Malaysia
Organisation:
During his annual address to Parliament on 17
February, King Tuanku Mizan Zainal Abidin
voiced his anxiety about blogs which he called
“sources of confusion for citizens”.
He also called on bloggers to
adopt an “ethical” and “more responsible”
approach online.
The country stepped up repression
by applying the Internal Security
Act (ISA), that provides for detention
without trial for two years (Article.
8), a sanction that is indefinitely renewable.
Renowned blogger Raja Petra Kamaruddin,
nicknamed “RPK”, was a victim of this judicial
hounding over articles on his website, Malaysia
Today (http://mt.m2day.org/2008/). He is currently
under threat of the application of Article 8
of the ISA, on the personal orders of interior
minister,
Syed Hamid Albar, who considers him “a threat
to national security”. RPK has already been imprisoned
in 2008. This pressure is one of the
means of intimidating critical voices
that oppose the government and
which it is not known how long it will
remain in force.
The country has a long tradition of
keeping the media under control.
The network is not censored but
bloggers are monitored. Almost
63% of the population is connected to the Internet
and an “inappropriate” use of the Internet
can be grounds for arrest. This happened to the
lawyer, P. Uthayakumar, who has been held
since 13 December 2007 in the Kamunting centre
for posting a letter addressed to the British
government condemning ill-treatment of the
Hindu minority in Malaysian prisons.
Published on
Updated on
20.01.2016