Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Media Ban Still In Force

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

  • Armenian Media Ban Still In Force

    ARMENIAN MEDIA BAN STILL IN FORCE

    Radio Liberty
    March 14 2008
    Czech Republic

    Armenia's leading newspapers critical of the government were unable to
    resume publication on Friday despite a softening of the controversial
    government ban on independent news reporting announced by President
    Robert Kocharian.

    The Armenian authorities also failed to unblock access to the websites
    of RFE/RL's Armenian service and local online news services.

    Under the 20-day state of emergency declared by Kocharian on March 1,
    the Armenian media could only cite the government and law-enforcement
    bodies when covering national politics. More than a dozen independent
    and opposition publications suspended or were forced to suspend their
    operations as a result. In a decree signed on Thursday, Kocharian said
    they can resume their work so long as they do not publish "obviously
    false or destabilizing information."

    The editors of seven newspapers affected by the severe restrictions
    said censors from the National Security Service (NSS), the Armenian
    successor to the Soviet KGB, ordered the printers not to publish
    their Friday editions after examining their content. Only one of the
    papers, "Aravot," was said to have been given an explanation of the
    publication ban.

    "There was a KGB censor at the Tigran Mets printing company who locked
    himself in a room and made phone calls to his superiors," the "Aravot"
    editor, Aram Abrahamian, told RFE/RL. "He then told my deputy that
    [a newspaper article about opposition leader] Levon Ter-Petrosian's
    news conference contains obviously false information and that the
    newspaper can therefore not be printed."

    "I suppose the authorities did not want to see balanced information
    containing their views along with those of the opposition," said
    Abrahamian. "They want to make sure that only their opinion, their
    version of events is made public."

    "Nothing has changed. NSS employees continue to sit at printing
    shops and check the newspaper content," agreed Hayk Gevorgian, acting
    editor of "Haykakan Zhamanak," Armenia's best-selling daily staunchly
    supportive of Ter-Petrosian.

    Local online publications not controlled by the government are
    similarly unable to resume their work. Haykazn Ghahriyan, editor
    of Lragir.am, said Internet service providers told him that the NSS
    has not yet allowed them to revise the list of news websites blocked
    following the imposition of emergency rule.

    The chief executive of Armenia's largest Internet firm, Arminco,
    confirmed this. "I am looking for [NSS] officials with whom I can
    discuss the problem," Andranik Aleksanian told RFE/RL. "Maybe they
    just forgot to drop the restrictions."

    An NSS spokesman refused to comment on the situation, referring
    all inquiries to Kocharian's press service. Victor Soghomonian, the
    presidential press secretary, confirmed that the former KGB is tasked
    with enforcing the media restrictions. He suggested that the newspapers
    in questions were prevented from publishing because they violated
    conditions spelled out in the presidential decree. It was signed by
    Kocharian amid mounting international pressure on Armenian government
    to lift the state of emergency and the resulting restrictions.

    In a joint statement, the seven newspapers and three online
    publications brushed aside Kocharian's decree as a "wretched attempt
    to mislead the international community and the Armenian public."

    "With such provincial tricks, it is impossible to create a semblance of
    democracy and thereby counter authoritative international structures'
    legitimate demands to ensure freedom of speech and end illegal
    restrictions and bans," they said. "We regard the actions of the
    Armenian authorities, ostensibly aimed at restoring internal stability,
    as an attempt to maintain dictatorship."

    In a Thursday interview with RFE/RL, Justice Minister Gevorg Danielian
    admitted that the notion of "obviously false information" can be
    open to "differing interpretations." Still, he came up with his own
    explanation of the term not defined by Armenian law. "It is when you
    have clear-cut official information from several sources, know what
    a particular fact is, but then get different information which is
    not only unconfirmed but does not correspond to the existing facts
    in any way," he said.
Working...
X