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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, November 24, 2016
SRI LANKA GOVT PUT FORWARDS DISCUSSION PAPER FOR MEDIA STANDARDS AND ENTITLEMENTS

Image: Media activist in Sri Lanka at a press freedom campaign.
The government has published a discussion paper on media standards and entitlements in Sri Lanka.
The government has invited media organisations, owners and publishers
associations, journalists’ unions and associations, civil society
organisations and members of the public to express their views on this
proposal.
The discussion paper follows:
A free, independent and diverse media with high ethical standards and
professional competence, dedicated to provide a wide range of
information and ideas to citizens, while serving as a public forum for
well-informed democratic dialogue, is indispensable for the building and
maintaining of democracy in Sri Lanka. The government is committed to
creating an enabling environment for the media sector which is based on
respect for internationally recognised professional standards and
practices, and which ensures media accountability to those who rely on
the media as a credible source of news and information.
The government has examined the comprehensive assessment of the overall
environment for media development as set out in the report Rebuilding
Public Trust: An Assessment of the Media Industry and Profession in Sri
Lanka, which was presented to the Hon. Prime Minister on 3 May, World
Press Freedom Day, 2016 by the multi-stakeholder partnership for media
reforms. The report contained a set of evidence-based recommendations
developed through a multi-stakeholder consultative process and based on
UNESCO’s widely accepted Media Development Indicators.
Similarly, the recently concluded International Conference on RTI Sri
Lanka and Media Reforms also deliberated several challenges of the media
sector while making some cardinal recommendations.
Some of the key recommendations of the report as well as the
international conference require the adoption of enabling legislation.
Based on this, the government wishes to undertake a consultation with
all interested stakeholders on the measures needed to provide adequate
legal protection for journalists and to strengthen systems for media
self-regulation.
The government is ready to ensure legal protection for freedom of the
press, including by protecting the media’s right to gather news and
information, by repealing the Sri Lanka Press Council Act, No 5 of 1979,
and by introducing an independent oversight mechanism to foster
professional standards, with mandatory powers over media outlets.
In this regard, the government invites the views of interested
stakeholders in relation to its proposals to introduce legislation:
1. To recognise media freedom and the right of the media: (a) to
gather and disseminate news and information; (b) to engage in critical
reporting on matters of public interest; and (c) to participate in the
process of forming public opinion.
2. To make it a penal offence for anyone willfully to obstruct the
legitimate collection of news and information by a journalist working
for a media outlet.
3. To put in place systems to promote the safety of journalists.
4. To protect journalist’s right to not to disclose their confidential sources of information.
5. To make it a penal offence to subject anyone to any legal or
employment related sanction or otheroformoof discrimination for
providing information to journalists working for a media outlet
concerning public affairs or on matters of public interest,except where
the secrecy of the information is justified by a larger public interest.
6. To make it illegal to impose sanctions on or to terminate the
employment of an editor or a journalist because of his or her refusal to
violate recognised professional codes of practice.
7. To establish an independent Council with a mandate to develop and
apply codes of practice for media outlets, based on internationally
recognised standards for the media.
The proposed Council will function as the oversight mechanism of a
system of self-regulation and will the power to apply sanction for
wilful violations of its codes of practice. The approaches towards
ensuring the independence of the Right to Information Commission will
also be applicable to the Council, which will comprise eminent persons
of whom two-thirds are nominated by organisations representing the media
and journalists and one-third are nominated by civil society
organisations.
To ensure the credibility of and the public confidence in the Council, a
Judge of a court of law nominated by the Judicial Services Commission
in consultation with the Bar Association of Sri Lanka will serve as
Chairperson. The tenure of Council members will be protected and, in
particular, removal will only be possible by vote of Parliament
following a recommendation of the Constitutional Council.
The functions and powers of the Council will include the following:
a. Adopt professional Codes of Practice,following a public
consultation involving journalists’ and editors’ associations, media
unions and civil society.
b. Monitor the performance of media outlets to ensure due compliance with the Codes of Practice.
c. Hold inquiries into alleged violations of the Codes of Practice
based on complaints or the monitoring of the Council,and issue
decisions.
d. Conduct public consultations to assess the public perception of media outlets’ compliance with the Codes of Practice.
e. Maintain a database o
f information on registered media entities.
f. Co-operate with or undertake training and educational activities,
including by producing training materials on the effective
implementation of the Codes of Practice.
g. Exercise powers which are similar to those wielded by the Right
to Information Commission in terms of conducting inquiries, with
provisions for appeals to the courts against the Council’s decisions.
h. In terms of sanctions, the Council will have the power to issue
warnings to media outlets and to order a media outlet to publish or
broadcast the Council’s decision in the manner prescribed by the
Council.
i. Mediate between employers and employees of media outlets in
relation to disputes concerning the enforcement of the Codes of
Practice.
The proposed legislation will be applicable to all print and broadcast
media outlets, as well as to online media outlets which formally agree
to comply with the Codes of Practice.
It shall be an offence for any media outlet to refuse to comply with or
to give effect to a decision of the Council, which may be punished by
the imposition of a fine after a summary trial before a court of law.
Similarly, obstructing the legitimate collection of news and information
by a journalist, forcing a journalist to disclose a confidential source
of information or discriminating against a journalist who refuses to
violate the Codes of Practice will be offenses.
The government invites media organisations, owners and publishers
associations, journalists’ unions and associations, civil society
organisations and members of the public to express their views on this
proposal. Please send your views in writing to the address given below
before 31st December 2016.
Director General – Government Information Department
(On behalf of the Secretary to Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs and Mass Media)
No 163, Kirulapana Mawatha,
Colombo 05.
Email :ranga@dgi.gov.lk
Fax: 0112514753
Fax: 0112514753
November 23, 2016
