The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) calls
on the management of the Utusan Melayu newspaper in
Malaysia to respect the rights of working journalists
to freely discuss industry issues, amid concerns the paper is victimising
the leader of the country’s journalists’ union.
Utusan Melayu initiated a domestic inquiry into
the actions of Ha’ta Wahari, an employee of the paper and president of the National Union of Journalists of Malaysia (NUJM), which was scheduled for January 17.
However,
after 30 minutes of argument from NUJM
General Secretary V. Anbalagan, the inquiry chairman Mohd Bashir Abdul Rahim abandoned the inquiry for unexplained
reasons.
Utusan has suspended Wahari indefinitely.
In a
statement, Anbalagan said that despite the possibility that the NUJM would not be permitted to represent the
journalist, Wahari was prepared to continue with the domestic inquiry in order
to clear his name.
The inquiry was
sparked by a series of statements by Wahari regarding
professional and industrial concerns of union members, particularly regarding the state of journalistic ethics. UtusanMelayuclaimed
that Wahari, as an employee of the paper, had tarnished its image, the NUJM reported.
“The IFJ is extremely concerned that
a media organisation would attempt to pursue a journalist for speaking out on
ethical journalism and other important professional concerns,” IFJ Asia-Pacific Director Jacqueline Park said.
“Media organisations seeking to
produce quality journalism are encouraged to listen to the concerns of staff,
aired through their union representatives, and to work together towards
improving standards and conditions in the industry.”
Wahari had faced eight counts of misconduct for issuing
statements to The Sun newspaper and news
portals Malaysiakini, Malaysian Insider and Merdeka Review between September
21 and October 14, 2010.
In September 2009, former NUJM
branch chairman and UtusanMelayuemployee Amran Ahmad was dismissed after a domestic
inquiry by the company. His case is now before Malaysia’s Industrial Court.
The IFJ calls for the company to reinstate Wahari to his full duties and abandon
further disciplinary action against the journalist. The IFJ also calls for Utusan management to support staff members
who are promoting the professional and industrial rights of working journalists.
See Malaysiakini coverage of the domestic inquiry hearing here.
For further information contact IFJ Asia-Pacific on +612 9333 0919
The IFJ represents 600,000 journalists in 125 countries
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