Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Beirut: Armenian-language reporting gains steam

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Beirut: Armenian-language reporting gains steam

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    Jan 5 2012



    Armenian-language reporting gains steam

    January 05, 2012 02:52 AM
    By Van Meguerditchian, The Daily Star



    BEIRUT: At 4:30 p.m. each day, many Lebanese Armenians switch their
    televisions to FutureNews or OTV to watch coverage of local, regional
    and international news in Armenian.

    While community members can choose from among dozens of
    Arabic-language television stations, many viewres told The Daily Star
    that they miss having a television channel dedicated to broadcasting
    Armenian-language programs.

    Paradise station, a local radio station that was based in Burj
    Hammoud, established the Armenian Television Network during the Civil
    War, but the station stopped broadcasting after its administration
    failed to obtain a proper license in the mid-1990s.

    While it's not a substitute, the nearly half-hour daily newscasts
    every afternoon provide viewers the opportunity to hear all the news,
    including local Lebanese affairs, in Armenian.

    Lorig Saboundjian, a reporter and anchor at OTV, told The Daily Star
    that the daily newscasts signalled that local media outlets were
    beginning to realizr the value and market for broadcasting news in
    Armenian.

    `After years of being off television screens ... people started to
    realize that, just like Arabic, Armenian is also an important language
    that needs to be used on TV,' Saboundjian said.

    According to Saboundjian, the Armenian news team at OTV needs to bring
    on more Armenian-language reporters because there are more events to
    be covered every day.

    `Not only should the team become bigger, I believe the daily 20-minute
    broadcast is regularly failing to cover all important issues,' she
    said, lamenting a lack of opportunities to study journalism in
    Armenian.

    Saboundjian said that she would have studied journalism in Armenian if
    it had been available at the university she attended.

    `Although I wanted to study Armenian journalism, the major wasn't
    available anywhere in Lebanon,' said Saboundjian, who studied Social
    Work at Haigazian University instead.

    `This is the main reason why there is a shortage in Armenian
    [-language] media personnel today and most probably this is one of the
    obstacles to lauching an Armenian [-language] TV channel,' Saboundjian
    added.

    `Whoever studies journalism in English, Arabic or French ... they will
    probably prefer to work in English, Arabic or a French media outlet.'

    Saboundjian, 35, first started her career in journalism as a part-time
    presenter for Beirut-based Radio Van.

    `All I did back then was simply present news after it was prepared by
    the editor,' she said.

    Before joining OTV in 2009, Saboundjian held a number of different positions.

    `In 2004, I was offered a job by an Armenia-based TV station that
    wanted to open an office in Beirut,' she said. `As a correspondent for
    the YergirMedia, I prepared all Lebanon-related documentaries and news
    broadcasts and sent them to Armenia.'

    A rash of security incidents in Lebanon after 2004 helped Saboundjian
    further establish herself in the profession. `I was the first
    journalist to send video coverage of [former Prime Minister Rafik]
    Hariri's assassination in 2005 to the Armenian capital of Yerevan,'
    Saboundjian said.

    `My work at YergirMedia was a great experience because sending
    political news from Lebanon to Armenia required a great deal of work
    and extra effort,' she said, noting how she needed to explain to
    Armenian viewers in Armenia the sometimes-convoluted background of
    Lebanese politics.

    It works the other way as well.

    `Although we have a team of Armenian journalists at OTV ... we
    constantly need to explain to non-Armenians at the studio about
    specific news and its importance during a certain news broadcast,' she
    said.

    `While thousands of Lebanese Armenians held a demonstration in
    Beirut's Martyrs Square against Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan's visit, Prime Minister Saad Hariri was giving a speech in
    Tripoli,' said Saboundjian, providing one example.

    `The decision about which event to broadcast was influenced by the
    Armenian desk, which explained to the administration the importance of
    the demonstration,' she added.

    Saboundjian's colleague at Future News, Shiraz Djeredjian, said an
    interest in politics led him to journalism.

    A graduate of Biology from the American University of Beirut,
    Djeredjian, 25, said that his ability to speak Armenian helped launch
    his career.

    `I was offered a reporter's job at Future News four years ago ... and
    I had to go through a four-month journalism training led by a group of
    journalists at the studio,' said Djeredjian.

    While Saboundjian cited a lack of academic opportunities, Djeredjian
    said that another burden hindering the expansion of Armenian-language
    journalism is the political divide among Lebanese Armenians.

    `Although Future News and OTV are the only channels that currently
    have daily Armenian news broadcasts, Lebanese Armenians prefer one of
    them over the other based on their political affiliations,' said
    Djeredjian.

    Future News is affiliated with the Future Movement while OTV is
    connected to Michel Aoun's Free Patriotic Movement.

    `The political rivalry between the two TV channels is negative ... it
    has led most Armenian politicians and figures to boycott one of the
    two stations, refusing to go on Future News or OTV,' he said.

    Shiraz, who presents the daily Armenian broadcast on Future News said
    that he and four other reporters staff the Armenian desk, producing
    local Lebanese news, Armenian news and international news.

    When asked what it takes to be a competent journalist in the Armenian
    language, Djeredjian said that both strong journalism skills and a
    sound knowledge of Armenian are equally important. `It's not enough to
    be a good journalist ... one needs to have an advanced knowledge of
    Armenian as well.'

    Djeredjian said he was hopeful that Armenian-language journalism in
    Lebanon would move forward and expand because of the experience many
    Armenian-language journalists have gained in newspapers and other
    media outlets.

    Besides being a full-time reporter at Future News, Djeredjian presents
    morning news on the Armenian Radio Sevan station.

    Djeredjian also appears live on two Armenian talk shows on the
    Yerevan-based ShantTV that connect Beirut via satellite broadcast with
    studios in Yerevan, Moscow and Los Angeles.

    While politics may influence which newscast viewers watch, many in the
    Lebanese Armenian community emphasize the importance of broadcasting
    in Armenian.

    `I don't mind which channel I'm watching ... watching news in Armenian
    even once a day is a great thing,' Nareg Hejinian told The Daily Star.

    Hejinian expressed dismay at not having a separate Lebanese Armenian
    television channel that broadcasts in Armenian. `We should have had it
    by now ... not having it is a big mistake,' said Hejinian.

    Another viewer agreed, saying that the news broadcasts that are
    currently offered are too brief.

    `Of course it is important to watch Armenian news and watch it every
    day ... but it needs to be longer and provide more details,' commented
    Armen Seferian, as he waited for the broadcast to begin.


    A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily
    Star on January 05, 2012, on page 3.

    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Local-News/2012/Jan-05/158895-armenian-language-reporting-gains-steam.ashx#axzz1iZ9fhvYb

Working...
X