Thanks Sabri; for your article.  After reading them I have summarised
the "professionalism". attitude and "principles" of Zainuddin Maidin.
They include;

1.  All of us are earning a living.

2.  We must please our Masters i.e. those who appointed us to our
present position.

3.  If need be we must lie to all the people all the time.

4.  Malaysians are a docile lot; readily believing all the 'truths'
publish by us.

5.  It is all right calling ladies prostitutes if the intention is to
NEUTRALISE the people.

6.  We need to tell the Malaysian public that an attendance to a
particular rally (by Anwar) numbers about 5,000 people although in truth
maybe about 100,000 people attended.  This is called "NEUTRALISING" and
not lies by Zainuddin.

7.  The word 'truth' does not exists in his vocabulary.

I need not continue.  The 100,000 people who attended the rally at the
National Mosque on the 20.9.98 as mentioned by you will by now  formed
an opinion as to the  "professionalism" of Zainuddin Maidin.  By the
way; is he really a Newspaper Editor or an efficient 'fiction writer'?
Dato' Mohd Said's "neutralising and turning over" statements looks tame
compared to Zainuddin's NEUTRALISING tactics.
 

>Date: Mon, 09 Nov 1998 03:10:01 +0800
>From: Sabri Zain <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected], [email protected],
[email protected], [email protected],
[email protected]
>Reply-To: [email protected]
>Subject: [gerak-net] "We don't tell lies .... up to a point"
>
>From: Sabri Zain <[email protected]>
>
>"We don't tell lies .... up to a point"
>
>----------------------------------------
>
>The statement by Utusan Malaysia Deputy Executive Chairman Zainuddin
>Maidin in a recent Asiaweek interview had me in gasps. He said that
>there is no government interference in the newspaper's day-to-day
>operations and refuted allegations that his paper is not telling the
>truth. "We're biased, " he admitted. "But we don't tell lies."
>
>The image of poor Zainuddin pleading for the independence and
>sovereignty of his newspaper reminded me a lot of Mr Salter - the
>servile, sycophantic Foreign News editor of the ‘Daily Beast’, the
>fictional British newspaper in Evelyn Waugh’s classic satire on
>journalism “Scoop”. There is a scene from the book where Salter is
>talking with Lord Copper, the all-powerful, despotic, senile and
>dim-witted owner and publisher of the newspaper.  While Lord Copper was
>talking about how his newspaper  must make a stand for  ‘strong
>government’ and ‘self-assertion’, Mr Salter’s side of the conversation
>was limited to delighted expressions of assent and enthusiastic
>agreement. Everytime Lord Copper was right, Salter would say,
>“Definitely, Lord Copper”. When he was wrong, Salter would say “Up to a
>point, Lord Copper.”
>
>“Hong Kong belongs to us, doesn’t it, Salter?”
>
>“Definitely, Lord Copper”
>
>“Let me see, what’s the name of that place ... the capital of Japan
>...Yokohama, isn’t it?”
>
>“Up to a point, Lord Copper.”
>
>The phrase “Up to a point ....” crops up a lot in the book - as, I’m
>sure it would in many conversations between our country’s top editors
>and our top leaders.  Malaysian journalism has taken the skill of
>writing between the lines - saying something without actually saying it
>- to an art form. And Malaysians have always found that the best news
is
>usually nestled reading between those lines.
>
>That is probably why the blatant and obviously hostile attacks on Anwar
>Ibrahim in the weeks following his sacking last September shocked so
>many. The meek, docile ‘responsible’ journalism that Malaysians had
>tolerated so long suddenly became bold, fiery and downright coarse and
>vulgar.  In lurid and graphic detail, the newspapers all gave us crash
>courses in sodomy and masturbation - we were all told who sodomised
who,
>how many times, where, when, how and which orifices and protuberances
>were involved.
>
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------
>“In the old days, men had the rack. Now they have the press” - Oscar
>Wilde
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>The trial by media had actually begun many months before. There were
>previously two golden rules governing what headline stories went on the
>front page. Rule 1 was there must be a quote from Mahathir. Rule 2 was,
>if the PM wasn’t in town, there must be a quote from Anwar. However, by
>the middle of this year, we suddenly noticed less and less of our DPM
in
>the papers - let alone the front page.  The only memorable news about
>Anwar in the weeks leading up to his sacking were denials by him and
the
>PM that there was no rift between them and he was not being called on
to
>resign. The PM was even willing to “kiss him on the street” to prove
the
>point - a very risky  proposition, considering the nature of the sexual
>accusations that were to emerge later.
>
>But being masters at reading between the lines, we all *knew* Anwar’s
>days were numbered. But we certainly didn’t expect him to be sacked -
>now *that* was news. Though TV3 certainly didn’t think so. The news of
>the country losing a Deputy Prime Minister was the third or fourth
>segment in the TV3 news that evening - after the top news of a change
in
>the Primary Six curriculum and some insignificant official opening by
>some insignificant Minister in some insignificant place I can’t even
>remember.
>
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>“We regard it as a promising little war .... and we intend to give it a
