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Committee To Protect Journalists Publishes Its Report On Armenia

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  • Committee To Protect Journalists Publishes Its Report On Armenia

    COMMITTEE TO PROTECT JOURNALISTS PUBLISHES ITS REPORT ON ARMENIA

    ArmInfo
    2010-02-17 16:58:00

    ArmInfo. The international non-governmental organization Committee
    to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has published a report "Attacks on the
    Press 2009: Armenia" for 2009.

    The authors of the research qualify the top developments in Armenia as
    "Broadcast media controlled by government or its allies" and "Numerous
    assaults reported, but police do little".

    The report stresses that "the nation remained polarized by the
    fraud-marred 2008 presidential election won by Serzh Sargsyan, with
    large public protests and violent government reprisals continuing
    well into 2009. The global economic crisis caused layoffs in the
    mining industry and a decline in remittances from Russia, heightening
    public frustrations. The government sought to suppress critical debate
    over these issues, and journalists faced intolerance, hostility,
    and violence". According to the CPJ data, the government maintained
    control over most broadcast media, the primary news source in a
    poverty-afflicted country with poor newspaper distribution and low
    Internet penetration. Most private radio and television stations were
    owned by politicians and businessmen with close ties to the government,
    leading to significant self-censorship by journalists and limited
    critical news reporting on the airwaves, CPJ research showed.

    "One independent news outlet remained off the air. In February, a
    Yerevan appellate court dismissed lawsuits filed by the media outlet
    A1+ that sought reconsideration of its broadcast license applications.

    The station, pulled from the airwaves in 2002 in reprisal for its
    critical news reports, has seen a dozen license applications rejected
    by the government's broadcast regulator. (A1+ has continued operating
    as an independent online news agency.) The Strasbourg-based European
    Court of Human Rights ruled in 2008 that the regulator violated
    the European Convention on Human Rights by repeatedly rejecting the
    applications without explanation",- says the report. The Committee to
    Protect Journalists reports that violent attacks against journalists
    continued amid a climate of impunity.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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