Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

New Studies Note Decline of Free Media in Former Soviet Union

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

  • New Studies Note Decline of Free Media in Former Soviet Union

    USINFO.STATE.GOV
    02 May 2006
    New Studies Note Decline of Free Media in Former Soviet Union
    Studies by press freedom groups mark World Press Freedom Day
    By Jeffrey Thomas
    Washington File Staff Writer

    Washington -- Free media in a number of countries that once belonged to
    the former Soviet Union continue to decline, according to new studies
    released by press freedom groups to mark World Press Freedom Day May 3.

    Turkmenistan President Saparmurat Niyazov personally approves the
    front-page content of the major dailies, and the Central Asian
    country's newscasters begin each broadcast with a pledge that their
    tongues will shrivel if their reports ever slander Turkmenistan,
    the flag or the president.

    Uzbekistan President Islam Karimov has re-established a Soviet-style
    dictatorship that relies on "an informal system of state censorship,"
    forcing foreign correspondents to leave the country and jailing Uzbek
    journalists, six of whom were in prison at the end of 2005. (See
    related article.)

    Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko's administration has
    stopped independent newspapers from being printed and distributed,
    jailed journalists for attempting to cover opposition rallies,
    and criminalized criticizing the president or "discrediting Belarus
    abroad."

    Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Belarus represent the worst of the
    worst in the former Soviet space, according to an analysis released
    May 2 by the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), which called
    state-sponsored censorship one of the most urgent threats facing
    journalists worldwide.

    In compiling its "10 most-censored" list, CPJ used such criteria
    as state control of all media; the existence of formal censorship
    regulations; the use by the state of violence, imprisonment and
    harassment against journalists; jamming of foreign news broadcasts;
    and restrictions on private Internet access.

    "People in these countries are virtually isolated from the rest of the
    world by authoritarian rulers who muzzle the media and keep a chokehold
    on information through restrictive laws, fear and intimidation,"
    said CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper.

    FREEDOM HOUSE STUDY A major study released April 27 by the independent
    nongovernmental organization Freedom House documents setbacks in
    press freedom in last year in a number of countries, including Russia,
    Uzbekistan and Belarus.

    The study, "Freedom of the Press 2006: A Global Survey of Media
    Independence," also shows a longer-term pattern of decline in press
    freedom in the former Soviet Union.

    The report noted improvements in press freedom in Ukraine and
    Kyrgyzstan, both of which are rated "partly free." The report rates
    Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia as "free."

    Freedom House bases its classification of each country on the degree
    to which the free flow of news and information is permitted.

    Turkmenistan once again was ranked among the five worst countries for
    press freedom - along with Burma, Cuba, Libya and North Korea. Press
    freedom conditions in Uzbekistan and Belarus put those two countries
    in the bottom ten. The study deemed an additional 62 countries "not
    free," including Armenia, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Azerbaijan,
    Kazakhstan and Tajikistan.

    Concerning Russia, the study cited obstacles created by Russian
    President Vladimir Putin's government to prevent reporting on
    sensitive topics, as well as numerous cases of journalists being
    assaulted because they sought to report on corruption or protests
    against the government.

    "Although the Russian constitution provides for freedom of speech
    and of the press, authorities were still able to use the judicial
    system to harass and prosecute journalists for independent reporting,"
    according to the Freedom House report.

    The report also says the Putin government exerts direct influence on
    media outlets and determines news content through state ownership or
    control of the country's three main national television networks --
    Channel One, RTR and NTV.

    But the Freedom House study is not without some good news, according to
    the group's Christopher Walker, director of studies, who described the
    report's highlights in an article for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.

    Ukraine since the Orange Revolution of 2004 has significantly improved
    its media climate, Walker said. Although the country "still confronts
    the challenges that accompany oligarchic ownership structures," he
    said, its media "have achieved a degree of pluralism and independence
    that would have been unthinkable in the pre-Orange Revolution era."

    "The significant yet incomplete progress in Ukraine should serve as
    a reminder that overcoming deeply entrenched Soviet-era habits and
    practices will be a trying, long-term effort for reform of the media,
    as well as for other key institutions that form the building blocks
    of democratic societies," according to Walker.

    The study by the Committee to Protect Journalists is available in
    English and Russian (PDF, 11 pages) on the group's Web site.

    The Freedom House study includes a global table, regional tables,
    and charts and graphs, as well as the survey methodology and detailed
    country narrative drafts (PDF, 190 pages).

    Christopher Walker's article, "Press Freedom in Former Soviet Union
    Under Assault," is available on the RFE/RL Web site.

    (The Washington File is a product of the Bureau of International
    Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site:
    http://usinfo.state.gov)

    http://usinfo.stat e.gov/xarchives/display.html?p=washfile-english&am p;y=2006&m=M
    ay&x=200605021656491CJsamohT0 .7066614&t=eur/eur-latest.html
Working...
X