http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3012&Itemid=175


Indonesian Official Seeks to Muzzle the Press 


Written by Our Correspondent    
Thursday, 24 February 2011 
 
Dipo says Don't knock SBYAn overzealous cabinet officer orders an advertising 
boycott for negative reporting 

A member of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's cabinet has kicked off a furor 
by attempting to censure media domestic organizations that print negative news 
about the president and the country.

There is plenty of bad news to report. Over recent months, the country has been 
hit by stories over corruption and growing militancy on the part of firebrand 
Islamic fundamentalists, who stormed an Ahmadiyah sect compound recently and 
murdered three members of the sect. A growing segment of the Indonesian 
electorate sees Yudhoyono as indecisive and timid to take action against either 
the corruption or the growing religious violence.

Despite a massive backlash, Cabinet Secretary Dipo Alam says he is standing by 
his call forgovernment institutions to put an advertising boycott on certain 
media organizations, particularly television news channel Metro and Media 
Indonesia, both owned by politician and media magnate Surya Paloh, and added 
that he is ready to face whatever consequences came with it. Last week, Alam 
called in all public relations officers from government ministries to order 
them not to place advertising in any media that is perceived to be negative to 
Yudhoyono.

Since the fall of the late strongman Suharto in 1998 after three decades of 
censorship, Indonesia has grown some of the liveliest press in Southeast Asia, 
with both print and electronic media flourishing, even in the face of a 
draconian criminal libel law that politicians often threaten to wield against 
journalists . 

Metro TV and Media Indonesia both demanded an apology. But during a hearing 
with the House Commission to discuss the Presidential Unit for Development, 
Supervision and Oversight (UKP4), Alam said he would not back down from his 
controversial statements. 

"Dipo Alam is Dipo Alam," he said in English. "I will never apologize." 

Metro TV chief editor Suryopratomo said the apology was necessary to make Alam 
aware of his mistake. 

"Otherwise there will be more violations of the Press Law and the Freedom of 
Information Law and he should know that as a government official," he said. 

The dispute began on Monday after Alam said he had called on government 
institutions to implement an advertising boycott on media organizations that 
relentlessly portrayed Indonesia as a "messy and dark" country. 

On Tuesday Alam accused three media organizations - Metro TV, TVOne and Media 
Indonesia newspaper - of spreading hatred toward the government through their 
news organizations. TVOne is also owned by a politician, Golkar chairman 
Aburizal Bakrie. 

The media organizations have denied his accusations and government officials 
and lawmakers were quick to denounce his statements, calling it a violation of 
constitutionally guaranteed freedom of the press. 

Alam, however, maintained on Wednesday that these media groups had crossed the 
line, creating such a falsely negative image of the country that it was 
beginning to affect perceptions of Indonesia among foreign investors and 
diplomats. 

"They have been asking me about the move to impeach the president," he said. 
"These negative images and messages that have been made by the media, 
badmouthing the president's administration, have successfully created the 
perception among people in the country and overseas that Indonesia is headed 
toward chaos and failure." 

Alam has also pointed out that he suspected there are other motives behind the 
negative news coverage, saying the way they lambasted the government "is not 
purely to spread news." 

"I did not say that I would boycott media that is simply critical [of the 
government]," Dipo said. "I said I would boycott them if they kept on 
lambasting [the government] intentionally." 

Meanwhile, Press Council deputy chairman Bambang Harymurti said the council had 
invited Alam for a meeting to hear his grievances directly. Even if he could 
not attend the meeting, Haryamurti said, the council expected him to send a 
representative. 

"We want to clarify his statements that were quoted in the media and whether 
they were directed to the media in general," Haryamurti said, adding that the 
council also wants to ask Alam why he did not lodge his complaints with the 
council or the broadcasting commission first.

With reporting by the Jakarta Globe



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