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  • Popular newspaper editor takes over MP-owned television company

    Heir to Air: Popular newspaper editor takes over MP-owned television company
    30 April 2004


    By Zhanna Alexanyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter
    The editor of a leading oppositional newspaper has taken over leadership of
    a Yerevan television company that has tangential government affiliation.
    The new director.

    Aram Abrahamyan, editor of Aravot (Morning), Armenia's leading daily, has
    been named director of the former Kentron (Center) television company, an
    enterprise recently purchased by pro-government National Assembly member and
    businessman Murad Guloyan. The newly-named company will air May 10.

    The TV company was previously owned (for one year) by another MP, Gurgen
    Arsenyan. Recent coverage by the channel of oppositional party
    demonstrations was not favorable for the government, leading to speculation
    that Arsenyan was later pressured by authorities to sell the company.

    The appointment has raised questions of whether the oppositional journalist
    and the MP-owned television company will have matching ambitions for how the
    station should position itself in Armenia's media, broadly divided according
    to political persuasion.

    Media observers are further intrigued that Abrahamyan will be inheriting a
    channel that, in its inception two years ago, helped kick A1+ off the
    airwaves, stirring a controversy alleging government censorship which
    continues these two years later.

    (In April 2002, A1+, the republic's leading oppositional channel, lost its
    license in a disputed bidding war in which a presidential-appointed
    commission gave the license to Sharm, primarily an entertainment and
    advertising company that did not even have a reporting staff at the time.
    Guloyan bought the company last week .)

    Abrahamyan was in fact a co-founder, with Mesrop Movsisyan, of A1+ in 1991
    and until the channel lost its license, was host of its most popular talk
    show, "Post Script".

    Abrahamyan says he puts his journalistic reputation behind his new role and
    that Aravot television will in fact join efforts to see A1+ resume
    broadcast. But he says any speculation that Aravot will become the new A1+
    are "absurd".

    "The Aravot TV, which I will be heading will become a rostrum from where we
    will always speak about the opening of A1+," Abrahamyan says. "I will be
    participating in all kinds of events (marches, demonstrations) which will be
    organized in support of A1+."

    Abrahamyan goes so far, in fact, to say that should the National TV and
    Radio Commission hold a contest for the 37 th frequency (currently held by
    Aravot, but previously belonging to A1+), "we will not take part in it and
    will do everything possible to help A1+ win the contest".

    The new director dismisses notions that either his newspaper or his
    television company should be labeled.

    "Political figures can be oppositional or pro-governmental but these
    categories must not touch us," he says.

    Guloyan, who is in his first term as MP, was elected on the ticket of the
    Republican party (though he, himself, is not a member). Not a well-known
    figure in Armenia, he is the owner of Milta, a food-production company. He
    comes from the same village as Armenian strongman Gagik "Dodi Gago"
    Tsarukyan. Some interested parties have speculated that the powerful
    millionaire is behind the purchase of the television company, which is
    believed to have sold for $500,000.

    Recent news programming (prior to Guloyan's purchase) by Kentron was praised
    by Abrahamyan, especially for its coverage of the violent April 13 clash
    between State police and oppositional protestors.

    Kentron, "was the most independent media among all others," Abrahamyan says.

    But others are claiming that those very reports riled the government and
    that Arsenyan was "forced" by high-level government officials to sell his
    company because of his company's broadcast of the clashes between police and
    demonstrators.

    It is an opinion shared by A1+ director Mesrop Movsesyan.

    Movsesyan says that, when A1+ was denied its license, President Robert
    Kocharyan promised to create another company like it. Kentron, Movsisyan
    says, was to have been that channel.

    "The president wanted to do that via Gurgen Arsenyan," Movsisyan says, "but
    when Arsenyan stumbled, he was forced to sell Kentron."

    Unofficial talk in Yerevan is that Kocharyan in fact called a meeting with
    Arsenyan following the broadcasts of the April 13 events.

    Ashot Kocharyan, spokesman for the President told ArmeniaNow there is no
    record of a meeting between the President and Arsenayn. The spokesman had no
    comment on rumors to that effect.

    ArmeniaNow attempted to get Arsenyan's version of the claims. He said he is
    reserving comment on the matter until after the new company begins its
    broadcast. Asked whether Arsenyan had been pressured into selling Kentron,
    an assistant for Arsenyan said the MP "does not wish to speak about it now".

    Movsesyan, meanwhile, criticizes his former colleague Abrahamyan for taking
    the directorship of a company that effectively put A1+ off the air.

    "By making that decision, he (Abrahamyan) demonstrated that he has changed
    his team," Movsisyan said. "Of course, this country always needed an
    imitator like Aram in the struggle of freedom of speech, and such person was
    found. Aram is a good journalist and he can create an imitation of an
    independent channel. I'm only surprised that he agreed to that."

    Abrahamyan, though, refutes accusations that he has switched his political
    allegiance by assuming a position seen as connected to the government.

    The journalist says he is confident the new owner will not use the
    television company as a rostrum for advancing his politics.

    "It's just a business for him to make investments for gaining profits in the
    future," Abrahamyan says. "I'm sure this is the only way for creating
    independent media. Media, but not the means for propaganda."

    Abrahamyan, a musicologist by profession, graduated Yerevan State
    Conservatory and defended his Ph.D. thesis. He served as press secretary for
    the first president after independence, Levon Ter Pertrosyan. He became
    editor of Aravot newspaper in 1994.

    Before hosting the A1+ talk show, Abrahamyan had been host of various music
    programs.

    "I always dreamt of working in TV," he says. "When I first came to TV in
    1983 I realized it was my world and I had always been dreaming of working
    there."

    His aim at Aravot TV, he says, is to direct a company that serves the public
    need for reliable information.

    "The strategic goal of the TV company is to become an informational and
    public channel like Freedom radio station," says Abrahamyan.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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