6th Conference on Myanmar Media Development in Yangon. Photo: Mizzima News

The crisis in Rakhine has thrown up a huge challenge to the media in Myanmar, Country Chief of UNESCO, Min Jeong Kim said.

Addressing the inaugural session of the 6th Media Development Conference at Yangonโ€™s Chatrium Hotel, Min Jeong Kim said that an unusally heavy spate of hate speech, fake news and biased reporting has characterised the media content on Rakhine.

Ready for a challenge? Click here to take our quiz and show off your knowledge!

โ€œThat is worrying because the content is so divisive,โ€ she said.

โ€œMedia must bring people together, not divide them,โ€ Kim said adding, โ€œThat is now the challenge for the media in Myanmar.โ€

The UNESCO country chief said the need of the hour for the Myanmar media was to stick to the five ethical principles of journalism โ€” Truth, Independence, Fairness, Humanitarianism and Accuracy. 

Ready for a challenge? Click here to take our quiz and show off your knowledge!

โ€˜Media must create the atmosphere for the dialogue, not close it down ,โ€ she said.

U Thiha Saw, secretary of Myanmar Press Council, stressed the need for ethics in journalism.

He questioned the content in social media because โ€œoften that was heavily biased.โ€

โ€œIt is time to question whether social media is media because it is full of hate speech, unverified news, plain rumours and often very divisive messages,โ€ he said.

Dr Zin Mar Kyaw , who teaches journalism at the National Management Degree College, insisted on implementing the recommendations resulting from media research projects of various organisations.