Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Karabakh: First Independent Paper

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Karabakh: First Independent Paper

    newBrainframes.org
    KARABAKH: FIRST INDEPENDENT PAPER

    Ashot Beglarian (01-05-2004)The first non-government publication in the
    Armenian-controlled province aims to cover themes which previously went
    unreported.

    Setting up an independent newspaper for Nagorny Karabakh has long been a
    dream of Gegam Bagdasarian, head of the Stepanakert Press Club. Now
    it's happened, and Bagdasarian is editor-in-chief of a twice-monthly
    paper called Demo.

    The idea behind it was to create a newspaper that is not beholden to the
    authorities or any opposition movement, but is a voice for the public at
    large - hence the title Demo, as in "democracy". The paper's 16 pages
    are in Armenian and Russian.

    "Every citizen should have the chance to know what is actually happening in
    his motherland and not just from one source but from several," explained
    Bagdasarian. "We intend to become a really independent source."

    Founding an independent newspaper is a very delicate project in a society
    which emerged from a devastating conflict ten years ago. Until now there has
    only been one main newspaper, the government publication Azat Artsakh.

    Bagdasarian says he is well aware of the sensitivities. "We understand what
    a responsible mission we are undertaking, as there is virtually no precedent
    in the Armenian information space," he said. "Demo is trying to become a
    free publication in the classic sense, meaning it depends only on the
    reader. We are not forcing our views on anyone. When we have a free market,
    the reader himself can choose what reason and conscience dictate."

    Karabakh president Arkady Gukasian, himself a former journalist, told IWPR
    last month that he welcomed the project. "A free press is a sign of the
    formation of civil society," Gukasian said. "We are now facing the biggest
    challenge - helping democracy to take root here."

    But the new paper will undoubtedly create controversy. The first issue
    touched on sensitive issues such as the resignation of Karabakh deputy prime
    minister Yury Gazarian and a property dispute over a collective farm in the
    town of Stepanakert. A column by Boris Navadasardian expressed concern about
    Armenian reactions to the recent murder in Budapest of Gurgen Markarian, an
    Armenian army officer, by Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov.

    Demo is supported by the British-based non-government organisation
    Conciliation Resources, as part of a wider consortium which is beginning a
    series of projects in both Armenia and Azerbaijan to engage with the Nagorny
    Karabakh dispute, with funding from the British government's Conflict
    Prevention Pool.

    In this spirit, the paper has also set itself the goal of building bridges
    across the ceasefire line with Azerbaijan. It is covering events in the
    Caucasus as a whole, and is publishing a page of IWPR's Caucasus
    articles in each issue.

    "We will be publishing articles about events in Azerbaijan, Georgia and
    Armenia, trying to fill the information gap that has formed," said
    Bagdasarian. "I hope this will help us find common points of agreement."

    So far, readers have responded positively to Demo. "The articles published
    in the newspaper are not only interesting but relevant," said Armen
    Sarkisian, a civil servant. "The whole spectrum of socio-political life in
    Nagorny Karabakh is reflected there."

    Albert Voskanian, a well-known local activist who heads Stepanakert's
    Centre for Civic Initiatives, said, "It is a lively newspaper which touches
    on and investigates topics which are not only interesting but also painful,
    and which worry people. I have no doubt it has a future."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X