Al Jazeera's Malaysian office raided over documentary

Al Jazeera's Malaysian office raided over documentary
Police seized computers as part of the investigation into an Al Jazeera documentary about migrants in Malaysia.
2 min read
A 2006 photo showing Al Jazeera's office in Kuala Lumpur [Getty]
Malaysian authorities raided Al Jazeera's Kuala Lumpur office on Tuesday and seized computers as part of an investigation into a documentary about migrants that angered the government, drawing condemnation from the broadcaster. 

Police launched the probe into the Qatar-based news network's programme last month, adding to concerns about worsening media freedom in Malaysia.

The documentary - "Locked Up in Malaysia's Lockdown" - looked at the detention of undocumented foreigners when strict coronavirus curbs were in place, as well as the plight of other migrants.

The broadcaster confirmed the raid in a statement and said two computers were seized.

"Conducting a raid on our office and seizing computers is a troubling escalation in the authorities' crackdown on media freedom," said Giles Trendle, managing director of Al Jazeera English.

"Al Jazeera calls upon the Malaysian authorities to cease this criminal investigation into our journalists."

Police and communications ministry officials took part in the raid, police official Mior Faridalathrash Wahid told Bernama news agency.

The government slammed the programme as misleading and inaccurate, and police are investigating the broadcaster for breaking laws against sedition, defamation and transmitting offensive content.

Seven Al Jazeera journalists, including five Australians, were called in for questioning last month while a Bangladeshi migrant worker interviewed in the programme has been arrested.

Police have insisted the investigation into the 25-minute documentary will be fair, and the journalists are being questioned as witnesses rather than suspects.

Authorities insist the arrests in May of undocumented migrants were necessary to protect the public, although rights groups raised concerns that placing them in detention centres could increase the risk of coronavirus infection.

Malaysia is home to large numbers of migrants from poorer countries - including Indonesia, Bangladesh and Myanmar - who work in industries ranging from manufacturing to agriculture.

Concerns about a worsening media climate have been growing since a scandal-plagued party seized power as part of a coalition earlier this year following the collapse of a reformist administration.

Leading independent news portal Malaysiakini has also been taken to court for alleged contempt over readers' comments on its site critical of the judiciary.

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