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Armenian Journal: Youth activist empowers peers through journalism

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  • Armenian Journal: Youth activist empowers peers through journalism

    International Journalist's Network
    July 17 2006

    Armenian Journal: Youth activist empowers peers through journalism

    Region :None
    Country :Armenia
    Topic :Young Journalists, Print Journalism

    17/07/2006

    By Timothy Spence, Knight International Press Fellow

    As a child living in Soviet Armenia, Arthur Ghazaryan read the
    weekly newspaper for young communist Pioneers. Later, as a high
    school student in the newly independent country, Ghazaryan and his
    classmates started a newspaper - writing their copy by hand because
    there were no computers available.

    Today, the energetic 26-year-old youth leader is preparing to publish
    the second edition of a tabloid-size newspaper geared toward young
    people in the northeastern town of Dilijan. It is part of a larger
    project sponsored by the nongovernmental Academy for Educational
    Development, or AED, to create print- and Web-based information
    outlets for youth groups in Armenia's rural regions.

    Ghazaryan says AED's Youth and Community Action Program wants to
    encourage young people to become involved in decision-making and instil
    democratic values. "We want to ensure them that they are something
    in the community, not just zero. We want officials to respect them,"
    said Ghazaryan, the program representative in Dilijan.

    Young Dilijan, the monthly newspaper that Ghazaryan helped found in
    his hometown, is part of that process, he said in an interview in the
    Armenian capital of Yerevan. He is also working to fund a youth-run
    radio station that would be an outlet for entertainment as well as
    educational and discussion programs.

    But the process has not been easy. Newspapers in Armenia largely
    rely on political or individual sponsors for their revenue, with most
    advertisers in the small Caucasian nation of 3.2 million buying time
    on television rather than space in print media.

    In Dilijan, Ghazaryan asked the mayor's office to help fund the first
    six issues of Young Dilijan - but he said part of the arrangement is
    that the paper would be rigorously independent.

    "We're not going to criticize something if it's not correct. We're
    going to publish new ideas. This is not going to be just another
    political newspaper," Ghazaryan said.

    There is also a problem of staffing, something editors of youth and
    student newspapers anywhere can appreciate. Ghazaryan said he was
    prepared for such challenges before the first issue went to press in
    June. "Starting this, I realized how much hard work this was going
    to be," he said. "I was ready to hear, to accept, lots of critics."

    His goal is to build a newspaper staff - and eventually, a radio crew
    - that can work without his involvement. The newspaper now has three
    or four "core" contributors, all of whom are volunteers.

    "I myself am doing all this voluntarily. This is not my job, I'm just
    interested in it," Ghazaryan said. "I am the chief editor right now,
    I'm the designer of the newspaper, I'm collecting all articles and
    deciding how to design everything."

    "I want in one year to have a group of journalists, of young people,
    who will work independently, who will have their chief editor et
    cetera," he said.

    As a child, Ghazaryan said he read the Pioneer Call, a Communist Party
    newspaper that was popular for its news about youth achievements,
    events and puzzles. He wants to borrow at least some of those ideas,
    highlighting success stories of young Armenians who complain that the
    mainstream media, with their heavy emphasis on politics, overlook them.

    Young Dilijan will also tackle tougher issues. Ghazaryan says the
    September issue will focus on employment and changes in the nation's
    education policies, including a new requirement for 12-year education,
    up from the current 10. The change was designed to bring Armenia's
    education system up to European standards, but it has triggered
    controversy with parents and students who say the old system has
    worked well.

    "We have an aim or purpose to educate the young people to get informed
    about youth policy in Armenia ... to get informed about events in
    Dilijan, because not everybody knows about them, to inform them
    about active people who won competitions in Yerevan or international
    competitions, and of course to educate them through the newspaper,"
    Ghazaryan said.

    Youth groups around Armenia that are either starting newsletters or
    Web sites recently participated in a journalism immersion course.

    More than 60 students, youth leaders and teachers underwent the
    training provided by the Knight International Press Fellowship program,
    a partner of the International Center for Journalists (ICFJ).

    The regional youth centers are gradually being equipped with computers,
    scanners and Internet access.

    Ghazaryan was born in Dilijan, a bucolic town in the mountainous
    Tavush region of Armenia. Once a Soviet resort for composers and
    artists, Dilijan is like many regional towns and villages outside
    the sprawling capital - its economy is struggling and young people
    seek opportunities in Yerevan or abroad.

    Ghazaryan graduated from Dilijan's University of Management and
    Information Technology with a degree in business administration,
    and hopes to earn a master's in business administration some day.

    But for now, his focus is on using the Internet, Young Dilijan and
    his hoped-for community radio to keep the younger generation active
    and informed.

    The independent Yerevan Press Club lists more than 70 print
    publications serving Armenia. Most of them are small and few serve
    rural markets.

    Fifteen years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, press freedom
    remains tenuous in Armenia. According to the Committee to Protect
    Journalists, the government has restricted coverage of terrorism,
    continues to deny a broadcasting license to an independent TV network
    that was ordered off the air in 2002, and cites occasional attacks
    on journalists.

    Reporters Without Borders ranks Armenia 102 out of 167 nations in its
    most recent "press freedom index." Neighboring Georgia ranked 99 and
    Azerbaijan 141.

    Ghazaryan - who was always "eager to be a journalist" - says that
    while the media today "are not independent, for sure," the younger
    generation will change that.

    "Armenia is a small country and everybody knows each other. If you
    are the owner of any kind of mass media, and if you write something
    which is correct, which is very healthy criticism about an official,
    in a couple of days you will be punished for that," he said. "Not
    always, but enough.

    "Right now a new generation is getting educated abroad, and they are
    coming back to Armenia, and they are bringing a new way of thinking
    about journalism ... more European, more American, more democratic. I'm
    optimistic that everything will change."

    Timothy Spence is a Knight Fellow working with journalists
    in Armenia. This is his second tour with the program; he
    was previously in Ethiopia. The John S. and James L. Knight
    Foundation sponsors the fellowships, administered by the
    International Center for Journalists. For more information, visit
    http://www.knight-international.org/.
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