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Journalists Taking Part In CCJN Mission To Armenia

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  • Journalists Taking Part In CCJN Mission To Armenia

    JOURNALISTS TAKING PART IN CCJN MISSION TO ARMENIA
    By IWPR Caucasus staff

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting
    March 19 2008
    UK

    IWPR sent a group of 11 journalists representing different countries
    in the Caucasus to report on the presidential elections in Armenia
    in February.

    The party comprised journalists from the North Caucasus, Georgia,
    Abkhazia and was led by IWPR Armenia country director Seda Muradyan,
    IWPR Caucasus programme director Margarita Akhvlediani and IWPR
    editor in Georgia Sopho Bukia. During the course of the mission,
    February 15-21, the participants met local experts and politicians,
    journalists and presidential candidates.

    On the first day, the journalists traveled to the city Abovyan,
    to witness the rally of presidential candidate, Prime Minister Serzh
    Sarkisian. On the same day, they covered the rally of former president
    Levon Ter-Petrosian, with one of the group, Irakli Managadze, posting
    stories about the event on Interpressnews site and reporting live
    for Radio Mwvane Talga.

    Participants also separately met two other candidates Vazgen Manukyan,
    chairman of the National Democratic Union, and Vahan Hovhannissian,
    deputy parliamentary chairman of the Dashnaktsutyun Party, in their
    offices.

    On February 17, the journalists spoke to Shavarsh Kocharyan, leader
    of the National Democratic Party, and Hrant Khachatryan, head of the
    Constitutional Right Union. Both politicians support Manukyan.

    Two round tables were organised on February 18, involving the
    journalists and political analysts Alexander Iskandaryan and David
    Petrosian. In addition, Yerkir Media TV prepared a special report
    about IWPR's CCJN mission, which was broadcast several times.

    On February 18, participants visited Internews Armenia and met Gegham
    Vardanyan, the editor-in-chief, and young journalists and student
    journalists working there.

    As a result of that meeting Akhra Smir from Abkhazia, traveled to
    the city of Echmiadzin with a group of Internews journalists to cover
    the elections.

    On election day, February 19, participants were divided into groups,
    working in the capital and rural areas. They interviewed the main
    presidential candidates and senior officials after they had voted.

    The journalists also traveled to Abovyan, where they spoke to electoral
    commission members, and representatives of candidates who had been
    subjected to violence while carrying out their work.

    The participants took part in the press conferences of the different
    political parties during and after the election. They also attended the
    press briefings of the central electoral committee and international
    observers.

    As a result of the mission, the journalists wrote a joint story, Voting
    Incidents Mar Armenian Election, for IWPR's CRS, published on February
    20, 2008. The participants also wrote stories for their own newspapers.

    Dimitri Avaliani, from the Georgian newspaper 24 Hours, said he
    gained much from the mission, "It is simply excellent to work in
    a group with colleagues. I learnt a lot of things about Abkhazia
    and the North Caucasus as well; we spent a lot of time discussing
    election-related issues and making comparisons."

    Anaid Gogoryan from the newspaper Chegemsskaya Pravda in Abkhazia
    says that her reporting from Armenia was praised back home.

    "My readers contacted me after they read my stories and said that
    they watched Russian television and the coverage of elections was
    very one-sided. They said that my stories gave them a more realistic
    picture of how the elections went," said Gogoryan.

    "I really appreciate the possibility to be at the centre of events.

    Too bad we could not stay for the events that took place afterwards -
    however, witnessing the elections was a unique opportunity."

    Diana Alieva, from the newspaper Svobodnaya Respublika in Dagestan,
    says she appreciated meeting journalists from other countries too,
    since reporters from regional press in Russia very seldom have the
    chance to travel outside of Russia.

    "I think I was the only journalist representing Russian regional
    press in Armenia during the elections," she said. "In our hotel we had
    people from many different countries. For me it was a real eye-opener
    to talk to them and hear how western media work during elections."

    Alieva said she also got good feedback after her stories were
    published, "We have a substantial Armenian minority in Dagestan
    and people appreciated reading first-hand reporting of the Armenian
    elections in their own paper."
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