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Kocharian Softens Curbs On Press Freedom

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  • Kocharian Softens Curbs On Press Freedom

    KOCHARIAN SOFTENS CURBS ON PRESS FREEDOM

    Radio Liberty
    March 13 2008
    Czech Rep.

    President Robert Kocharian on Thursday softened severe restrictions
    on media freedom stemming from the state of emergency in Yerevan which
    he imposed in the wake of last month's disputed presidential election.

    Media outlets not controlled by his government were not sure, however,
    that they can resume uncensored news reporting on Friday.

    Under the 20-day state of emergency declared by Kocharian on March
    1, Armenian media could only cite the government and law-enforcement
    bodies when covering national politics. More than a dozen independent
    and opposition newspapers and online news services suspended or were
    forced to suspend their operations as a result.

    Kocharian's office said they can now resume their work provided that
    they do not publish "obviously false or destabilizing information"
    about domestic political affairs. It said they will also not be
    allowed to call for or disseminate calls for Armenians to participate
    in unsanctioned demonstrations.

    The Yerevan Press Club, an independent media watchdog, criticized these
    conditions, saying that they may serve as a smokescreen for government
    censorship. "They may well be used for muzzling the independent and
    opposition press," Mesrop Harutiunian, an YPC expert, told RFE/RL. He
    said any newspaper report that containing views differing from the
    official version of the March 1 unrest in Yerevan may be construed
    by the authorities are "obviously false information."

    Aram Abrahamian, editor of the independent daily "Aravot," shared
    Harutiunian's concerns. "The question is what the authorities mean by
    destabilizing reports," he said. "If they mean the opposition's views,
    then they are wrong."

    "We will try to publish tomorrow," Abrahamian told RFE/RL. But he
    said the paper will again suspend publication "if we are told to
    remove a particular word or even a letter."

    Gegham Nazarian, editor of the opposition newspaper "Hayk," was also
    skeptical about the easing of the media ban. "We will try to publish
    tomorrow, even though we suspect that censors at the printing house
    won't allow that for some reason," he said.

    But Satik Seyranian, editor of another, more neutral publication,
    "168 Zham," disagreed. "I think the decree is acceptable," she told
    RFE/RL. "We must take into account the fact that the situation in
    the country is tense. I think the media should refrain from carrying
    inflammatory reports."

    It was also unclear whether Kocharian's decree means the websites
    of local electronic publications will be automatically unblocked by
    the authorities on Friday. Nor was it immediately known if local
    radio stations will be able to resume the retransmission of daily
    Armenian-language news programs of RFE/RL.
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