>lot of publicity” - Evelyn Waugh, “Scoop”, 1938
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>The war of words between the Anwar supporters and the government
>supporters was to begin - and it was a promising little war.
>Unfortunately for the Anwarites, the government had outflanked their
>enemy weeks before by getting rid of a number of key editors which they
>felt would not be so compliant in the coming trial by media.
>
>Soon, affidavits of sexual misconduct were hotly discussed and
>deliberated fully in the newspapers - even before they had appeared in
>any court of law. Lawyers raised a howl of outrage. The normally sober
>Bar Council  issued a scathing statement viewing ‘with dismay’ the
>publication of the affidavits, which they regarded as ‘most unusual and
>unprecedented’ and may have even been ‘subjudice and in contempt of
>court’. The Council had this radical idea that a trial by media was ‘a
>breach of the rules of natural justice and fair play’ and  infringes
>‘the constitutional right of a person to defend  himself’.
>
>With the press muzzled and only barking up where its masters told it to
>bark, an avenue for the dissatisfaction of Anwar supporters was firmly
>shut. They instead flocked by the thousands to his home, to community
>halls around the country and, finally, to the streets. And they took to
>the Internet. Anwar websites were already on-line the evening he was
>sacked. The government was not so swift - the Prime Minister’s official
>home page still had glowing tributes to his sacked Deputy weeks after
>his dismissal!
>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> “The first casualty when war comes is Truth”- US Senator Hiram
Johnson,
>1917
>------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>The war of words continued. Gatherings of many thousands of people were
>reported as being attended by a few hundred, sometimes a few dozen,
>Anwar supporters.  The mammoth gathering at the National Mosque and
>Dataran Merdeka on the day of Anwar’s arrest - which eyewitness reports
>indicated could have easily numbered 100,000 - were reported in the
>local press as being attended by 5,000 people. Not only that, a Minster
>was even reported to have said that they were mostly foreigners!
>
>Whatever these ‘news’ reports were meant to accomplish, they certainly
>were successful in convincing those 100,000 people not to believe them
>anymore.
>
>The gag order by Justice Augustine Paul to halt to all public comments
>on sodomy and corruption charges faced by Anwar when he was finally
>brought before a court of law stemmed the steady flow of pornography
>from the local press - but the lies certainly didn’t stop. Women in
>tudungs quietly singing and chanting under a tree in front of the
istana
>are "prostitutes" screamed Utusan Malaysia - despite the Kuala Lumpur
>police chief issuing a statement denying that any prostitutes were
>involved in the demonstration. (This statement, by the way, did not see
>the light of day in any of the mainstream Malay or English press - and
>don't even dream there was a retraction from Utusan Malaysia) It makes
>one wonder if the ‘prostitutes’ were actually the ones with the
cameras,
>notepads and press tags.
>
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>“Dear Sir, Your profession has, as usual, destroyed your brain.” -
>George Bernard Shaw, in a letter to a journalist.
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>During all this,  Mahathir of course continued with his ranting and
>raving against the foreign press for *their* lies and unfairness. It
was
>therefore only a matter of time before a local journalist would have to
>echo His Master’s Voice and follow suit - and he even managed to out-do
>the PM! Malaysian journalism finally sunk to its lowest depths ever
when
>an opinion piece in the New Straits Times actually called for 'errant'
>journalists to be detained without trial under the Internal Security
>Act. These are journalists asking for other journalists to be detained
>without trial. And these people are supposed to be the guardians of the
>freedom of speech, thought and expression in Malaysia? Who guards the
>guardians, I wonder.
>
>I must concede that that this kind of naked hostility is not a common
>trait in most journalists. Having been a journalist myself and being in
>a profession where I have to work with journalists on a regular basis,
I
>know that most journalists are ethical and professional. Many of them
>feel just as strongly for social justice and democratic freedoms as any
>Reformist I know.  They had been fighting these causes for years -  at
>times when many of the champions of the Reform movement today were
>breaking up conferences on East Timor independence, calling human
rights
>NGOs traitors and urging the use of the ISA on party opponents.
>
>One or two of these lonely, independent voices in the local media do
>manage to get heard on rare occasions.  There was a brave article that
>appeared in the Life and Times section of the New Straits Times on
>November 4 that took  a candid look at the feelings and opinions of the
>various people who flocked to the courthouse that week.  The writers
>quoted people saying things such as “I am here to support Anwar”, “We
>don’t have the freedom to speak up”, “It’s impossible to be a
journalist
>here”, “I no longer have no faith in the system - the only way left is
>to change it altogether”.
>
