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Georgia: Taming Of A Revolutionary Station

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  • Georgia: Taming Of A Revolutionary Station

    GEORGIA: TAMING OF A REVOLUTIONARY STATION

    A1+
    [03:45 pm] 09 December, 2006

    Rustavi-2 television loses its fearless reputation.

    The television station that was at the forefront of Georgia's Rose
    Revolution has lost audiences and its reputation for political
    investigation, amidst accusations of pressure from the new authorities.

    During the peaceful demonstrations against the government of former
    president Eduard Shevardnadze of November 2003, the programmes of
    Rustavi-2 were broadcast to crowds in the centre of Tbilisi on a huge
    screen. As the revolution gathered momentum, Rustavi-2 worked round
    the clock, urging people to join the rallies.

    However, just a few months after the Shevardnadze administration fell
    and Mikheil Saakashvili was elected president of Georgia, the media
    climate began to change. Two television channels - Iberia and Ninth
    Channel - were taken off the air, and the popular political talk
    shows broadcast by Rustavi-2 and other companies began disappearing.

    The official rationale for the closure of the two channels was
    their own financial problems, while the ending of the talk shows was
    explained as an internal management decision. However, the opposition
    started accusing the new government of putting pressure on the media
    and violating freedom of speech.

    Rustavi-2, which had helped bring the new government to power, began
    experiencing problems too. First the company was declared bankrupt
    and the majority of its shares sold to a little-known businessmen
    Kibar Khalvashi, who was a close associate of then minister of defence
    Irakly Okruashvili. Two weeks ago, the day after Okruashvili resigned
    as defence minister, Khalvashi again sold his controlling stake in
    the company.

    For viewers, the most important change has been in the content of
    Rustavi-2's news programmes. The news programme Courier has lost the
    reputation for boldness, which made it so popular.

    "Rustavi-2 broadcasts only the latest news from the interior ministry
    or the president's briefings, there's nothing interesting to watch,"
    Marina, 49, told IWPR.

    Ia Antadze, a commentator with Radio Liberty, said the changes at
    Rustavi-2 were directly linked to the balance of political forces
    in the Georgian government, with two camps linked respectively to
    Okruashvili and Interior Minister Vano Merabishvili.

    She said Merabishvili had control over the Alania and Mze television
    companies and influence over public television, while Rustavi-2 and
    Imedi were associated with Okruashvili.

    After the Rose Revolution, Rustavi-2 broadly continued to support the
    new government. David Kikalishvili, presenter of the news programme
    Courier P.S., explained, "After the revolution, the journalists
    regarded themselves as revolutionaries, and, proceeding from interests
    of the revolution, they agreed with the owner's position that the
    political temperature should be lowered."

    The staff protested for the first time three months ago when the
    authorities demanded the resignation of general director Nika
    Tabatadze. The news section held a strike that lasted for several
    hours. A crisis meeting was called, which staff say was attended by
    Okruashvili and Gigi Ugulava, mayor of Tbilisi - although no one has
    confirmed this in public.

    The news team all then quit the company, but without making any
    comment.

    "They said nothing, because they had nothing to say," said Paata
    Veshapidze, editor of 24 Hours newspaper, pointing out that they had
    put up with the major changes at the station unquestioningly and it
    was hard for them suddenly to take a determined stand.

    However, one leading journalist, Eka Khoperia, announced live on
    television that she was quitting because of "unacceptable demands from
    certain representatives of the authorities", whom she did not name.

    Following the mass resignations, Koba Davarashvili, a close friend of
    Economics Minister Giorgy Arveladze, was appointed general director of
    the company, and a former head of the press service of the governing
    party, the National Movement, was put in charge of the news section.

    But ratings have dropped dramatically. The Courier news programme
    used to have an audience share of 50-60 per cent, but now only gets
    between six and 11 per cent of the audience.

    "The authorities are well aware of the power the television has,"
    said Paata Veshapidze. "They do not want to have such a powerful bomb
    that may explode at any moment."

    The latest audience figures show that Rustavi-2 now lags behind Imedi,
    a television company owned by businessman Badri Patarkatsishvili,
    who is an associate of former Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky.

    In August, Imedi signed a partnership agreement with Rupert Murdoch's
    media giant News Corporation.

    Before the local elections in October, Imedi's news programmes took
    a critical line with the government and government figures boycotted
    the channel's political talk show Reaction for several months.

    In its turn, the opposition has shunned Rustavi-2, saying the channel
    has turned into a "branch of the government".

    Experts say that the media is less independent and critical of the
    government than it used to be and that is harder to obtain information
    from official sources.

    But, said television critic Ninia Kakabadze, "there are not enough
    factual arguments to say that the authorities are directly putting
    pressure on the media.

    "To any question why this or that journalist has been sacked or why
    this or that programme has been shut down the authorities give one
    simple answer - we have nothing to do with this, this is what the
    management has decided. That is why the main question is, who the
    management is, how they take decisions and who influences them."

    "Independent reporting is hampered by journalists' self-censorship,"
    said Tamara Shamil, a media expert with the Caucasian Institute of
    Peace, Democracy and Development in Tbilisi. "Most of them are waiting
    to see how their new masters will react."

    By Eka Kvesitadze in Tbilisi for Institute for War and Peace
    Reporting's Caucasus Reporting Service
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