Radio Stations Crackdown

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KoratCat
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Ungelesener Beitragvon KoratCat » Fr Mai 18, 2007 9:04 pm

Thailand launches crackdown on "illegal" community radio stations

Bangkok - Thailand on Friday launched a crackdown on the country's plethora of illegal community radio stations days after exiled former premier Thaksin Shinawatra used one of the stations to air his political grievances.

'We will be listening to these illegal radio stations to see whether they are attacking the government and if they do we will send authorities to shut them down,' said Borworn Thecha-in, director of the radio and television division at the Public Relations Department (PRD).

Borworn said Thailand had more than 1,000 small radio stations that have operating in a legal limbo for years, pending legislation to cover the media sector.

'In the past we've ignored them, partly because they are so difficult to monitor,' said Borworn. 'Sometimes these stations just play music all day.'

On Thursday, the PRD closed down the FM 87.75 station after it aired a live interview with Thaksin from his home in London in which the ousted premier called for speedy elections in Thailand and criticized the current government for not solving the country's problems.

The station has been charged with operating without a license, a crime that carries a maximum sentence of five years in jail and/or a 100,000 baht (2,857 dollars) fine.

'We were acting on a complaint,' said Borworn, explaining the closure of FM 87.75.

Thailand has been under an 'appointed' government since the military overthrew Thaksin in a bloodless coup on September 19, 2006, while he was attending the United Nations General Assembly meeting in New York.

Thaksin, a former telecommunications tycoon whose family fortune is estimated at 3 billion dollars, has been living in exile since the coup, but he continues to be a thorn in the thigh of the current appointed government.

Thai authorities attempted to block the airing of an interview Thaksin had with CNN on March 20 and was irked by another Thaksin interview that appeared the same month in Time Magazine.

Thaksin's foray into Thailand's community radio stations on Wednesday was his first interview with the vernacular media since his fall from power.

A video version of the interview was also posted on the popular YouTube.Com, which irked the government last month with its airing of images deemed insulting to Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej. Access to the website has since been blocked for Thai users.

Thai authorities, however, have not yet attacked YouTube.Com for posting the Thaksin footage.

'Lese majeste is a sensitive issue for our country, but if it is just about politics we won't intervene,' said Information Communciations and Technology Ministry spokesman Visanu Meeyoo.

Thai Defence Minister Boonrawd Somtas said Friday that Thaksin's latest publicity effort was in response to the escalating problems he faces in the country.

Thaksin's family has been charged with tax evasion and abuse of power and similar charges are pending against the former premier.

It is also likely that his Thai Rak Thai political party will be dissolved by a constitutional tribunal on May 30 for committing fraud during the April 2, 2006, general election.

Monsters & Critics May 18, 2007
Es gibt nichts Gutes, ausser man tut es! Erich Kästner, 1899 - 1974

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KoratCat
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Ungelesener Beitragvon KoratCat » Sa Mai 19, 2007 10:05 am

It's kind of funny how Thaksin managed to gain upperhand again by luring the junta into this trap. At a moment when they were looking like winning the game with finally some founded and proven accusations he turns the card with a simple phone call. And they show the world again what they think of press freedom. He just turned the spotlight around from himself at them. :twisted:
Es gibt nichts Gutes, ausser man tut es! Erich Kästner, 1899 - 1974

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Ungelesener Beitragvon KoratCat » Di Mai 22, 2007 4:16 pm

There's an interview with Thaksin's lawyer Noppadon on the site of ABC Radio Australia. Noppadon says about Thaksin's live appearance at those radio broadcasts "... he was invited by a ... in London to talk to someone, but eventually it was broadcast live in a radio station. It wasn't his effort to conduct political manoeuvre in Thailand at all."

The poor tricked guy! Is there anybody to believe it? :mrgreen:
Es gibt nichts Gutes, ausser man tut es! Erich Kästner, 1899 - 1974

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Ungelesener Beitragvon KoratCat » Mi Mai 23, 2007 11:39 am

MEDIA-THAILAND:
Community Radio Refuses to Go Silent
Marwaan Macan-Markar

BANGKOK, May 21 (IPS) - They may still be on the margins of the country's media landscape with their limited reach on the airwaves and small audiences, but Thailand's community radio stations are refusing to go silent.

