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Journalists Discuss Public-Service Broadcasting And Digitalization A

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  • Journalists Discuss Public-Service Broadcasting And Digitalization A

    JOURNALISTS DISCUSS PUBLIC-SERVICE BROADCASTING AND DIGITALISATION AT OSCE MEDIA CONFERENCE

    A1+
    [04:48 pm] 14 November, 2008

    The challenges and future of public-service broadcasting and how the
    digital switchover can support media freedom and media pluralism were
    among the topics discussed at the Fifth OSCE South Caucasus Media
    Conference that ended in Tbilisi today.

    The two-day event, organized by the Office of the OSCE Representative
    on Freedom of the Media with the help of the OSCE Mission to Georgia,
    brought together media professionals, NGOs, and government officials
    from Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, as well as international
    experts. Parliamentarians from all three countries also took part.

    "Free media remains a basic human right in need of constant
    protection," said Ambassador Terhi Hakala, the Head of the OSCE
    Mission. "The recent crisis in Georgia has shown that it is essential
    in keeping the public informed on issues of crucial importance."

    Miklos Haraszti, the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media,
    added: "Even voices critical of their country's public-service
    broadcasters have acknowledged that these channels are indispensable
    guarantees in further improving their democracies, and therefore have
    to be robustly protected from governmental or parliamentary intrusion.

    Haraszti urged the Governments of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia to
    grant their young public-service broadcasters sustainable financial
    independence. "Where such laws have already been passed, what remains
    to be done is to ensure governmental or opposition restraint from
    tampering with programming decisions and editorial freedom," he added.

    Participants at the conference learned about the recent decision
    of Georgia's public-service broadcaster to dedicate its second
    channel to equal presentation of all political and societal forces,
    and to debates among them, modeled after the C-Span channels in the
    United States. They also noted that depriving BBC, Radio Liberty,
    and Voice of America of frequencies in Azerbaijan would signal danger
    for pluralism. The representative of Azerbaijan's National Radio and
    TV Council expressed his hope that a solution would be found.

    Participants also discussed the changes affecting broadcasting in the
    digital age, and the challenges of the transition period. One of these
    challenges is the recent moratorium on issuing licenses in Armenia,
    which was justified by the transition to digital transmission. The
    moratorium prevented TV station A1+ from getting its license, a
    loss deemed by the European Court of Human Rights as a human rights
    violation.

    Participants demanded greater transparency of media ownership and
    expressed the need for quality and self-regulation in journalism.
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