The Centre for Law and Democracy (CLD) and International Media Support (IMS) today released Comments on the draft Printing and Publishing Enterprises Law (draft Law) released by the Ministry of Information of Myanmar in early March 2013. In August 2012, the Ministry tasked the Interim Press Council with preparing a draft Press Law, and the release of the draft Law by the Ministry came as a surprise to many observers. As the Comments make clear, the draft Law fails in important ways to conform to international standards regarding media freedom.
“The important steps Myanmar has taken over the last year and a half to bolster respect for freedom of expression in practice now need to be anchored in a democratic legal framework,” said Toby Mendel, Executive Director of the Centre for Law and Democracy. “The draft Printing and Publishing Enterprises Law, the first draft media law to be formally published by the government, fails to do this.”
The CLD/IMS Comments make a number of recommendations, including the following:
We urge the Myanmar authorities to allow the Interim Press Council to complete its work of preparing a draft press law, and then to hold discussions on legal regulation of the print media based on that draft.
Tags: Centre for Law and Democracy, Freedom of Expression, International Media Support, Law Analysis, Legal Reform, Press Law BillThis post is in: Law, Spotlight
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