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Stop the press: South Korea's journalists cry foul

 
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Alyallen



Joined: 29 Mar 2004
Location: The 4th Greatest Place on Earth = Jeonju!!!

PostPosted: Thu Oct 11, 2007 7:41 pm    Post subject: Stop the press: South Korea's journalists cry foul Reply with quote

I just figured I'd toss in a bit of Korean news

Stop the press: South Korea's journalists cry foul
Thu Oct 11, 2007 12:55 PM BST
By Jack Kim

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea cut Internet connections to a string of ministry press rooms on Thursday, the latest step in a drive to close down what it says are collusive and cosy clubs.

The aim of herding Seoul's journalists into a few centralised briefing rooms has provoked outrage in media organisations and brought accusations that the government is trying to muzzle the press. Some reporters have boycotted the new press rooms and staged sit-down strikes at their old desks.

"We have given enough time to vacate the current press rooms, which have been allocated for other uses," an official at the Government Information Agency said.


"We will be taking the steps (to shut them down) tomorrow."

Government officials said they wanted reporters out of the old press rooms by the end of the working week.

"Whether you agree with the policy or not, this is not the right way to go about it," a reporter for one domestic newspaper said. "You don't do this even when you're trying to evict a tenant who didn't pay his rent."

South Korea said it wants to make the government more open by allowing for greater media access at the new briefing rooms and setting up live Internet broadcasts of news conferences.

It argues the old system led to a collusive system between bureaucrats and journalists, and among journalists themselves.

Most South Korean ministries had separate press rooms where domestic media stationed reporters throughout the day and who form informal but exclusive press clubs.

The government campaign began with bitter words from the country's unpopular president, Roh Moo-hyun. He told a cabinet meeting in January that "reporters sit around" press rooms and conspire to write critical stories about his government.

Leading presidential contenders to replace Roh, who has only a few months left in office, have said they would restore the old briefing rooms if they take power.


The government has bowed to pressure and rolled back a provision in new regulations that would require bureaucrats to first seek permission before they could meet reporters. But many critics say the new system will still severely limits access.

The Korea News Editors' Association has called the entire plan "a means to oppress media freedom" while other critics say it harkened back to the days when South Korean dictators censored the media.

http://tinyurl.com/3arez9
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jinju



Joined: 22 Jan 2006

PostPosted: Thu Oct 11, 2007 7:49 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Roh learned well from the two Kims: DJ and JI.
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mindmetoo



Joined: 02 Feb 2004

PostPosted: Thu Oct 11, 2007 9:51 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm trying to grasp the role of these press rooms. As far as I understand, the reporters hang out there, the government people come out, feed them the news, and they go back and put it in their own words. The government will close these press rooms, forcing reporters to dig for stories, do real work. It seems to me the blow back from a press that actually has to investigate stories (and possibly get them 100% wrong) is going to make the government wish it never closed down these press rooms.
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jinju



Joined: 22 Jan 2006

PostPosted: Thu Oct 11, 2007 10:19 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

mindmetoo wrote:
I'm trying to grasp the role of these press rooms.


Cmon, I think its obvious. Roh wants to control the information that gets out. if they can stop reporters from geting information from any sourse other than these press rooms the government will have basically gotten a stranglehold on what information gets out.

Quote:
As far as I understand, the reporters hang out there, the government people come out, feed them the news, and they go back and put it in their own words. The government will close these press rooms, forcing reporters to dig for stories, do real work. It seems to me the blow back from a press that actually has to investigate stories (and possibly get them 100% wrong) is going to make the government wish it never closed down these press rooms


let's hope so. I am still hoping Roh leaves office totally humiliated. I couldnt give a crap any more if it is real or fabricated.
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