在历史的十字路口,地下和流亡的修炼者回到缅甸境内的地上生产。这篇文章从记者的角度描述了在独裁统治时期对风险的感知,以及为什么他们在监禁、流放和死亡的威胁下继续工作。文章随后考察了导致记者在缅甸民主斗争中占据突出地位的历史背景。最后,它考虑了他们及其工作在新环境中可能面临的未来风险,并提出了一些方面供国际社会考虑。经过几十年的斗争,向文官政府的转变为媒体组织在地面上露面和/或从流亡中回归创造了一个机会。然而,新闻业的地位远非牢不可破。记者仍然受到逮捕和骚扰,在武装冲突持续、缅甸军队远离中央控制的地区,他们仍然面临危险。在向文官统治的不确定过渡中,这个故事没有一个整齐的结局。同时,这也为西方大国以“民主发展”的名义输出他们自己对商业/企业媒体实践的看法敞开了大门,而不考虑已经成功的本土新闻结构和方法。在这一总体背景下,我认为,如果不能完全掌握现有草根媒体的多样性和实力,国际媒体发展援助可能会削弱一种勇于冒险的新闻风格的优势,这种风格毫不掩饰地对权力负责,寻求社会正义,而不是利润。
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