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OSCE Media Watchdog Notes Improvements In Armenian Media Legislation

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  • OSCE Media Watchdog Notes Improvements In Armenian Media Legislation

    OSCE MEDIA WATCHDOG NOTES IMPROVEMENTS IN ARMENIAN MEDIA LEGISLATION, CALLS FOR MORE PLURALISM

    Organization for Security and Co-Operation in Europe (OSCE)
    http://www.osce.org/
    June 21 2006

    /noticias.info/ YEREVAN, 21 June 2006 - Miklos Haraszti, the OSCE
    Representative on Freedom of the Media, said today that Armenia has
    made significant progress in improving media legislation, but actual
    media pluralism remained limited to the print media.

    "I am pleased that since 2005 there have been very few atrocities
    reported against journalists. It is similarly welcome that criminal
    libel cases have not been initiated since several years," said
    Haraszti, who was on a three-day official visit to Armenia at the
    invitation of the Government.

    "However, the coverage of political life still remains one-sided,
    both in private and public-service broadcasting. This confines actual
    pluralism to the diverse, at times even partisan, but economically
    very weak print media."

    The aim of the visit, co-organized by the OSCE Office in Yerevan,
    was to assess the state of freedom of the media, giving special
    attention to the upcoming changes in the legal framework, required
    by amendments to the Constitution adopted in November 2005.

    The OSCE Representative expressed his appreciation for having been
    received by President Robert Kocharian. He also met the Chairman of
    the National Assembly Tigran Torosyan, and other government officials,
    as well as broadcast operatives, journalists and media NGOs.

    "We see good pieces of legislation, such as the Constitutional
    amendments on broadcasting, and the Freedom of Information law," added
    Mr. Haraszti. "However, implementation is behind the blueprints in
    some fields. For example, the broadcast law reform required by the
    Constitution is still missing, as are the implementation rules for
    the law on Freedom of Information."

    Haraszti suggested that pluralizing the composition of the
    broadcasting boards would lead to diversity in the licensing of private
    broadcasters, and to more objective news coverage in public television,
    saying that: "Media reform should be accelerated, especially in view
    of the upcoming elections."

    The Representative on the Freedom of the Media regularly conducts
    assessment visits in the OSCE region and presents his reports to the
    Organization's Permanent Council. The reports include an analysis of
    the media situation and offer practical recommendations for improving
    the freedom of the press.
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