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Viewing cable 06BANGKOK1747, TELEVISION IN THAILAND: WHO HOLDS THE LEASH

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06BANGKOK1747 2006-03-22 07:45 2011-08-25 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Bangkok
VZCZCXRO7535
PP RUEHCHI RUEHDT RUEHHM
DE RUEHBK #1747/01 0810745
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 220745Z MAR 06
FM AMEMBASSY BANGKOK
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 7353
INFO RUEHZS/ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHEAST ASIAN NATIONS
RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 BANGKOK 001747 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SENSITIVE 
SIPDIS 
 
PACOM FOR FPA HUSO 
STATE FOR EAP/PD, IIP 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PHUM PREL PGOV KPAO TH
SUBJECT: TELEVISION IN THAILAND: WHO HOLDS THE LEASH 
 
REF: A. BKK 01549 - SHIN DEAL LEGAL SO WHAT? 
 
     B. BKK 00538 - TEMASEK BUYOUT OF SHIN CORP 
     C. BKK 01537 - OPPOSITION SELLS 
 
1. (SBU) SUMMARY. The RTG has traditionally maintained tight 
control over the information presented to the public over the 
airwaves.  The RTG owns all of the country's six television 
licenses, although three are licenses to commercial 
operators.  Reform of broadcast media, though mandated by the 
1997 Constitution, has been exceedingly slow in 
materializing.  Television professionals have practiced 
self-censorship under the all-too-real threat of reprisal for 
reporting anything overly critical of the government or 
powerful pro-government commercial interests.  In recent 
weeks, we have seen a trend on the part of television news 
programs to move beyond self-censorship and present 
increasingly balanced coverage of the current political 
crisis.  Still, it is far too early to tell whether this 
newfound freedom is here to stay.  END SUMMARY. 
 
WHO OWNS THE AIRWAVES... 
------------------------ 
 
2. (SBU) The RTG maintains ownership over all of the 
country's six free-to-air television licenses.  Three of 
these licenses are leased out to private companies but, as 
the owner, the RTG has the ability to weigh in with the 
management to ensure that they are not challenging government 
policies or leadership.  Below is a list of Thai television 
channels and their respective ownership: 
 
LICENSE     OWNER       Operator 
 
Channel 3   MCOT        BEC-Tero 
Channel 5   Thai Army   Thai Army 
Channel 7   Thai Army   Bangkok TV 
Channel 9   MCOT        MCOT 
Channel 11  PRD         PRD 
iTV         PM Office   Shin 
 
...AND WHO RUNS THEM 
-------------------- 
 
3. (SBU) The two long-standing commercial operators dominate 
Thailand's prime-time viewership: Bangkok Entertainment 
Company (BEC-Tero) operates Channel 3 and can expect five 
million viewers most nights; Bangkok TV Company runs Channel 
7 which routinely draws over twelve million viewers. 
BEC-Tero, in turn, is owned by the Maleenot Family, and one 
of the Maleenot's is the Minister of Tourism in Prime 
Minister Thaksin's current Cabinet.  Bangkok TV is owned by 
the Kanthasut Family, also owners of the Italo-Thai 
conglomerate, long-standing Thaksin supporters. 
 
4. (SBU) Thailand's other independently-operated station is 
iTV, established in 1997, and has around four million 
viewers.  It is operated by a subsidiary of the now infamous 
Shin Corporation (see REFs A and B), owned by the family of 
PM Thaksin Shinawatra until March 14 when it was purchased by 
Singapore's Temasek Holdings.  iTV insiders have told PDoff 
that Grammy Entertainment, another close ally of the Prime 
Minister, is interested in purchasing iTV from Temasek, but 
to date there is no clear indication that such a sell-off is 
in the works. 
 
5. (SBU) The rest of Thai TV is operated by its respective 
owners.  Channel 9, which like iTV draws about four million 
views, is operated by MCOT (Mass Communication Organization 
of Thailand - a state-run enterprise that, although it is now 
issuing shares to the public, is still 77 percent owned by 
the Ministry of Finance).  Channel 11, with about one million 
viewers, is directly operated by the Prime Minister's Public 
Relations Department, and Channel 5, with about two million 
viewers, is still very much run by the Army. 
 
