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How To Maintain Journalism Ethics When Oligarchs Nominated As Electi

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  • How To Maintain Journalism Ethics When Oligarchs Nominated As Electi

    HOW TO MAINTAIN JOURNALISM ETHICS WHEN OLIGARCHS NOMINATED AS ELECTION CANDIDATES? OPINION

    epress.am
    04.03.2012

    Carefully reviewing the lists of election candidates, journalists have
    to violate ethical norms because they have no alternative, said Hetq
    Investigative Journalists NGO president, hetq.am chief editor Edik
    Baghdasaryan in his speech at a seminar and training for journalists
    in Armenia titled "Reliable, Responsible and Balanced Coverage of
    the 2012 Parliamentary Elections" organized by the Europe in Law
    Association, the OSCE Yerevan office and the US Embassy in Armenia,
    taking place in Congress Hotel from Apr. 2-3.

    Speaking about journalism ethics during election period, Baghdasaryan
    said included on lists of candidates in the upcoming parliamentary
    election are those on whom journalists have uncovered various dirt
    over the years, people who have engaged in electoral fraud and against
    whom criminal cases are even launched.

    "And now they tell journalists, you have to maintain journalistic
    ethics. How can we observe journalistic ethics when you know everything
    about those people? Let me cite some examples: [ruling Republican
    Party of Armenia MP, tycoon] Samvel Aleksanyan [pictured] organizes
    a pre-election meeting near the Yerevan City [supermarket] in Malatya
    [a district in Yerevan]. How should the reporter begin her report? She
    has to say (right?) that [Aleksanyan] is a well-known oligarch; he has
    six Yerevan City [supermarkets] in the city and is preparing to build
    three more; he is the main importer of sugar - the importer of 99%
    [of the sugar market]. He sells counterfeit vodka in this Yerevan
    City here; he's been fined five times by the State Commission for the
    Protection of Economic Competition; he continues to sell counterfeit
    vodka; and most importantly, he is known in public by the name Lfik
    Samo. The journalist isn't expressing any position, she is simply
    listing that which is; the journalist is objective, is presenting
    the objective facts. I didn't even say the most important part:
    he's been involved in some criminal activity," Baghdasaryan said.

    As another example, the Hetq Investigative Journalists NGO president
    cited Rule of Law (Orinats Yerkir, or OEK) MP Heghine Bisharyan,
    stressing that journalists, when referring to her, cannot not say
    her closest friend's assessment of her - "a lioness".

    "Or speaking about [Republican Party of Armenia MP candidate Artashes]
    Geghamyan, shouldn't we say that a few years ago the president called
    him a dhole [wild dog]? This is just making facts public, but media
    experts can immediately say it's a breach of ethics. And they do,"
    he said.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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