An ex-hijacker, a business mogul and a Burma media veteran will team
up to lead a revamped Mizzima, a formerly exile news outlet once based
in India that has moved operations into Burma and plans to expand its
news coverage, the company’s founder and editor-in-chief said on
Thursday.
Soe Myint, who in 1990 hijacked a Thai Airways plane flying from
Bangkok to Rangoon in an act of protest against Burma’s former military
regime, told The Irrawaddy that Mizzima Media Group (MMG) would be led
by himself and two other shareholders.
“With two more partners, we will continue to focus on the quality of
our media work while expanding it,” said Soe Myint, who was acquitted
for the hijacking by an Indian court and went on to found Mizzima in New
Delhi in 1998. “We have decided to do whatever media works available
during the country’s reform process.”
Among the three MMG shareholders, Burmese business tycoon Thein Wai,
better known as Serge Pun, will serve as a member of its Board of
Directors. Sonny Swe, cofounder of English-language weekly newspaper The
Myanmar Times, and Soe Myint will take the chief executive officer and
editor-in-chief positions, respectively.
“We three will hold equal shares,” Sonny Swe said.
Serge Pun is founder of the multinational Serge Pun & Associates
(SPA) Myanmar Limited, which he established in 1991. He set up Yoma Bank
the following year. SPA Myanmar has since become a sprawling
conglomerate of some 40 business enterprises with interests in financial
services, manufacturing, technology, construction, real estate, the
automotive industry and health care.
Sonny Swe is the son of former Military Intelligence (MI) officer
Brig-Gen Thein Swe and held a majority share in The Myanmar Times until
he was arrested during a purge of the MI by former junta supremo Snr-Gen
Than Shwe in 2004. Tin Tun Oo, a media magnate with close connections
to the junta, took over Sonny Swe’s Myanmar Times shares.
“I was imprisoned but still dreaming about media works,” said Sonny
Swe. “I have tried to reintegrate with The Myanmar Times since my
release but have not been successful for various reasons. Then, I was
given an opportunity to join Mizzima, so I thought I couldn’t pass it up
for any reason.”
Many challenges remain in Burma’s reform process, according to Soe
Myint, but the former exile said he decided in 2011 that he would be
part of the country’s increasingly open media scene.
“The new government relaxed restrictions on foreign media,” said the
Mizzima editor-in-chief. “People inside Burma were able to directly
access the websites of exile media groups such as The Irrawaddy, Mizzima
and Democratic Voice of Burma [DVB]. They had to use proxy servers to
visit them before. So, in late 2011, when private journals were allowed
to publish, we decided that we would return and be based inside the
country.”
Burma’s government has significantly eased once-severe restrictions
on media as part of reforms in the country undertaken beginning in 2011.
The country’s censorship board, to which all private journals were
required to submit content prior to publication, was effectively
shuttered in 2012 and on April 1 of this year, private dailies were
allowed to print in Burma for the first time in decades.
Currently, two websites, a daily Burmese-language newspaper, an
English-language business magazine, and weekly economic and sports
programs are produced under the Mizzima umbrella. In the future, the MMG
will reportedly focus on additional media ventures such as a weekly
women’s TV program, a daily English-language newspaper and other TV
programs.
When asked how much the shareholding trio has invested in the new
MMG, Soe Myint declined to provide details, saying that was an internal
matter and revealing only that the three men had “enough money to run
the media group.”
“My dream to establish my own newspaper began in 1997 when I was
responsible for the production of The Mandalay Daily Newspaper,” Sonny
Swe said. “I want to push for digital media because it is now more
popular than print at the international level. I will put special effort
into this. Since we have established a multimedia news group, I will
also prioritize FM radio channels and TV broadcasting.”
source: Mizzima
http://www.irrawaddy.org/burma/mizzima-trio-plans-expanded-burma-coverage.html
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