Developments in Global Media Landscape
By U AC
Q: What’s WAPC all about?
We were established because there
were a lot of problems with journalists and media members. So we talked and
came together to support each other in order to create more opportunities for
press freedom and of course, responsible journalism. We are not only one-sided
but also thinking about the public and the fact that they have to have the
correct news. We think that it is important that all participants in the media
industry should be respectful to each other. That’s how and why we were
established.
When it was established, there
were twelve member countries. Now we have twenty-six and it is becoming more
powerful and we can achieve more because our members are really unified in
pushing for press freedom and responsible international journalism. It has been
quite an achievement for the council and also for our members.
Q: How has it changed over the
years?
It changed a little bit. Yes, we
have the same ideals, such as press freedom and responsible journalism. Also,
in the media sector, there are new things happening with the new technology,
social media and internet journalism. All of that pose a lot of challenges to the
council and when our members come together last year in Kenya, we decided that
we have to develop a code of ethics for social media as well. Because social
media has become an instrument to defame certain people for political purposes,
which we think is not fair. We believe we should have a code of ethics for
social media as we have in journalism.
Q: We would protect the
journalists and reporters, at the same time, how about fake news agencies that
farm out falsehoods and reporters who write these?
Thank you for asking me that. It
has been one of the major challenges for WAPC. Unfortunately, there are some
participants in the media, who sometimes write or make fake news and it may not
be very easy to correct these fake stories. And it is worse if nobody complains
or points out these fake news items. It would stay on the digital media
forever. Even in the US, very eminent people are complaining about fake news.
Of course, we are against it. We feel that journalists, and media workers,
should have a responsibility to the general public. We are addressing these too
and we should be writing just and unbiased news. If the journalist takes the
opinion from one side, they should express the opinion from the opposite side
too, to have unbiased news.
We are very sensitive about those
things, but how much we can extend ourselves is limited and sometimes, we
cannot really reach certain places all around the world.
Q: How does Türkiye/Cyprus handle fake news?
This is a problem because
sometimes, it may not come to us. Because there was so much social media fake
news stories are everywhere. Most of the postings there are fake stories. We
are very frustrated because we cannot do anything about it. First, one has to
follow every single digital media outlet or news posting. It is impossible,
especially for a non-governmental organization like ours. The second thing is
even if you find the source of the fake news, the process took so long and
people forgot about it. You found and tracked the fake news down. And if you make
an announcement one or two months later that counter the fake news with the
correct chain of events, people really forget about what was the news, in the
first place. So, it should be framed in such a way that the response is very
fast. Then the people would have sufficient memory to replace the fake news
with the correct version.
These are great challenges faced
not only by WAPC but also many countries all over the world, that still do not
know how to deal with fake news. Many countries still have no punishment or
penalties for fake news spread over social media. Based on the resolution of
our last meeting in Kenya, we decided the same code of ethics for traditional
media should be applied to digital social media. Also for punishment and
penalties.
Q: What is the solution to
tackle fake news, especially in developing countries, with a semi-educated
population?
In such a case, the better idea
could be having an office, a special office, following news and assessing the
correctness of these. People then have a channel to report and fake news could
be stopped before they harm the general public. That office could follow the
general media as well as the social media. If there is any fake news harmful to
society or the public, it should be cleaned before it spreads. That office
should be handled by the government, especially in these countries. There
should be penalties and punishments for harming society too.
Q: How do you handle pressures
from US and Russia, with Türkiye
being part of NATO and a neighbour of Russia at the same time?
I totally understand what you are
saying about Myanmar being caught between the giants and being part of
geopolitical gameplay. Türkiye
is also between giants like European Union and Russia with a lot of power play
from the US too. That type of position requires extremely delicate handling
because you do not want to be fighting or going against any of the giants. I am
sure Myanmar people are very intelligent and they can develop the best
strategies for themselves. I know it’s a very difficult position to be in. I
hope all the best for you.
Q: Obviously Turkish PM
continues to accuse Myanmar of illegal Bengali immigrants genocide, yet, it is
not true. What would be the best way to resolve that?
Under this type of situation,
there may be fake news, complaints, disputes, propaganda, etc. The best thing
is to communicate. Communicate with each other. If we do not understand each
other, we cannot ever reach a resolution. So the first step should be to try to
understand each other much better and try to solve the problem by coming
together. I think this would be the best idea hurting nobody and protecting all
sides’ interests at the same time. I always prefer that strategy.
Q: How powerful is the press
council in Türkiye?
How is it dealing with the shrinkage of traditional media and the expansion of
digital media?
We are somewhat powerful because
there is freedom of the press here and also responsible journalism. If there is
any deviation from responsible journalism, we make a point to address the
situation and take control of it. So we do have press freedom and responsible
journalism in all aspects of our country’s media, except for social media.
Social media is totally out of control, unfortunately. It is sometimes really
harmful to the people.
Q: How does the majority of
the Turkish population view US and Russia?
That again, is the strategic
position Türkiye has to
take delicately. There is definitely anti-US sentiment because Turkish people
think that sometimes US interests and Turkish interests can be conflicting, in
certain areas. Hence, they react. But we also know that Türkiye is a NATO ally
militarily and the country is following a market economy system. So
economically and militarily, we are somewhat allied with the West.
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