The fuss created by three radio stations has helped to bolster a view that these broadcasters have a pivotal role to play in opening the space here for media freedom rather than the traditionally larger, richer and more powerful sections of the mainstream media.

That view was strengthened over the weekend when a group representing 150 community radio stations petitioned the military-appointed government of Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont to challenge Bangkok's nationwide crackdown on radio stations.

On Friday, the Thai government sanctioned security checks on some 3,000 community radio stations after shutting down three community broadcasters the day before. These harsh measures under the guise of ‘'national security'' followed a brief interview the three stations had with former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted from power by the military in the September 2006 putsch.

The interviews Thaksin gave late Wednesday night breached the fortifications the junta and its supporters in the mainstream media had built to prevent Thaksin's voice and his direct views being heard in Thailand. Thaksin, a billionaire tycoon who was twice elected to power, has been living in London since his ouster. The only media interviews he had given were to select international media organisations, some of which were censored here.

But the community radio stations that dared to go down this broadcasting route have found little support in the mainstream media, particularly the press which enjoys more freedom than the television and radio stations that are shackled by state or military controls. And that, too, even after Thaksin's comments had included calls for early elections.

‘'The mainstream media still sees community radio stations as a tool of Thaksin's and are trying to de-legitimise anything linked to the former prime minister,'' Ubonrat Siriyuvasak, professor of communication at Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University, said in an interview. ‘'The latest broadcasts have made it clear that community radio offers a channel for Thaksin to get in touch directly with his constituency.''

The disregard for community radio also reveals another bias that runs through the mainstream media. ‘'Community radio stations are part of people's politics here,'' adds Ubonrat. ‘'But people's politics is not considered part of established, institutional politics and mainstream media share this view.''

Similar muted reactions have followed revelations about the increasing number of websites that have been blocked or targeted for closer scrutiny, including those sympathetic to Thaksin. The first four months since the coup resulted in an ‘'over 500 percent'' jump in the Internet sites blocked, revealed Freedom Against Censorship in Thailand (FACT), a media watchdog.

The ministry of information and communication had blocked 13,435 websites by mid-January, a steep rise from the 2,475 sites that had been censored in mid-October, reveals FACT.

By contrast, there was a robust reaction from the mainstream media when the junta issued a warning to the major radio and television stations in January to limit any reference to Thaksin in their news coverage. Stations were told ‘'not to broadcast message or statements of the former prime minister and leaders of the past ruling party.''

In fact, the battle for legitimacy and survival waged by the community radio stations has intensified since the country's 18th coup. Among the first decrees announced by the coup leaders after taking power on Sep. 19 was to ban some 300 community broadcasting outlets in the country's northern and north-eastern provinces, an area where Thaksin had a loyal following.

Analysts view Bangkok's treatment of these radio stations as a disturbing indicator of this South-east Asian country's political environment since coup leaders had promised to restore democracy and create an open media environment after Thaksin's ouster. ‘'There seems to be a narrowing effect at a time when there should be a broadening of space for more access to media and for more voices to be heard,'' says David Streckfuss, an U.S. academic specialising in Thai political culture.

It confirms that ‘'the urge to authoritarianism is still very powerful here,'' he explained in an interview. ‘'The years of authoritarian rule in the past extinguished what might have become a counter discourse in the country.''

Thailand has been ruled by military dictators and unelected leaders for nearly three-fourths of the past 75 years, when it became a constitutional monarchy in 1932. Thaksin's five-and-a-half year stint as leader was no exception, despite his party winning thumping majorities in two parliamentary elections. He gained notoriety for his increasingly authoritarian style, crushing his critics and applying pressure to silence the media.

Community radio stations were not spared either by Thaksin. Such harsh measures against the alternative media was not lost on press freedom advocates here, since the first community radio station to go on air was during Thaksin's first year in office, in 2001.

‘'The coup government says they want democracy, but they have ended up as heavy handed or more so than the previous government,'' says C.J. Hinke, a Canadian academic and coordinator of the media watchdog FACT. ‘'The government feels insecure, which is evident from the fact that they do not want to permit Thaksin's presence in the media.''

Inter Press Service News Agency May 23, 2007
Es gibt nichts Gutes, ausser man tut es! Erich Kästner, 1899 - 1974


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