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(Full text) Speech by PM Najib Razak at WAN-IFRA 16th Asian Media Awards

The following is the full text of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak's speech at the WAN-IFRA 16th Asian Media Awards tonight:

Distinguished guests,

Ladies and gentlemen,

It is a pleasure for me to be with you all here this evening, at a gathering of some of the most respected names in newspapers, here both for the three day programme of Publish Asia, and also tonight for the 16th Asian Media Awards, organised by the World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers.

I’m delighted that we will be honouring a range of publications from across the continent that have upheld the highest standards in design, infographics, printing, editorial content, marketing, community service and photojournalism.

I’m also delighted to see – and I don’t think I’m giving too much away by saying this – that one or two well-known Malaysian names are among the winners! Which categories, and which prizes? For now, I must leave you all in suspense…

But the importance of these awards is clear. A free press is a guarantor of accountability and transparency. It should also be a guarantor that the still small voice of truth is heard amid the maelstrom of both information and misinformation that new technologies have unleashed.

The theme of this year’s conference is apt. “Strengthening Print in the Digital Era” is indeed important, since even while many publications suffer declines in sales, there is still an authority and a trust in print titles.

That authority is then conveyed to their online versions; and even for titles that exist only digitally now, it is the fact that they used to be printed newspapers, bought and read in the hundreds of thousands, that continues to give them a degree of respect that newer, net-only publications struggle to gain.

Ladies and gentlemen,

We recognise the vital role that newspapers play in free societies, and my Government has opened up the space for the democratic scrutiny they rightfully bring to bear.

We eliminated the bans on opposition party newspapers; we removed the annual renewal requirement for printing licenses from the 1984 Printing Presses and Publications Act; and we opened up the Home Ministry’s authority to block, allow or revoke licences to judicial review.

Now, ladies and gentlemen,

You may sometimes have heard foreign activists talking about “crackdowns” on free speech in Malaysia. But look at our press. You will find criticism of the Government, of our ministers, of our officials, in our newspapers every day.

Sometimes it is the opposition criticising ministers. Sometimes it is ministers criticising other ministers. Sometimes it is the opposition criticising one minister for not criticising another minister.

Sometimes it is former ministers – or even a former prime minister – criticising certain opposition parties for not being critical enough; when those individuals used to criticise those same parties for criticising the Government when they were in power.

It gets very confusing!

But what I can tell you, is that there is more than enough criticism to go round. And if you look online and on social media… well, it’s like the Wild West out there!

My point is that free speech is thriving in Malaysia. We are much more open to our citizens exercising their right to voice their opinions – for or against any party – than most other countries in the region; and our press, or what is sometimes called “the Fourth Estate”, is vital to that.

But, ladies and gentlemen,

With freedom comes responsibility; and part of that responsibility is the need to counter what has become a plague: a plague of false and fake news.

There is an old saying that “A lie will go round the world while the truth is pulling its boots on”. Similarly, the great 18th Century essayist and author of Gulliver’s Travels, Jonathan Swift, once wrote that “Falsehood flies, and the truth comes limping after it; so that when men come to be undeceived, it is too late; the jest is over, and the tale has had its effect.”

If Jonathan Swift could be warning about the dangers of fake news as long ago as 1710, what on earth would he make of the situation that confronts us today: where so-called news stories, although many of them are nothing of the sort, are casually shared, retweeted, messaged, emailed, texted and so on, and believed by too many – with no checking of their veracity at all?

Last November, Stanford University released a study which showed that 82 percent of 13 and 14 year olds in America could not tell the difference between an article called “sponsored content” – that is, an advert – and a real news story.

Last December, a man walked into a pizza restaurant in Washington DC and fired three bullets. He said he was investigating a child sex ring associated with a member of Hillary Clinton’s staff. People only narrowly avoided being shot. Others received death threats. And Mrs Clinton had to address the issue in the end herself.

But it was all completely made up. It was based on a tweet sent out by a white supremacist, which eventually was seen by millions of people – and unfortunately, believed by some of them.

The problem has become so serious and so widespread that the BBC announced earlier this year that it is going to set up a special team, dedicated to fact checking and exposing false news that has gained traction on the web or on social media.

Ladies and gentlemen,

We are far from immune to this problem here in Malaysia. We have had former leaders talking about Malaysia going bankrupt. We have had people talking about Malaysia being in danger of becoming a failed state.

Look around you, at this first class hotel we are gathered in, at the heart of a vibrant development, KL Sentral, which has sprung up in the last ten years. It’s been a new addition to an ever-expanding skyline, in a city which was ranked second for best quality of life in the region in a survey last month by the consulting firm Mercer.

That is just one of the many programmes we have been implementing to enhance connectivity and liveability for all our citizens. Recently we completed the first phase of the Mass Rapid Transit project – on time, and below budget.

We are working on the Warisan Merdeka, which at 118 storeys will be the tallest building in Malaysia and the third tallest in the world when completed. These demonstrate our ambition to have a world class infrastructure, which includes – after years of neglecting it during the 1990s – a truly world class public transport system, fit for purpose and serving the needs of the people.

Other countries recognise what we are doing. The confidence they have in Malaysia has been demonstrated in the last few months by a series of huge investments that have been announced by China, Saudi Arabia and India.