>I say the article was brave because, while not exactly supportive of
the
>Reformists, it was probably the first one I had read in the mainstream
>media that indicated that there were ordinary people who were not just
>concerned about Anwar but about freedom and justice in Malaysia as
>well.  The writers questioned the usual party line parroted in the
media
>that 22 million Malaysians have unswerving loyalty to the government
and
>unshakable faith in its democratic institutions - and the answers they
>got may have convinced many that, perhaps, this key issue here is not
>only about Anwar Ibrahim - but about the far broader issues of justice,
>freedom and democracy.
>
>-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>“The bigger the lie, the easier it will be for people to believe it” -
>Adolf Hitler
>-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>Articles such as those are a candle in the darkness that envelopes
>Malaysian journalism today. Unfortunately, isolated acts of
independence
>like that are submerged in the torrent of propaganda that tries to
>disguise itself as news coverage. One of the shocks from last week’s
>sessions in court was the admission on November 5 by the former head of
>the Special Branch Datuk Mohd Said Awang that he may lie in court if
>asked to do so by the PM. This was the top story in all the
>international news wire services that day, as well as in the regional
>newspapers the next day.  “I might lie if asked to, says witness” was
>the Singapore Straits Times headline.
>
>And what were the corresponding headlines in the local Malay press?
>“Dakwaan Salah Laku Seks Anwar: Mohd Said Percaya” - Berita Harian.
>“Saksi Yakin Tuduhan Benar” - Utusan Malaysia.
>
>It is this kind of editorial wool-pulling over the eyes that has made
so
>many people angry at the press. Some have reacted passively - by simply
>not buying the papers anymore. The Opposition parties and GERAK have
>singled out Utusan Malaysia as particularly vile and initiated a
>campaign encouraging people to boycott the paper.  Others have resorted
>to more dramatic displays of frustration. An Utusan Malaysia vehicle
was
>pelted with rocks when it entered Kampong Baru on October 24th - the
>scene of a violent confrontation between Reformasi supporters and the
>riot police. A Reformasi demonstration in Kampong Baru last Saturday
saw
>demonstrators burning copies of Utusan Malaysia. One person I know
takes
>copies home from the office to be used as cat litter - proudly
>displaying it to friends who come to his home.
>
>Anwar himself has been more understanding of the situation local
>reporters face. During the massive demonstration at the National Mosque
>on September 20th, just hours before Anwar was arrested, a TV3 crew was
>pelted with drink cartons to shouts of  Penipu!" "Anjing!" from the
>crowd. Fortunately, Anwar ordered them to calm down, quipping "Let them
>do their job ... I definitely know that particular crew secretly
>supports me!"
>
>In one of the sessions in court last week, Anwar actually turned to
>reporters in the gallery, pleading with them to be more ‘objective’.
>Complaining that local media reports on his trial were “terrible”, he
>quickly smiled and said “I understand it’s not your fault. It’s your
>editors.”
>
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>“A free press can, of course, be good or bad; but certainly, without
>freedom, the press will never be anything but bad” - Albert Camus
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>Today, November 8th 1998, Southeast Asian journalists launched a new
>regional alliance in Bangkok to fight for press freedom and to monitor
>attacks on reporters. The Southeast Asian Press Alliance (SEAPA) will
>set up a secretariat in Bangkok next year to urge governments to
>overturn repressive media laws and monitor attacks on journalists.
>Delegates from independent journalist associations in the Philippines,
>Indonesia and Thailand will steer the SEAPA, formed during a weekend
>seminar here on press freedom in Southeast Asia organised by the
>Reporters' Association of Thailand.
>
>I don’t know why no Malaysian journalist associations were represented
>at the meeting. Perhaps they felt out of place at a forum discussing
>press freedom. But if our own local journalists feel that the fight for
>press freedom is a futile one, we as readers have a duty to prove them
>wrong. Thai Foreign Minister Surin Pitsuwan, a former journalist
>himself, told the forum it is the responsibility of each member of
>society  “to safeguard the freedom of the press” which he said was “a
>basic human right”. People just don’t like being lied to, being
deceived
>and having their intelligence insulted. Malaysians have resorted to
>using the Internet as the printing press of the nation, photocopying,
>faxing, posting and distributing news and views they cannot find in
>their own local media. They have taken it upon themselves to assume a
>task which the local press have seen fit to neglect.
>
>If I were a journalist I would be ashamed of that. And until
journalists
>stand up to their editors and to the people that rule our editors,
>readers will just continue not buying their papers and seek elsewhere
>for truth. Because lies, vested interests, hidden agendas and plain old
>official propaganda that are disguised as Truth can only be believed -
>up to a point.
>
>
>/\__/\
> @  @
>={_!_}=
>
>Sabri Zain

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