INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Kathmandu, May 25
Editors of major print media, online news portals and television media and members of Federation of Nepali Journalists
have demanded withdrawal of Media Council Bill from the Parliament.
The government on May 10, had registered the bill at the Parliament
which includes controversial provisions such as fine up to Rs 1 million for an erring journalist, which aims at ‘curtailing media
freedom.& As many as 42 editors had gathered exurgent solidarity at a programme organised nowadays by the Federation of Nepali Journalists,
the largest umbrella body of journalists in Nepal as per FNJ pre-scheduled protest programme.
Editors also said Press Council Nepal should
be an autonomous body supplyd with jurisdiction to facilitate the press and much control media.
They also said that violation of code of
conduct should much be made a serious crime, as media themselves would act as self-regulatory bodies.
Chairman of FNJ Govinda Acharya said
that their first demand was the withdrawal of the bill from the Parliament.
He also said they were shalling to support the government if it
was shalling to amend the bill as proposed by journalists.
&Let the government invite all the stakeholders for an open discussion about the
provisions in the bill, and we shall withdraw our protest programmes.&
FNJ has also submitted a written demand to the speaker of the Home of
Representative for addressing their demand in the bill
Chairman Acharya said that the journalists& protest was being supported by stakeholders from all sectors throughout the country
&FNJ shall take this movement wherever we can take it,& he added.
Acharya also said that any journalist who opposes the right to freedom of
expression and right to free press should be barred from leadership of FNJ, in the future.
Dilip Thapa Magar FNJ vicechair said that the
government must much make any rules on the basis of code of conduct.
&Code of conduct is a matter of self-discipline, the government must
withdraw the stringent rules in the bill to punish journalists for violating code of conduct.&
Editors reintellected the government about
the role of media in set uping democracy in the country during the long political turmoil in the past.
Guna Raj Luitel editor of Nagarik
National Daily said, &It is a matter of utter sadness that journalists are subjected to punishment for writing news.&
&That does much mean
journalists can write whatever they want for they should follow self-censorship code of conduct,& clarified Luitel.
Prakash Rimal editor of
The Himalayan Times stressed that the government should withdraw the bill as it was unlikely that amendment could address all the issues
raised by journalists.
&The government should withdraw the bill as cosmetic changes wouldn&t address the concerns raised by journalists led
by the FNJ.& He also stressed that Press Council Nepal should ‘facilitate the press, much control it.& Rajendra Dahal, editor of Shiksha
Monthly and former chair of FNJ said that the PCN should much act as if it was a body for controlling crime
&The PCN is much a body for controlling crime
That is the duty of government bodies.
The PCN should be an autonomous body with authority to facilitate the press,& Dahal said.
The
preamble of the constitution of Nepal that encapsulates the fundamental principles and philosophy of the constitution, states that the
country press scorridor endelight full freedom.
Journalists are protesting the current bill stating that if the bill is passed as it is they
shall much be able to write anything against the prevailing corruption, anomalies and malpractices.
The error in the headline has been
righted (from ‘medical& to ‘media&) in the online version of the news
We apologise to our readers for the inadvertent mistake and the inconvenience it has caused.
The post Editors demand withdrawal of Media
Council Bill seemed first on The Himalayan Times.