These investments will lead to thousands of new jobs, a transfer of skills, and will help our economy make the quantum leap to becoming a 21st century beacon of innovation and enterprise in the region and beyond.

Now, some critics with little knowledge of economics have been trying to say that foreign direct investment leads to us selling our sovereignty. But Malaysia has been encouraging FDI ever since independence! Are we any less sovereign as a result? Of course not.

To say so is pure ignorance, and betrays a complete lack of understanding of how trade between nations benefits all parties, especially the people. I will never give up an inch of our sovereignty. Ever.

On the contrary, what FDI shows is that people around the world believe that Malaysia is a good place to do business, to grow new businesses, and to expand. And that commitment is not just for now, it is for the future – because their commitment to invest now, shows that they believe in our future.

They are not wrong. In fact, BAV Consulting and the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania recently published a report in which they named Malaysia as the best country to invest in. They said we were the clear frontrunner.

Ladies and gentlemen,

I ask you: Does that sound like a failed state to you ?

Unfortunately, when the government’s opponents spread fake news, some people believe them, because they believe – wrongly – that they would not lie.

This is not confined to Malaysian social media. A well-known foreign newspaper has taken to printing complete lies about the Government. They did that, for instance, about the appointment of a new Governor for Bank Negara last year.

They scandalously even brought His Majesty, the then Yang di-pertuan Agong, into it as well. All without a shred of evidence, and based solely on nameless, anonymous sources who may not even exist. And multiple sources, including independent authorities, that don’t fit part of their narrative, they brazenly ignore.

You may well speculate about why they should print fabricated opposition propaganda and omit other sources that disprove it. About how they allowed themselves to be used as media proxies of those seeking to interfere in a sovereign nation and change a democratically-elected government mid-cycle. And about how their supposed journalistic ethics evaporated in their selfish quest for personal fame.

This was fake news entering the mainstream, and lies masquerading as facts. This represents a cancer at the heart of journalism, and this disease can have very serious effects.

Saudi Aramco’s US$7 billion investment in the Petronas Pengerang Integrated Complex in Malaysia was almost wrecked after a former leader told lies about the state of our country’s economy that were amplified by the media.

Similarly, there will be those who believed a foreign academic who often writes about Malaysia, when she wrote last December that Malaysia had suffered an economic contraction.

Let’s be clear about this. The Harvard economist Kenneth Rogoff defines a contraction as, and I quote: “a much, much more severe version of a recession” that is “accompanied by a financial crash.”

This is, supposedly, what Malaysia suffered at the end of last year. That is nonsense, of course, but did any of this academic’s numerous close friends in the Malaysian opposition rush to correct her? Evidently not. In fact, they began to echo her false statements, despite knowing all too well that it was false.

Indeed, this falsehood is still in her article on various websites – because it suits their political, partisan, selfish purpose to have people believe the worst of this country.

The facts are these.

We have had years of healthy growth, and even in these difficult times for the global economy we registered growth of 4.2 percent in 2016. We expect a slightly higher figure for this year, and for it to rise in 2018.

These figures show Malaysia growing at more than double the rates the IMF predicts for advanced economies over the same time period.

Between 2010 and 2016, we have created 1.8 million jobs, of which over one million were high-income jobs.

Gross National Income increased by nearly 50 percent.

We have almost eradicated poverty, reducing it to just 0.6 percent.

We have kept inflation and unemployment low, and have been acclaimed by global institutions such as the World Bank and the IMF for the reforms we have undertaken.

We have been transforming Malaysia, at every level, from the infrastructure projects that will open up the East Coast of the peninsula, to the Pan-Borneo Highway that will be of huge benefit to Sabah and Sarawak; to the culture of innovation and entrepreneurship we have been cultivating through numerous programmes and projects – with, most recently, the establishment of the world’s first Digital Free Trade Zone.

All the time bearing in mind that our focus on human capital means forging a nation in which no Malaysian is left behind, and that the sustainable and inclusive future we are building is for all our citizens, young and old, regardless of ethnicity, faith or community.

These, ladies and gentlemen, are the facts about Malaysia.

We here today, in this room, can and may disagree about many things. That includes the performance of the Government and the state of Malaysia in general.

But I would urge you to bear in mind the words of a journalist still revered today, the Manchester Guardian’s long-time editor, CP Scott. He famously declared, and I quote, that “comment is free, but facts are sacred.”

It is your duty as publishers, editors, reporters and designers to maintain the trust that readers have in your titles, and to fight to the last this tide of fake and false news that threatens to turn truth into a purely subjective matter, with little relation to the actual facts.

The Government of Malaysia will be on your side. All we ask in return is the opportunity to remind you to rely in your reporting and sourcing, in whichever country that may be: not on rumours, not on unsourced anonymous quotes, and not on invented propaganda, no matter now persuasively it may be presented – but on verified facts.

We have no fear of the facts: for they are undisputed. For the future of newspapers, both in print and online, to be as healthy as we all want and need it to be, I am sure that is something that all here would agree on.

May I now salute all the brave editors, publishers and reporters whose commitment to the facts and to the pursuit of truth have led them to be honoured tonight. You are vital to our democracies, and we are delighted to host you here at this dinner to recognise your work. Long may it continue.

Thank you.

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