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Statement on Package of Draft Amendments to Broadcast Legislation

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  • Statement on Package of Draft Amendments to Broadcast Legislation

    Statement on the Package of Draft Amendments to Broadcast Legislation
    http://hetq.am/en/society/statment

    2009/04/10 | 09:24 ]
    society

    The agenda of the RA National Assembly includes the second hearing of
    the package of draft amendments to the RA Laws `On Television and
    Radio', `Regulations of the National Commission on Television and
    Radio', `Regulations of the RA National Assembly', `On State
    Duty'. Despite the few improvements against the previous version of
    the package strongly criticized by our organizations in the statement
    of February 3, 2009, the document, as we see it, remains far from the
    demands of the time.

    Any legislative initiative on television and radio must today be
    assessed from the perspective of solving the four cornerstone problems
    of the Armenian broadcast sphere:

    - ensuring the independence of the National Commission on Television
    and Radio - the body that regulates the activities of TV and radio
    companies;

    - real reformation of the Public TV and Radio Company, inclusion of
    - PTRC in the field of legal regulation, creation of mechanisms of its
    - responsibility and accountability to the society; formation of new
    - legal conditions of impartial and transparent broadcast licensing
    - competitions; revocation of the ban on allocation of frequencies.

    The legislative changes that do not entail basic solutions to the
    problems above can be only seen as cosmetic. In this regard the
    improvement of certain provisions of the draft law package on
    broadcasting, proposed for the second hearing by the RA National
    Assembly, are nothing but a reform imitation and do not in any way
    contribute to overcoming the total control of the authorities over the
    TV and radio air in Armenia.

    As a main argument to support the package its authors refer to the
    positive assessment of the Council of Europe expert. Meanwhile, the CE
    assessment, while phrased in a very polite and cautious manner,
    contains criticism of a number of important clauses of the drafts. In
    particular, this document clearly states the absence of due guarantees
    to the independence of the National Commission on Television and Radio
    and the Council of Public TV and Radio Company, as well as about the
    incompliance of the PTRC structure to the internationally accepted
    standards of good governance.

    Even if one shares the satisfaction of the CE expert with most of the
    remaining provisions of the package, the two mentioned shortcomings,
    referring to the cornerstone issues of the broadcasting legislation,
    render the voting of the RA NA deputies for the package
    questionable. What is the value of amendments to the RA Law `On
    Television and Radio', if they do not call for a basic review of the
    mechanisms permanently criticized over the past 12 years, ever since
    the debate of the broadcast legislation started?

    It is quite surprising that the Council of Europe expert, assessing
    the package of the draft law on regulating the broadcasting,
    overlooked the recommendations of the Resolutions of the Parliamentary
    Assembly of the Council of Europe 1532 (2007), 1609 (2008), 1620
    (2008) and 1643 (2009). Addressing the issues of Armenia's compliance
    with its commitments to the Council of Europe and functioning of
    democratic institutions in the country, these Resolutions, proceeding
    from the political situation in the country, define the agenda of
    reforms, also with regard to media. The recommendations raise the
    issues of independence of the regulatory body, the transparency of
    broadcast licensing competitions, and the possibility of `A1+' TV
    company taking part in them, the ban on frequency
    allocation. Considering the draft package without taking into account
    the four most recent PACE recommendations on Armenia, the Council of
    Europe expert, on the one hand, actually overlooked some questionable
    provisions of the legislation in force (first of all, the ban on
    frequency allocation), and on the other - assessed a whole number of
    legislative innovations without taking into account the problematic
    practices of late (transparency and impartiality of broadcast
    licensing competitions).

    The expert welcomes the expansion of Article 50 of the RA Law `On
    Television and Radio' that call for the provision of `full reasons' to
    the applicants that were refused a license. A reference is made here
    to the judgment of the European Court of Human Rights of June 17, 2008
    on the case of `A1+' TV company founder, `Meltex' LLC. Yet, in
    essence, the new draft law proposes nothing new with regard to
    justification of license refusal, the mechanisms of defining criteria
    that NCTR members should be guided with during the assessment of the
    applications are still not prescribed.

    One could have quoted a number of other examples of the insufficiently
    thorough analysis of the draft law package by CE expert. Yet the
    problem lies not with the particularities, but with the technique that
    the media legislation is being shaped with in Armenia. Despite the
    fact that a working group of local experts is set up adjacently to the
    specialized standing committee of the National Assembly, the recent
    drafts have not been discussed with this working group. The
    international experts meet and discuss drafts only with their authors
    or MPs interested in the draft promotion. Objections, comments,
    clarifications as to the problems of practical applications of certain
    clauses that the representatives of Armenian media community could
    share, public debate - all this is of no interest to any one for a
    long time already. Such closed process of legislation formation cannot
    yield other results than the ones we have today.

    Meanwhile, when the authorities are interested to promote certain
    initiative, even if extremely unprofessional in its development, it is
    immediately in the limelight of attention, debate is raised about it
    on all TV channels. A vivid example of this is the draft law on
    introducing new provisions to the Civil Code, stipulating moral damage
    compensation, that has made so much noise lately. The vehement
    endorsement of this initiative can be hardly regarded as anything
    other than an attempt to divert the public attention from real
    problems in media, obstruction of efforts of journalistic
    organizations in legislation and media self-regulation.

    Unfortunately, such red herrings have been used more than once and run
    contrary to the policy of strengthening civil society as declared by
    the RA authorities.

    Proceeding from this, we call on the RA National Assembly:

    1. To revoke from circulation the package of draft laws on
    broadcasting and to come back to it after thorough review and
    improvement in accordance with the international commitments of
    Armenia and the suggestions of the working group at the RA National
    Assembly Standing Committee on Science, Education, Culture, Youth
    and Sport Issues. Otherwise we see no point in further
    participation in the working group and shall call back our
    representatives from it;

    2. To immediately include a draft law on abolishing the ban on holding
    broadcast licensing competitions in the agenda of the National
    Assembly. To refuse from the idea of digitalization at the expense
    of free competition and media plurality. To hold open debate of the
    TV and radio broadcast digitalization program;

    3. To delay the initiatives related to new forms of journalistic
    liability for defamation until the completion of processes aimed at
    improving the broadcast legislation, guaranteeing true public
    service broadcasting, pluralistic private TV and radio, media
    accountability system formation. The attempts of prioritizing the
    issue of legal liability of journalists damaging the development of
    civilized media market will be viewed by us to be directed at the
    restriction of free expression in Armenia.

    April 9, 2009
    Yerevan Press Club,
    `Internews' Media Support NGO,
    Media Diversity Institute-Armenia,
    Committee to Protect Freedom of Expression,
    `Asparez' Journalist's Club,
    Vanadzor Press Club
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