Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak should conduct a
thorough and swift investigation on violent acts in Bersih 3.0,
including those on journalists, and charge the perpetrators.
A group of six journalism associations issued a joint statement requesting this yesterday.
They are the Centre for Independent Journalism, Charter
2000 Aliran, Journalists Union of North Malaya, Penang Chinese Media
Journalists and Photographers Association (Pewaju), Penang Press Club
and Penang Press Employees Cooperative Society Limited.
The group condemned the arrest of two journalists and
alleged police violence towards others who were covering the sit-down
protest for free and fair elections.
"The prime minister must also adopt firm measures to
ensure all uniformed personnel understand and respect the role of
journalists, and give compensation to those whose equipment were
deliberately damaged," it said.
Media reports, video feeds, Facebook postings and tweets by the journalists involved, or their colleagues, indicate at least six such cases.
"We view the incidents as a concerted attack on media
freedom since they appear to be aimed at preventing professional
journalistic documentation of police violence against some Bersih
protesters," it added.
The joint statement also noted that the police's
attitude towards reporters might have caused by their embarrassment over
photographs and videos the reporters have recorded in the past few
months regarding police brutality.
Last week, it said, a mob attacked the Occupy Dataran
encampment and targeted activists who were wielding cameras or
smartphones, in a bid to thwart any attempt to document the violence and
identify the perpetrators.
"Journalists, including press photographers, are
professionals tasked with bearing witness to matters of public interest
and reporting them ethically.
"Like the police, journalists have a public duty to perform and they should be afforded protection towards this end.
"Unless journalists are obstructing police work, they
should be left alone to do their job. And certainly, no journalist in a
nation that prides itself as a democracy, should ever be arrested for
doing their job."
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