Right to privacy in
Students sing the national
during a ceremony marking the new school year at a local elementary school in
Earlier this month a national TV channel came under fire for a
news report on some 17-year-olds smoking shisha.
While the problem was whether VTC14's
reporter tricked the children into smoking to stage the report, it was a rare
case in which a Vietnamese media agency was openly criticized for violating
ethical standards by revealing full information about underage people's
identities.
In fact, violating children's right to
privacy is a problem that has dogged the Vietnamese media for years. Local
and international organizations have held a few conferences and training
programs to help improve journalists' awareness and skills.
However, the issue is still barely
addressed.
These days many stories about child abuse in
the media, especially news websites, come with a small print that reads:
"The name(s) of the victim(s) in the story has been changed."
But elsewhere in the stories, complete
details about the children's family, house, school and even class can be
found. Sometimes their photos are also published, albeit pixelated.
Nguyen Nhu Lich, a Thanh Nien reporter who
has won many awards for her stories on children’s issues, said she was once
"shocked" to read a story that explicitly described how a child in
Ho Chi Minh City was sexually abused by her stepfather.
Although it said under the story that the
victim's name had been changed, her home address was clearly mentioned, she
said, aghast.
Nguyen Ngoc Oanh, a lecturer at the
Hanoi-based Academy of Journalism and Communication who has spent over 15
years studying child rights in the media, also said
"inappropriately" using children's images is one of the most common
violations of children’s rights in the Vietnamese media.
Child victims of sexual abuse can be
identified through other details provided, though their faces are blurred out
and their names are given only in acronym, he said.
For underage criminals/suspects, the
situation is worse since many reports show their names and faces without
holding anything back, be it thieves or murders.
The only study on the issue so far in
The independent survey was done by five top
news website in
By revealing the children's private
information as well as details on how they were victimized, reporters
subjected them to public criticism or even danger, the survey concluded.
It cited a case in which a 13-year-old girl
and her 23-year-old boyfriend attempted suicide in the central region as they
could not cope with social condemnation after many news agencies reported how
she got pregnant along with all of her personal information.
In another case, a 12-year-old orphan in the
south was nearly kidnapped just two days after a newspaper reported about how
she lived alone and took care of her sick mother. The story was meant to call
for donation to help the girl.
Ethics and laws
Oanh, the journalism lecturer, said the
abuse of children’s rights in the media is mainly due to reporters' lack of
respect for children and the lack of knowledge and skills needed for writing
stories about children’s issues.
In fact, many media bosses mistakenly
believe that writing about children is the easiest and so anyone can do it,
he said.
Another reason is that reporters and editors
want to make stories sensational to attract more readership, he said.
Le The Nhan, chairman of the non-profit
Center for Community Development and Social Work, which is headquartered in
the central city of
He said for the survey he and his team would
write to media agencies whenever they discovered inappropriate articles, but
would get no response.
On the other hand, Nhan said,
But local laws still fail to spell out
regulations to fully protect such rights, he said.
So, to resolve this issue, besides raising
awareness of children’s rights among reporters, editors, children themselves,
and parents, it is necessary to have "clear" and
"practical" provisions on children's right to privacy in the laws,
including the Child Law and Press Law, he said.
How much is enough?
"There are 'internal rules', which are
reporters' conscience and responsibility," Lich, the Thanh Nien
reporter, said, explaining that if reporters put their own children in the
victims' shoes, they would handle the reporting more appropriately and
reasonably.
A report with full details is obviously more
convincing than one with selective information, but the former could subject
child victims and their families to more and deeper pain, she said.
Laura Ngo-Fontaine, communications
specialist at UNICEF Vietnam, said
Mark Pearson, professor of journalism and
social media at
Identifying victims in cases of abuse can be
"traumatic" and, in most cultures, "embarrassing" for the
victims, he said.
"Add to this the international human
rights conventions protecting children and privacy and there are strong legal
and ethical reasons for not identifying child abuse victims."
For child criminals, the norm is to
anonymize them due to the belief that children deserve the chance to redeem
themselves and not be "haunted" by the consequences of crimes they
committed when they were young, Pearson said.
However, while most countries follow the
anonymity practice, some have a "name and shame" policy for repeat
offenders, especially those where juvenile crime is a major problem, he said.
While he can understand the position of
reporters who claim to need full details to make their stories more
convincing, Pearson said "there is a greater public interest in
protecting the privacy and mental health of children than there is in
providing the media with entertaining stories.
“Such matters can still be reported in an interesting
way with the child's identity kept anonymous."
By Thanh Nguyen, Thanh Nien News
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Thứ Hai, 27 tháng 4, 2015
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