CENSORSHIP THAI-STYLE 
--------------------- 
 
6. (SBU) PDOFF and POLOFF met with representatives from the 
six television stations to discuss a variety of issues 
including the role of the RTG in news programming decisions. 
Officials at Channel 5 and 11 made no bones about the fact 
that programming decisions are made by senior military and 
government officials in charge of the station.  While 
managers at the other four stations maintained that there is 
no direct interference from the government in determining 
news content, all agreed that an unwritten understanding 
exists of what is and is not permissible. 
 
BANGKOK 00001747  002 OF 002 
 
 
 
7. (SBU) Producers at all three commercial stations confirmed 
that self-imposed censorship is maintained by the tacit 
threat of reprisal.  TV hosts and producers who dare to cross 
over the invisible line have routinely lost their airtime or 
faced exile to some forgotten corner of the newsroom.  These 
producers speculated that powerful commercial interests with 
ties to the government influence programming decisions by 
threatening to pull advertisements and cut into revenues. 
 
8. (SBU) One producer confirmed that stations occasionally 
receive phone calls and even letters from the PM's Public 
Relations Department suggesting that certain stories be 
dropped or treated softly.  When the anti-Thaksin movement 
was principally led by Sondhi Limthongkul, the producer said 
a government official called his station to "encourage" them 
to play down the story.  Several sources said that in the 
past they had been told by management to stop investigating a 
story that could damage commercial prospects of advertisers, 
such as reports of toxic contamination in instant noodles and 
shampoo. 
 
REFORM ON THE SLOW TRACK 
------------------------ 
 
9. (U) The 1997 Constitution mandated broadcast media reform 
by calling for the reallocation of TV (and radio) frequencies 
to the public, private, and community sectors.  It further 
mandated the establishment of an independent National 
Broadcasting Commission (NBC) to oversee this distribution 
and supervise the broadcast industry. 
 
10. (SBU) Eight years later and implementation of these 
reforms is still pending.  In September 2005, the Senate put 
forward a list of seven nominees for the NBC.  Almost 
immediately, media advocates and professionals in the field 
questioned the nominees' independence, noting their close 
ties to the government, military or established entertainment 
industry.  To date, the nominees have not been formally 
appointed and, thus, the NBC has yet to be officially formed. 
 
11. (SBU) At the same time, the draft 
constitutionally-mandated Radio and Television Broadcasting 
Bill continues to be mired in Parliament.  An article 
stipulating that any technician, announcer or host must 
receive a license of operation from the RTG is one of the 
principle roadblocks.  Critics claim that the article is a 
draconian measure designed to provide a governmental 
screening process for media professionals. 
 
TESTING, TESTING, 1, 2, 3 
------------------------- 
 
12. (SBU) As the campaign to oust PM Thaksin continues to 
gain momentum, the Thai broadcast media has become 
increasingly bold in its coverage of the anti-government 
movement (see REF C).  With the exception of Channel 11 
(which is run out of the PM's office) all TV stations have 
made unprecedented efforts to cover anti-Thaksin activities. 
Media observers attribute this shift partly to a drive to 
increase ratings, and partly to the fact that the 
anti-Thaksin protests have simply gotten too big for the 
broadcast media to ignore. 
 
THE TELEVISION MAY NOT BE REVOLUTIONIZED 
---------------------------------------- 
 
13. (SBU) COMMENT.  Two months ago, we would not have 
anticipated the remarkable shift that has occurred in 
televised news coverage.  Despite the government's complete 
control of the broadcast media's licenses, journalists and 
talk show hosts continue to press the boundary -- offering 
coverage that recently would have been unthinkable.  To date, 
the TV stations have not moved to crack down.  In contrast, 
the only talk show hosts to be fired recently were two 
virulently pro-government commentators who were canned for 
making disparaging remarks about much revered Privy Council 
President Gen. Prem Tinsulanonda. 
 
15. (SBU) Nevertheless, it is far too early to tell whether 
this move away from self-censorship will endure.  So far, the 
media has been testing the waters on a single issue, the 
anti-Thaksin movement and the political crisis that it has 
generated. Admittedly, this is a huge story but it will 
eventually come to an end.  And when it does, whatever 
government replaces the current caretaker administration will 
still own the airwaves. 
BOYCE