Taylor Luck
AMMAN - A study released on Thursday revealed that though many Jordanians support media freedoms, a majority support government restrictions when it comes to destabilising issues.
In the study, performed by WorldPublicOpinion.org and supported and coordinated by the Centre for Strategic Studies at the University of Jordan, 78 per cent of respondents agreed that the media’s freedom to publish news and ideas is important.
However, some 66 per cent of Jordanians favoured the government placing tighter restrictions on material which is viewed as politically destabilising.
Only 26 per cent believed that media should be free to publish news and ideas without government control.
Jordan was among three countries in the study where a majority of respondents approved greater government control over media issues deemed destabilising: the Palestinian territories (59 per cent) and Indonesia (56 per cent).
While a plurality of Iranian respondents supported such control (43 per cent), opinions were divided in Russia (45 per cent to 44 per cent), Egypt (49 per cent to 52 per cent) and Turkey (45 per cent to 42 per cent).
Strikingly, 63 per cent of Jordanian respondents said the government should have the right to prevent access to certain items on the Internet, joining Iran as the only two nations where a majority shared this view.
Only 26 per cent of Jordanians believed that citizens should be able to read any content on the Internet without restrictions.
In comparison, 97 per cent of Egyptians said it was important for the media to be free, with 64 per cent of respondents calling media freedoms “very important”. In terms of electronic media, 65 per cent of Egyptians believed that citizens should be able to read any information on the Internet without government restrictions.
Under the same report, 82 per cent of Palestinians in the Palestinian territories stated that media should be free to publish news and ideas without government control.
A majority of Palestinian respondents, 59 per cent, believed that the government should have the right to curb media freedoms in order to prevent instability, while 44 per cent believed the government should be able to restrict access to certain items on the Internet.
The poll of 18,122 respondents in 20 nations was conducted by a collaborative research project involving research centres from across the world and managed by the Programme on International Policy Attitudes at the University of Maryland.
The survey’s findings were released two days ahead of the World Press Freedom Day.
Comment: Perhaps now you will begin to understand the nature of the news reports from Arab countries and perhaps have a deeper appreciation for democracy.
No comments:
Post a Comment