April 19, 2005 -
This Draft Code has to be the most shameless attempt to impose a regime
of censorship on the media since the infamous Green Paper on the reform
of media law in 1997. It must be vigorously opposed by everyone with an
interest in preserving free speech and a free press.
Clearly, its architects
are oblivious to the spirit of some of our basic constitutional
guarantees and this country’s specific obligations under Article 19 of
the United Nations Declaration on Human Rights.
It is also clearly in
conflict with the Chapultepec Declaration, recently endorsed by the
current administration, and the concerns of regional, hemispheric and
international organisations interested in the preservation of basic
human rights including free expression and the reinforcement this right
enjoys under the guarantee of a free press.
The Code also appears to
ignore the fact that there already exist guidelines for media houses
which are currently administered by the Media Complaints Committee,
within the framework of self-regulation.
Wesley Gibbings