Government
pledges to give media resources for growth
HA NOI - The Party and State vow to
create all possible conditions to help the Vietnamese revolutionary press
grow vigorously, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung asserted in a meeting with
journalists at the Ministry of Information and Communications in Ha Noi
yesterday.
The meeting was
held to celebrate the 90th anniversary of the birth of Viet Nam's
revolutionary press with the Thanh nien (Young People) newspaper, first
issued by Ho Chi Minh on June 21, 1925.
The PM said the
Party and State were fully aware of the vital role and significant
contributions the Vietnamese revolutionary press made to the cause of
national independence, reunification, construction and development.
Many journalists
braved dangers during the war to fulfill their noble missions assigned to
them by the Party, State and the people, he said, adding that in the cause of
socio-economic development, the press had helped create social consensus in
implementing the Party and State's policies, while conveying the public's
feedback to the Party and State in a timely manner.
The press had also
made significant contributions to the protection of the nation's sea and
island sovereignty, the PM said.
On whether
traditional newspapers can compete with social media in the multimedia age,
the PM told journalists that the answer to how they would survive the present
conditions of fierce competition and limited State financial assistance by
struggling forward.
He said that
old-fashioned management could not hold in the new media age.
The
editors-in-chief of the Tien Phong (Vanguard) and Thanh Nien (Young People)
newspapers asked for improvement in the way the ministry and agency spokesmen
responded to the media, as most of the time this was late and inadequate.
Pham Anh Tuan,
editor-in-chief on the online newspaper Vietnamnet.vn, warned against newspapers
being influenced by social media.
This temptation,
he said, necessitated that official responses come quicker.
Irreplaceable
role
Pham Van Huan,
editor-in-chief of Quan doi Nhan dan (People's Army) newspaper, highlighted
the important role the printing press plays in modern times.
He said that
though more people now had access to the Internet, television and radio
services, the printed news was still needed.
"In many
remote areas without Internet, television or radio, soldiers and members of
the public still need newspapers," he said.
In response to
concerns over the Government's media restructuring scheme, PM Dung instructed
the Ministry of Information and Communications to work with news
organisations and their publishers to ensure reasonable implementation.
Development over
90 years
Minister of
Information and Communications Nguyen Bac Son read a report at the meeting,
delving into the history of journalism since the first edition of Thanh nien
was published. In the last century, newspapers have moved from working in
secrecy to semi-secretly and finally today's openness.
The country now
has 849 newspaper agencies with 111,000 publications; 98 online newspapers;
and 66 broadcasting stations with more than 100 television channels and 70
radio channels. — VNS
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Thứ Bảy, 20 tháng 6, 2015
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