Monday, May 7, 2018

Media control

Cached version of the article on the new owners ensuring editorial independence, before firing the editors at PPP for publishing this article.

The Phnom Penh Post has been sold to Sivakumar Ganapathy, a Malaysian investor and executive at a public relations firm that has previously done work for Prime Minister Hun Sen’s government.
Sivakumar, who is the executive director of Malaysia-based Asia PR, said in a press release distributed to staff on Saturday that he intends to maintain the newspaper’s editorial independence.
Editorial staff were informed on Saturday evening that the paper was being sold by Australian mining businessman Bill Clough, who has owned the paper since 2008.

“As representative of the owners of Post Media Ltd, (the Company), which includes Phnom Penh Post and Post Khmer publications, I am pleased to announce that that the Company has been sold to Malaysian investor, Sivakumar G. (Siva),” the press release from Clough reads. “Siva is a well respected newspaper man, with a [sic] experienced journalist background, and represents a strong investment group from Malaysia.”

The sale followed a wrongful termination suit brought by a former CEO and a $3.9 million tax bill levelled by the General Department of Taxation (GDT), which had caused some observers - over the objections of The Post’s management - to compare the situation to the Cambodia Daily. That publication, the only other independent newspaper in the country, was shuttered after receiving a $6.3 million tax bill in September.

The tax bill had been settled as part of the sale, according to Clough, who thanked the GDT for their professionalism in his press release. Details of the settlement were not given.
No contact information for Sivakumar was provided in the press release, and messages to his Facebook and email accounts went unanswered on Sunday. Calls and emails to Asia PR also went unanswered.

Asia PR’s past clients include “Cambodia and Hun Sen’s entry into the Government seat”, according to their website. They have also represented KFC Holdings Berhad, a branch of the popular fried chicken chain that launched in Cambodia by partnering with politically connected tycoon Kith Meng.

According to Asia PR’s “Track Record” web page, the firm oversaw a signing ceremony that involved Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad and then-co-Prime Ministers Hun Sen and Norodom Ranariddh.

In the press release from Sivakumar released on Sunday, the new ownership said it was “fully committed to upholding the paper’s 26 year old legacy and editorial principles/independence without infringing any relevant laws and regulations of the Kingdom of Cambodia”.
Ed Legaspi, executive director at the Southeast Asia Press Alliance (SEAPA), said it was worrisome that The Post’s new owners appeared to be linked to both the Malaysian and Cambodian governments.

“Although ordinarily sales shouldn’t affect editorial policy, we are quite worried this is happening to the Phnom Penh Post,” Legaspi said, adding he thought it was “highly likely” that the ownership would try to affect editorial independence.

“Malaysian media and media owners are not known for independence,” he said. “The thing to do is for editors to maintain their independence and continue to do the work that you do.”

According to Legaspi, any improper influence over editorial policies at the Phnom Penh Post would be disastrous for the country’s independent media scene.

“We are thinking [The Post] is the last independent outlet in Cambodia,” he said, adding that any editorial influence from the new owners “would really be the death of press freedom in Cambodia”.

Sivakumar studied journalism at university and was also previously the chief operating officer and editor in chief of Malaysian newspaper Eastern Times News, according to his LinkedIn page. The newspaper was widely viewed to be close to the Sarawak state’s Chief Minister Abdul Taib Mahmud.

The Post’s new owner also wrote two books on the life of Taib, including an 650-page authorised biography about the longtime head of Sarawak state titled Taib - The Visionary.

Environmental groups have estimated that Sarawak has lost up to 90 percent of its forest cover under Taib’s tenure. The state leader was described in leaked, classified cables by the United States government as “highly corrupt” and was similarly criticised by Global Witness. A Swiss-based NGO released a lengthy report last year accusing Taib and his family of laundering up to $77 million in Ontario’s property sector. Taib has denied all charges.

Asia PR previously ran the pro-government Cambodia Times newspaper for several years in the Kingdom in the early 1990s. Three separate reports from the 1990s, including one in the Phnom Penh Post, identify NagaCorp CEO Chen Lip Keong as the owner of the Cambodia Times.
An email to two NagaCorp marketing officers asking about the ownership of the Cambodia Times went unanswered on Sunday.

The editor in chief of the Cambodia Times was Kamaralzaman Tambu, who was also named as the managing director of Asia PR in a 1995 article in Asian Business. However, Sivakumar did not begin working with Asia PR until 2010, according to his LinkedIn profile.

The managing editor of the Cambodia Times was T Mohan, according to Reporters Without Borders. Mohan is currently the publisher of the Khmer Times, a local newspaper that has been linked - via a batch of partially authenticated leaked messages - to NagaCorp and the prime minister’s second son, Hun Manith. Mohan strongly denied the veracity of the leaks at the time, and Manith and Chen declined to comment.

Mohan said on Sunday that Sivakumar “has never worked for the Cambodia Times”.

“There is no link between him and me,” he added.

On Sunday, Clough said “he did not believe” there was a connection between the new ownership and NagaCorp or Mohan.

“Siva has repeated[ly] categorically denied that his investment group has any connection with either Naga World or the Khmer Times,” he said in an email.

“In fact, it was the first question I put to him when we first met. I believe he will be true to his word.”

Saturday, May 5, 2018

Affording to not give cookies

(Source: ASDA Good Living)

     Getting stopped by policemen at a traffic blockage yesterday gave me some juice for thoughts. Me and Ondeh were on our way to a concert in the city centre, when they waved us to the side. It was a surprise to be picked, as we would both pass off as locals (Real deal on my side, while Ondeh is Indian, but not Malaysian).

They were surprised at me being local, and looked slightly relieved discovering Ondeh's non-localness. Checked our bags, and asked for IC and driving licenses. They tried to find issues with Ondeh's driving licence, but he has checked with the Ministry of Transportation, and as well with other traffic police encounters in random blockage where we lived. Hence, there aren't any problems with his documents. Yet the policemen tried to waffle about it being not right, and about how we would get a summon.

In short, I asked him to issue me the summon, with perhaps a tone in my voice of "let's get this over with". I was irate. The venue we were heading to was about 400 metres away and we are late. Plus they just gave me some long-winded shittiest acting I've ever seen in my life (eg, looking at the documents with a ponderous look and calling another officer over and going, oh, what are we to doooo etc), and my eyes was internally rolling so fast it could power some electrical appliance. If it is a real issue, write up the fine and stop wasting my time. But of course, there isn't an issue. They wanted some cookies. He wasn't too happy with this, and decided to be "nice" by letting us go with a warning.

     Driving on later, I recalled the other time I was stopped by some policemen in an unfamiliar territory. I did a U-turn in an isolated road, and the next thing I knew, the sirens were up. Apparently that turn was illegal. They did the whole gig of back-and-forth as well. Only, at that time, I had started my career with low pay. The summons would cost RM300. I remember, despite my principles, I was tempted. Very. That was a big big amount at that time.

Yet principles stood, and furthermore it was the fasting month, so I told him to pass me the summons and knock off a point under my probational driving license if they had to. They let me off.

I would say that I'm lucky to be where I am now; to have potential summons as a financial irritation rather than a threat to my financial well-being. I thought about the people who doesn't have that option, hence, for them, the tacit offer of cookies are a relief.