This week, it seemed that President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) was on the verge of  bringing substance and hard numbers to the debate on the economic cooperation  framework agreement (ECFA) with China. The Presidential Office announced that Ma  would hold monthly press conferences on the matter — a welcome development for  all those who still don’t have a clue as to what any of it means, what they  stand to gain and what they risk losing.
Then it was announced that  foreign media organizations would be banned from attending, let alone asking  questions. In a laughable concession, however, they would be allowed to sit in  another room and watch the exchange on television.
“Deeply outraged” at  the thought of this development becoming the norm, the Taiwan Foreign  Correspondents Club (TFCC) protested against the decision in a letter to the  Presidential Office spokesperson. It argued that the “ECFA is a matter of  interest to those beyond Taiwan. What [the] government decides to sign with the  People’s Republic of China will have repercussions for those living beyond this  island and they have as much a right to know about what is happening as those  primarily served by the local media.”
Perhaps stung by the TFCC letter,  as well as a stern reaction from individual foreign correspondents, the  Presidential Office suggested that the president might arrange a meeting with  the TFCC in April. But it would not consider joint press conferences because  these were a private matter between the local journalist’s association and the  Presidential Office.
It may be the case that Ma is still smarting from  the grilling he received over his response to Typhoon Morakot; some of the most  confronting questions over that government debacle were fired at him during a  press conference for foreign correspondents.
Indeed, the occasional  forced segregation of local and foreign media outlets is nothing new. What is  disturbing about the latest development is that this practice may become  institutionalized in regard to a specific subject, which in turn raises  questions about what the government is trying to achieve.
The  Presidential Office sets up monthly meetings with the local journalists’  association. It is worth noting the way the association operates. We can expect,  as is often the case, that few hard questions will be asked, embarrassment will  be avoided, many cups of tea will be shared and the requisite number of nods and  winks will apply.
To be fair, Ma continues to hold lengthy, often  combative interviews with media outlets whose editorial line does not concur  with his own. No one can accuse him of aspiring to the level of cynicism and  hubris of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, for example, when it comes to  handling, and manipulating, the media. If anything, Ma’s attempts to make use of  new media technology come across as quaint and faltering; he is hardly a model  for the next generation of media-savvy politicians.
Even so, as much now  as at any time before, the president has a responsibility to maintain the flow  of information on matters of public interest. He should communicate directly and  regularly with all accredited journalists, local and foreign, without  restriction.
Source: Taipei Times - Editorials 2010/02/13
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