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Kocharian Defends Continuing Media Blackout

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  • Kocharian Defends Continuing Media Blackout

    KOCHARIAN DEFENDS CONTINUING MEDIA BLACKOUT

    Radio Liberty
    March 17 2008
    Czech Republic

    President Robert Kocharian defended through a spokesman on Monday
    his administration's continuing refusal to allow Armenia's leading
    independent and pro-opposition newspapers and online publications to
    resume news reporting.

    All of those media outlets suspended or were forced to suspend their
    work as a result of a 20-day state of emergency imposed by Kocharian
    during the March 1 clashes in Yerevan between riot police and thousands
    of opposition supporters. 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    said they can resume their work so long as they do not publish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."

    Officers of the National Security Service (NSS) prevented the seven
    national newspapers critical of the government from publishing the
    next day after examining their content. The NSS also maintained
    the blockage of the websites of at least three Armenian online news
    services as well as RFE/RL's Armenian service. Still, the authorities
    did allow local radio stations to resume the retransmission of RFE/RL's
    Armenian-language news programs.

    Victor Soghomonian, Kocharian's press secretary, said all of the papers
    in question sought to report "obviously false information" in their
    Friday editions sent to the printers. Speaking at a news conference,
    Soghomonian cited specific newspaper reports that accused the Armenian
    authorities of underreporting the number of people killed on March 1,
    described the arrested opposition activists as political prisoners and
    said that many of them were mistreated in custody. He also faulted
    the opposition daily "Haykakan Zhamanak" for trying to publish an
    interview with Nikol Pashinian, its fugitive editor who played a major
    part in the rallies organized by opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian.

    Soghomonian further made clear that the authorities will continue
    to block Internet users' access to local online publications for
    the duration of emergency rule. He argued that government monitoring
    and censorship of their reports is much more difficult than that of
    print media.

    In a joint statement issued on Friday, the publications affected by
    the severe restrictions brushed aside Kocharian's Thursday decree
    as a "wretched attempt to mislead the international community and
    the Armenian public." A separate statement by the Yerevan Press Club
    and seven other civic groups condemned the censorship as "illegal"
    and demanded its complete abolition.

    Boris Navasardian, the YPC chairman, argued on Monday that the
    censorship was not formalized by any written presidential decree or
    government directive and that NSS officers are enforcing it solely on
    the basis of verbal orders from their superiors. He said that runs
    counter to an article of the Armenian Criminal Code that makes it
    a crime to obstruct journalists' work.. "If the prosecutor's office
    considers itself a guardian of law, it must open a criminal case in
    connection with that," he told RFE/RL.

    Navasardian also said Armenia's leading TV stations and other
    pro-government media are only fanning post-election tensions in the
    country with their "one-sided" coverage of the March 1 clashes and
    the ensued developments. "Everyone must realize that the society
    is not unanimous today," he said. "If there is no open debate, no
    open exchange of information, those differing interpretations of the
    situation will deepen. And that means political polarization will
    deepen too."
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