Printing Presses and Publications Act 1984 explained

Short Title:Printing Presses and Publications Act 1984
Legislature:Parliament of Malaysia
Long Title:An Act to regulate the use of printing presses and the printing, importation, production, reproduction, publishing and distribution of publications and for matters connected therewith.
Citation:Act 301
Territorial Extent:Malaysia
Enacted By:Dewan Rakyat
Date Passed:28 March 1984
Enacted By2:Dewan Negara
Date Passed2:16 April 1984
Royal Assent:27 June 1984
Date Commenced:28 June 1984
Date Effective:1 September 1984, P.U. (B) 364/1984
Bill:Printing Presses and Publications Bill 1984
Bill Citation:D.R. 15/1984
1St Reading:16 March 1984
2Nd Reading:28 March 1984
3Rd Reading:28 March 1984
Bill2:Printing Presses and Publications Bill 1984
Bill Citation2:D.R. 15/1984
Introduced By2:Mohd. Kassim Ahmed, Deputy Minister of Home Affairs
1St Reading2:9 April 1984
2Nd Reading2:13 April 1984
3Rd Reading2:16 April 1984
Amended By:Printing Presses and Publications (Amendment) Act 1987 [Act A684]
Printing Presses and Publications (Amendment) Act 2012 [Act A1436]
Related Legislation:Printing Presses Act 1948 [Act 58]
Control of Imported Publications Act 1958 [Act 63]
Keywords:Printing press, publications
Status:In force

The Printing Presses and Publications Act 1984 (Malay: Akta Mesin Cetak dan Penerbitan 1984) is a Malaysian statute governing the usage of printing presses and the printing, importation, production, reproduction, publishing and distribution of publications in Malaysia. It replaced the Printing Presses Act 1948 and the Control of Imported Publications Act 1958 (Revised 1972).[1] A controversial amendment was made after Operation Lalang, where all printing presses were required to renew their licence annually through the Ministry of Home Affairs, seen as a move to curtail press freedom.The Act was subsequently amended in 2012 to remove the requirement for annual licence application and the government's 'absolute discretion' over permits, and reinstated judicial overview.[2]

Structure

The Printing Presses and Publications Act 1984, in its current form (1 September 2012), consists of 5 Parts containing 27 sections and 2 schedules (including 2 amendments).

Printing presses

The Act provides that it is a criminal offense to possess or use a printing press without a licence granted by the Home Affairs Minister. The Minister is given "absolute discretion" in the granting and revocation of licences, and can also restrict or ban outright publications that is likely to endanger national security interest or create social unrest. Should one possess or use an unlicensed printing press, he may be imprisoned for up to three years and/or fined up to RM20,000. A deposit made under Section 10 of the Act will also be forfeited in such a case.[3]

Publishing

The Home Affairs Minister is given "absolute discretion" to grant, revoke or suspend permits "to any person to print and publish a newspaper in Malaysia" or "to any proprietor of any newspaper in Singapore allowing such newspaper to be imported, sold, circulated or distributed in Malaysia." Permits are normally granted for the period of one year, and cannot be transferred without the permission of the Minister. Should one print, import, publish, sell, circulate or distribute - or even offer to do any of those things - a newspaper without a permit from the Minister, it will be deemed an offense punishable by up to three years in jail and/or a fine of up to RM20,000.[4]

Criticism

There has been quite a debate on the Printing Presses and Publications Act 1984 in Malaysia. Although the law was meant to maintain genuine news stories, create a regulated press sector, and provide legal guidelines to reporters, some say that the legislation is restricting political discourse, silencing political opponents and manipulating the news delivered to consumers.[5]

The Act has been criticised for curtailing the freedom of speech in Malaysia, which is subject to any restriction Parliament may impose under Article 10 of the Constitution. In particular, it has been alleged that the Act "empowers the Minister to exercise virtually total control over the print media."[1] This criticism was intensified after a 1987 amendment to the Act established an ouster clause preventing actions of the Home Affairs Minister from being called into question by the courts.[6]

Despite this, High Court Justice Harun Hashim has asserted that the Home Affairs Minister's actions may be subjected to judicial review. In the case of Persatuan Aliran Kesedaran Negara v. Minister of Home Affairs, Harun quashed the decision of the Minister to refuse Aliran, a reform group, permission to publish a Malay publication. His decision was reversed on appeal in the Supreme Court, where Supreme Court Justice Ajaib Singh ruled that the amended section 12 of the Act did exclude actions of the Home Affairs Minister from judicial review.[7]

The constitutionality of the Act has been called into question. In Public Prosecutor v. Pung Chen Choon, it was argued that the restrictions placed by section 8(A)(1) of the Act on freedom of speech violated Article 10 of the Constitution. The Supreme Court held that although the Act did restrict freedom of speech, such restrictions were permitted by Articles 4(2) and 10(2) of the Constitution, and that the right to freedom of speech was not an absolute right. While the Constitution of Malaysia does allow freedom of speech and for the press, there is a very crucial limitation - The Constitution provides that freedom of speech may be restricted by legislation "in the interest of security (or) public order.[8]

Hence this means the government can enact legislation to determine the way information is disseminated by the mass media industry if the government feels that the national interest has been threatened. Supreme Court Justice Edgar Joseph stated:

Although Pung's counsel presented various authorities from other jurisdictions, the Supreme Court dismissed them, holding that "the Malaysian press is not as free as the press in India, England or the United States of America and cases from these jurisdictions are of little relevance."[9]

Electronic media

As blogs and other online resources became more popular among Malaysians, the government is looking at expanding the act to include electronic media and Internet media.[10] [11] However, the statement was retracted several days later, as electronic media are considered to be under the Multimedia Commission. However, the act itself might be updated as studies on its relevance would be carried out.[12] [13]

Notes and references

External links

Notes and References

  1. Rachagan, S. Sothi (1993). Law and the Electoral Process in Malaysia, p. 169. Kuala Lumpur: University of Malaya Press. .
  2. Book: Democracy, Media and Law in Malaysia and Singapore: A Space for Speech . Andrew T. Kenyon . Tim Marjoribanks . Amanda Whiting . 13–14 . Routledge . 2013. 978-0415704090.
  3. Rachagan, pp. 169 - 170.
  4. Rachagan, p. 170.
  5. Web site: CIJ Malaysia . 2010-12-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080106105553/http://www.cijmalaysia.org/Bluffer_PPPA.htm . 2008-01-06 . dead .
  6. [Rais Yatim|Yatim, Rais]
  7. Yatim, p. 171.
  8. Web site: Communications Law in Transition Newsletter . 2010-12-05 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080610152139/http://pcmlp.socleg.ox.ac.uk/transition/issue07/malaysia.htm . 2008-06-10 .
  9. Yatim, pp. 170 - 171.
  10. http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2006/7/27/nation/14961817&sec=nation The Star
  11. http://www.seapabkk.org/newdesign/alertsdetail.php?No=497 SEAPA
  12. Web site: Bernama . 2010-12-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070929091421/http://www.bernama.com.my/bernama/v3/news.php?id=211180 . 2007-09-29 . dead .
  13. http://www.sun2surf.com/article.cfm?id=14952 Sun2Surf